Creativity in Education
International Perspectives
Edited by Nicole Brown, Amanda Ince, Karen Ramlackhan
Publication date:
29 January 2024Publisher
UCL PressDimensions:
234x156mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9781800080652
Creativity has become a buzzword across all disciplines in education and across all phases, from early years through to tertiary education. Although the meaning of creativity can change vastly depending on the global educational setting, it is impossible to ignore the applicability and relevance of creativity as an educational tool, philosophical framework and pedagogical approach.
Through case studies of creativity in varying settings and diverse contexts, this collection explores the ground-breaking work undertaken internationally to support, develop and future-proof learners with, and for, creativity. The chapters are centred around a practice based enquiry or other forms of empirical research. This provides the scholarly basis upon which creativity is continuously reconceptualised and redefined in the educational and country-specific context of each study. Contributors from different countries then provide critical, reflective and analytical responses to each chapter. These conversational responses focus further on international education perspectives and provide a dialogue for educators into how methods and approaches can be transferred, translated and contextually mediated for different environments. Through the case studies and responses, Creativity in Education provides practical insights for application in a wide range of educational settings and contexts, such as the use of art exhibitions and object-work, as well as more philosophical approaches to teacher education, leadership for learning and creativity as a universal phenomenon.
Praise for Creativity in Education
'The publication is engaging and intellectually provoking. It challenges the reader to view creativity as a universal phenomenon with specific cultural and country-specific mediated practices. While it emphasises the socio-cultural nature of creativity, its international approach is particularly useful for teacher educators and practitioners from all countries in extending their understanding of creativity through its many different manifestations. The examples of creative assessment tasks and methods make it a very practical book, but its insights also provide an important message for policymakers with policy recommendations to view creativity as a key competence for future generations of teachers and their learners.'
Educational Review
'Knox [chapter 1] choreographs a tour de force discussing creativity using inter¬actions with context, content, curriculum, pedagogy, herself, students, and teacher education literature. She adroitly situates her case study within teacher education narrative inquiry and offers responses and rich description to her query “What is choreography and how is it creative?”'
The Journal of Educational Research
'The publication is engaging and intellectually provoking. It challenges the reader to view creativity as a universal phenomenon with specific cultural and country-specific mediated practices. While it emphasises the socio-cultural nature of creativity, its international approach is particularly useful for teacher educators and practitioners from all countries in extending their understanding of creativity through its many different manifestations. The examples of creative assessment tasks and methods make it a very practical book, but its insights also provide an important message for policymakers with policy recommendations to view creativity as a key competence for future generations of teachers and their learners.'
Educational Review