1 / 17

Creativity and Innovation

Creativity and Innovation. Defining the Terms Trying Out Strategies Review of Resources Debriefing. Who am I?. Kristal Jaaskelainen English Language Arts Lead Teacher Skyline High School Ann Arbor, MI University of Michigan Eastern Michigan University Yooper!. Creativity is Necessary.

hermione
Télécharger la présentation

Creativity and Innovation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Creativity and Innovation Defining the Terms Trying Out Strategies Review of Resources Debriefing

  2. Who am I? • Kristal Jaaskelainen • English Language Arts Lead Teacher • Skyline High School • Ann Arbor, MI • University of Michigan • Eastern Michigan University • Yooper!

  3. Creativity is Necessary • Sir Ken Robinson @Ted • Debrief • Responses to the video? • Is creativity valued in your school? Curriculum? Pedagogy? Why or why not?

  4. Creativity is Necessary • Sir Ken Robinson @Ted • Debrief • Responses to the video? • Is creativity valued in your school? Curriculum? Pedagogy? Why or why not?

  5. Definitions • “I define creativity as the act of turning new and imaginative ideas into reality. Creativity involves two processes: thinking, then producing. Innovation is the production or implementation of an idea. If you have ideas, but don't act on them, you are imaginative but not creative.” • Linda Naiman • Think-Pair-Share • Think about the meaning of this quote • Partner with someone next to you • Share out your thinking

  6. Grouping Game and 1-minute Challenge • Theater adaptation for creative thinking in the classroom - bodily/kinesthetic • Why did we do this activity? • How can you imagine using it in your classroom? • How did it help you think about our concepts of creativity and innovation?

  7. Defining Using Metaphor

  8. Thinking About Thinking • You better recognize! • We have used strategies already to come to a shared definition • The strategies include: • Think-Pair-Share (Reading Apprenticeship) • Bodily-Kinesthetic (Gardner, Spolin, Improv) • Metaphorical Thinking (K. Gallager) • How can/do such strategies foster creative thinking in our students? • What questions have arisen?

  9. Strategy Trial • 6 Thinking Hats - Dilemma and Problem Solving • Read the instruction sheet and the story • Fill out the graphic organizer • Participate in group discussion • Report out group solution to the question: • How can the soldier creatively solve this dilemma? • Debriefing Questions • Which hat did you find easiest to wear? Which was most difficult? • How did referencing the hats change your interactions in the group? • How does this strategy foster creativity and innovation?

  10. Strategy Trial • Metaphorical Thinking • Read The Dinner Party silently • With a partner, choose two graphic organizers and create metaphors that apply to the story • Debriefing Questions • How do metaphors foster creativity and innovation? • How can you apply this activity to your classroom?

  11. List of Strategy Titles • Grouping Game and 1-minute Challenge • Think-Pair Share • Questioning • Metaphorical Thinking • 6 Thinking Hats (Edward de Bono) • Graphic Organizers • Gallery Walk

  12. Creativity and Innovation in Context • Resource Toolbox • Located online at http://www.missionliteracy.com • Focus on Creative Thinking • Can you connect critical thinking to the HSCEs? http://www.mycoted.com/Category:Creativity_Techniques

  13. Connecting to 21st Century Literacy • Synthesis - understanding of connections and meaning • Creative and Critical Thinking - creation of new ideas and content • Application - real world opportunities to put ideas into action • Read - comprehend - DO

  14. 21st Century Literacy requires we no longer use the “banking method” of education (Freire) How can the concepts of creativity and innovation inform your educational practices? How might these creativity and innovation enter into your lesson planning? What are you taking away from today’s workshop? What questions have arisen? Food for Thought

  15. Tips From a Teacher • Don’t make it feel like more work - make it feel like it enhances what already goes on on classrooms • Participate. Model the best practices you want to see from your teachers • Unify resources - put them all in one place • Distribute the power and control of ideas - validate what they know • Provide food!

  16. What questions have arisen? Email me at jaaskela@aaps.k12.mi.us with any questions or requests for specific resources Thank you!

More Related