Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 How to Discourage Creative Thinking in the Classroom
- 2 Teaching for Creativity in an Era of Content Standards and Accountability
- 3 Developing Creative Productivity in Young People through the Pursuit of Ideal Acts of Learning
- 4 Creativity: A Look Outside the Box in Classrooms
- 5 Using Constraints to Develop Creativity in the Classroom
- 6 Infusing Creative and Critical Thinking into the Curriculum Together
- 7 The Five Core Attitudes, Seven I's, and General Concepts of the Creative Process
- 8 Learning for Creativity
- 9 Broadening Conceptions of Creativity in the Classroom
- 10 Everyday Creativity in the Classroom: A Trip through Time with Seven Suggestions
- 11 Education Based on a Parsimonious Theory of Creativity
- 12 Roads Not Taken, New Roads to Take: Looking for Creativity in the Classroom
- 13 Creativity in Mathematics Teaching: A Chinese Perspective
- 14 Possibility Thinking and Wise Creativity: Educational Futures in England?
- 15 When Intensity Goes to School: Overexcitabilities, Creativity, and the Gifted Child
- 16 Intrinsic Motivation and Creativity in the Classroom: Have We Come Full Circle?
- 17 Attitude Change as the Precursor to Creativity Enhancement
- 18 Creativity in College Classrooms
- 19 Teaching for Creativity
- Creativity in the Classroom Coda: Twenty Key Points and Other Insights
- Index
- References
7 - The Five Core Attitudes, Seven I's, and General Concepts of the Creative Process
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 How to Discourage Creative Thinking in the Classroom
- 2 Teaching for Creativity in an Era of Content Standards and Accountability
- 3 Developing Creative Productivity in Young People through the Pursuit of Ideal Acts of Learning
- 4 Creativity: A Look Outside the Box in Classrooms
- 5 Using Constraints to Develop Creativity in the Classroom
- 6 Infusing Creative and Critical Thinking into the Curriculum Together
- 7 The Five Core Attitudes, Seven I's, and General Concepts of the Creative Process
- 8 Learning for Creativity
- 9 Broadening Conceptions of Creativity in the Classroom
- 10 Everyday Creativity in the Classroom: A Trip through Time with Seven Suggestions
- 11 Education Based on a Parsimonious Theory of Creativity
- 12 Roads Not Taken, New Roads to Take: Looking for Creativity in the Classroom
- 13 Creativity in Mathematics Teaching: A Chinese Perspective
- 14 Possibility Thinking and Wise Creativity: Educational Futures in England?
- 15 When Intensity Goes to School: Overexcitabilities, Creativity, and the Gifted Child
- 16 Intrinsic Motivation and Creativity in the Classroom: Have We Come Full Circle?
- 17 Attitude Change as the Precursor to Creativity Enhancement
- 18 Creativity in College Classrooms
- 19 Teaching for Creativity
- Creativity in the Classroom Coda: Twenty Key Points and Other Insights
- Index
- References
Summary
When I began working in the field of the education of the gifted and talented, as a county coordinator in Ohio, in 1977, I looked at the categories of giftedness as described in the Marland Report of 1971. These categories were superior cognitive ability, specific academic ability, creative thinking, visual and performing arts ability, and psychomotor ability. I asked myself, “Aren't smart people creative? Aren't people good at academic subjects creative? Aren't visual and performing artists creative? Aren't athletes creative? Why is there a separate category for creativity?” Over the next thirteen years, I was a county coordinator in two states and the principal of New York City's Hunter College Elementary School, the oldest U.S. school for gifted children. I am now a college professor who runs a graduate program for certification for teachers of the gifted and talented. I am unusual, I suspect, because in my inner life, my real life, I am and have been an artist – a published novelist and a poet – and I see the world not only through the eyes of a researcher in education and psychology but also through an artist's eyes (e.g., Piirto, 2008b; Piirto & Reynolds, 2007). I have also been what is called a teaching artist (Oreck & Piirto, 2004), as I also worked for four years as a Poet in the Schools in the National Endowment for the Arts “Artist in the Schools” program during the late 1970s and early 1980s.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Nurturing Creativity in the Classroom , pp. 142 - 171Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010
References
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