Creativity Guide

Creativity Classes Section


 

Creativity Classes Navigation


|

Stress and Anxiety Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Trigonometry Creativity |
Bondii Creativity |
Workshops Creativity |
Left Hemisphere And Creativity |
Creativity And Multicultural Education |
Creativity And Divergent Thinking |
Creativity Project |
Best Webdesign Award Winner Creativity |
Self Esteem.txt |
Causal Link Drug Creativity |
Talk Creativity |
Why Teach Creativity To Children |
Pooh Creativity Play Set |
Creativity For Women In 1900s |
Creativity Atlanta |

List of Creativity Articles

Creativity Classes Best seller

Buy it Now!



Best Creativity Classes products

Sitemap

Quote of the Day: Maria Montessori

"Never help a child with a task at which he feels he can succeed."



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Creativity
Email:
First Name:



Main Creativity Classes sponsors


 

Latest Creativity Classes Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Creativity Classes!



Welcome to Creativity Guide

 

Creativity Classes Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

CAN CREATIVITY BE TAUGHT?

from:

Author J Sharkey





A lot of people say that creativity is a trait only a selected few are born with, that it isn't something taught because, like physical beauty, it is a gift, a privilege, something that is influence and born by circumstance and other positive preceding factors, instead of something that is introduced only after a person is born. Thus, the conclusion of some that creativity is not something that can be taught.



However, there are different schools of thought to this matter, especially as the world advances and we begin to see people develop their creative faculties and excel only later in life, when they haven't shown any tinge of creativity at all in their earlier days.



Some proponents of the idea that creativity is something that can be taught and learned assert that a person's environment, orientation and background are the ones responsible for diminishing or enhancing one's creativity.



On the other hand, fans of the conservative idea that creativity is innate say that such factors like orientation and environment are merely tools to enhance creativity and that their presence would amount to nothing if there is no creativity to hone in the first place.



This issue has long been the topic of debate among many scientific and social experts all over the world. Some people say perhaps the differences lie in the fact that creativity is an all too general concept that encompasses a variety of ideas and occurences that people have varying definitions for it. What may be an indication of creativity for one may not be so for another.



For this article, however, for the sake of uniformity, we will be tackling creativity as a factor of imagination and innovation.



If creativity, then, is a component of innovation, then perhaps it is something that can be taught and learned in schools and at home. This is because it is seen as an ability to adapt to changes and adjust to them.



When we were born, while we had been equipped with rational faculties, none of these would have been of any use had we not been taught how to use them properly. Therefore, while we were born with certain traits that would make us creative, they would be for naught if no form of education or teaching were involved in the process.



Upon birth, we were unaware of what the future held for us. Because of this lack of knowledge about future occurences, all our parents and schools could do was to teach us to be resilient and how to think for ourselves, in order to have the ability to make unique decisions when the need arises. We were not taught early on how to spefically respond to changes. What we taught then was how to be creative and innovative amid behavioral and environment shifts. That being said, yes, creativity can be taught after all.



Today's trend of using standardized tests to determine a person's creativity is not only very innacurate, but actually very limiting and stifling. This is because nobody can really measure how creative a person can be, because this faculty only surfaces when particular situations come up. And because incidents do not happen to everyone, creativity is difficult to measure. So, given this, who is to say who is creative and who is not?



The argument on whether creativity can or cannot be taught is a bottomless pit. For some, education has worked. For others, education is seen as merely a tool.



However which way you choose to see it, you should appreciate that you were born human and given the ability to understand and engage in such debates. It can go on forever. It may not even eventually find a consensus. Ironically, that's where your creativity comes in – in your response to the issue and your decision on how to deal with it. Confusing, isn't it?


Other Creativity Classes related Articles

Creativity And Education
Creativity In The Workplace
Risks Of Creativity
Parkinsons Creativity
Knowledge Processing Creativity And Politics

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


Creativity Classes Specific links

Creativity Classes News

Artist Guild Session I Classes Begin Monday, January 12 (The Falmouth Enterprise)

Every six weeks the Falmouth Artists Guild offers a new session of art classes. Classes are small offer an opportunity to learn and develop skills and creativity. Classes begin the week of January 12. Those who don’t have time available for a full session may call the guild to arrange to take a class or two. Children's classes will be offered during School Vacation Week, beginning Tuesday, ...

Read more...


New House Speaker sworn in (Dayton Daily News)

Democrats officially took control of the Ohio House for the first time in 14 years on Monday, Jan. 5, and new House Speaker Armond Budish wasted no time outlining his vision for turning Ohio into a leader of "entrepreneurial capitalism."

Read more...


Kids tap creativity at the Blanden (The Fort Dodge Messenger)

Luke Teeselink, 9, flexed his arms and wrinkled his nose as he groaned, putting all of his strength into punching a hole into his sponge creation to be used on his African print art. "I'm 9 years old," he said while wiping his brow. "I think I'm stronger than that!" Teeselink was one of nine participants taking part in the Children's Art Program at the Blanden Memorial Art Museum Saturday.

Read more...


Success for an everyday poet (The Southampton Press & The East Hampton Press)

Adam Penna is on a roll. For nearly a decade, he’s written one poem every day, almost without fail. He writes for the love of poetry, believing that poems reveal truths that can easily be missed, and offer a way of connecting the universal human condition with individual experiences.

Read more...


Briefly in Tompkins (The Ithaca Journal)

Ithaca High School students Jacob Evelyn (senior) and Mary Eloundou (sophomore) were awarded first prize and third prize in an essay competition to celebrate the French Presidency of the European Union, which ran from July-December 2008. Janet Bowman, French language teacher at Ithaca High School, learned of the competition through the Cornell Institute for European Studies' outreach program. ...

Read more...