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Peer reviewedSlabbert, Johannes A. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1994
This discussion of creativity in its educational context first considers the role of the creative product, process, personality, and environment. A proposal for teaching student teachers to teach more creatively is offered. The approach stresses development of originality, fluency, abstraction, elaboration, and openness. (DB)
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creative Teaching, Creativity, Higher Education
Peer reviewedDial, Jackie – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1991
Creativity can be distinguished from intelligence, but there is no consensus on how the recognized stages of the creative act can be taught. The steps to rational thinking can and should be intentionally taught and rationality may prepare a base for unexpected creative insights. (DB)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Creative Development, Creativity
Peer reviewedGreer, Martin; Levine, Elaine – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1991
This study compared the relative effectiveness of fantasy induction, intrinsic motivation induction, and combined fantasy/intrinsic motivation induction upon creative writing performance of 100 freshmen college students. All three methods enhanced the creativity of the students' poetry writing, with the conjunctive approach exhibiting no more…
Descriptors: College Students, Creative Development, Creative Writing, Creativity
Peer reviewedSwisher, Michael – Unterrichtspraxis/Teaching German, 1991
Presents an in-class writing exercise that is designed to stimulate creativity and promote sophistication of style in the advanced conversation and composition German language class. (GLR)
Descriptors: Advanced Courses, Creativity, German, Second Language Instruction
Peer reviewedMeadows, Eddie S. – Music Educators Journal, 1991
Offers suggestions for students and teachers for learning jazz improvisation. Discusses listening, practicing scales, chords, phrasing, developing a sense of swing, and shaping creative ideas through structural features. Emphasizes the relationship between chords and scales as a critical key to improvisation. Recommends educational materials to…
Descriptors: Creativity, Improvisation, Jazz, Learning Strategies
Peer reviewedTorrence, Martha – Montessori Life, 1993
The use of Montessori sensorial materials presents challenges for classroom practitioners. These materials are designed to assist a child's development by leading the child, through use and manipulation, toward eventual mental abstraction of the concepts related to the materials. The questions of when and how to intervene in the child's activities…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Creativity, Early Childhood Education, Montessori Method
Peer reviewedRejskind, Gillian – Roeper Review, 2000
Discussion of creativity in teachers of the gifted considers different kinds of creativity, techniques that promote creativity in students, the role of planning in creative teaching, and improvisational creativity during the teaching process. (Contains extensive references.) (DB)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Creative Development, Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education
Davies, Trevor – Journal of Technology Education, 2000
Personal Construct Theory framed a study of three secondary design/technology teachers and six students. Teachers were insecure about their understanding of creativity and professional role. Risk-taking teachers felt prepared to challenge students. Concerns that students avoid failure resulted in less challenge and risk. (Contains 32 references.)…
Descriptors: Creativity, Design, Foreign Countries, Secondary Education
Folkestad, Goran – Music Education Research, 2005
Most research in music education has so far dealt with music training in institutional settings, such as schools, and is accordingly based, either implicitly or explicitly, on the assumption that musical learning results from a sequenced, methodical exposure to music teaching within a formal setting. However, in order to realise and understand the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Research Methodology, Music, Meta Analysis
Parker, Jane – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2005
Creative intelligence is relevant to all aspects of the school curriculum, yet it is through art and design that pupils may come to experience the significance of creativity as a means of exploring innovative and original ideas which offer credence to the individual and affect approaches to learning. This article analyses creativity and the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Intelligence, Creativity, Curriculum Development
Ngara, Constantine; Porath, Marion – High Ability Studies, 2004
In an exploratory study designed to investigate Shona culture of Zimbabwe's views of giftedness, data were collected from sixteen Zimbabwean academics of Shona cultural background. Using questionnaire narratives, the study established that Shona culture views giftedness as an unusual ability blessed in an individual through ancestry which enables…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Background, Gifted, Questionnaires
Metzger, Robert P. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2006
Systems biology, metabolomics, metabolic engineering, and other recent developments in biochemistry suggest that future biochemists will require a detailed familiarity with the compounds and pathways of intermediary metabolism and their biochemical control. The challenge to the biochemistry instructor is the presentation of metabolic pathways in a…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Teaching Methods, Metabolism, Familiarity
Reist, Kay – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2006
French Dada artist Marcel Duchamp was one of a group of artists who created art that ridiculed contemporary European culture and traditional art forms. It is said that the movement got its name when one of the artists randomly opened a dictionary and blindly pointed to the word dada. The word made no sense at all but the artists considered it an…
Descriptors: Artists, Art Activities, Teaching Methods, Art Education
Feldhusen, John; Feldhusen, Hazel – Gifted Child Today, 2004
Classroom management can be enhanced and improved a great deal by weekly cooperative class meetings in which gifted and talented children are given opportunities to offer ideas, solutions, and creative insights (Webb & Palincsar, 1996). All children can and should be encouraged to participate and offer ideas, but the advanced thinking skills,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Leadership, Thinking Skills, Talent
Cooper, Carolyn R.; Baum, Susan M.; Neu, Terry W. – Journal of Secondary Gifted Education, 2004
Can students with learning and attention difficulties in school actually be talented scientists in disguise? This article presents a model that was highly successful in identifying and developing scientific talent in these special students. The factors that contributed to the success of the model were the following: The emphasis was on helping…
Descriptors: Special Needs Students, Talent Development, Science Education, Models

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