Engaging Imagination
eBook - ePub

Engaging Imagination

Helping Students Become Creative and Reflective Thinkers

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Engaging Imagination

Helping Students Become Creative and Reflective Thinkers

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

How to nurture creativity in tomorrow's innovators—today's college students When asked what they want colleges to emphasize most, employers didn't put science, computing, math, or business management first. According to AAC&U's 2013 employer survey, 95% of employers give hiring preference to college graduates with skills that will enable them to contribute to innovation in the workplace. In Engaging Imagination: Helping Students Become Creative and Reflective Thinkers, two leading educators help college instructors across disciplines engage students in nurturing creativity and innovation for success beyond the classroom. Alison James, an expert in creative arts education, and Stephen D. Brookfield, bestselling author, outline how creative exploration can extend students' reflective capabilities in a purposeful way, help them understand their own potential and learning more clearly, and imbue students with the freedom to generate and explore new questions. This book:

  • shows why building creative skills pays dividends in the classroom and in students' professional lives long after graduation;
  • offers research-based, classroom-tested approaches to cultivating creativity and innovation in the college setting;
  • provides practical tools for incorporating "play" into the college curriculum;
  • draws on recent advances in the corporate sector where creative approaches have been adopted to reinvigorate thinking and problem-solving processes; and
  • includes examples from a variety of disciplines and settings.

Engaging Imagination is for college and university faculty who need to prepare students for the real challenges of tomorrow's workplace.

Frequently asked questions

Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on “Cancel Subscription” - it’s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time you’ve paid for. Learn more here.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlego’s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan you’ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes, you can access Engaging Imagination by Al James, Stephen D. Brookfield in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Education & Higher Education. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Jossey-Bass
Year
2014
ISBN
9781118836118
Edition
1

Part 1
Understanding the Role of Imagination in Learning

1
How Engaging the Imagination Fosters Reflective Thinking

Imagination is the key to human progress. Without the capacity to imagine a different world that is more beautiful than the one in which we live, change is impossible. Why would we strive for something better or different if we didn't have the imagination to conceive of a more beautiful way of living? The capacity to imagine is part of what makes us human. It is essentially a creative impulse that people build on as they conceive of, and realize, new social forms and artistic processes. Imagination is also often playful and elusive. It revels in serendipity, in unexpected connections, chance meetings, and seeing the everyday and familiar in new ways.
The unpredictability of engaging the imagination makes it hard to adapt to classroom environments ruled by rigid assessment protocols. If we have decreed in advance the evidence we will use to measure whether or not learning has occurred, there is little room for divergence or the unexpected. This virtual outlawing of so many facets of creativity is one of the travesties of higher education. If education is supposed to draw students out, to help them understand new ideas, practice new skills, and make meaningful personal connections to learning, then it makes no sense to declare in advance that certain modes of expression are off the table.
To pose a provocative challenge: Why shouldn't doctoral science students dance their PhDs (Bohannon, 2011)? Why are we not open to varied expressive modes—video, art, drama, poetry, music—to gauge students' learning? If there are multiple intelligences (Gardner, 2011), if students' diverse histories, cultural backgrounds, racial identities, and personalities mean teaching and learning is inevitably complex (Allen, Sheve, and Nieter, 2010), then shouldn't our approaches to helping and assessing learning exhibit a similar variety? Even in something as highly structured as online education it's clear that creativity, variety, and imagination are crucial to retaining student interest and participation (Conrad and Donaldson, 2011, 2012).
This book is about finding ways to increase the number of imaginative moments that students encounter in contemporary classrooms. We both work from the assumption that when students learn something using different senses and when they study the same content through different modalities, there is a depth and complexity to their learning that is absent when only one format—filling in the lines next to PowerPoint slides projected during a lecture, for example—is adopted. For learning to “stick,” whether it is understanding a complex new concept, applying existing knowledge in unfamiliar contexts, or honing a newly developed psychomotor skill, the fullest range of our imaginative faculties needs to be engaged. Both of us love listening to well-constructed and delivered lectures and reading well-written texts. Equally, however, we both know that the broader the range of imaginative activities we're involved in, the more engaged we are with the learning.
Allied to imagination is the notion of engagement. Exercising imagination is inherently engaging, so a classroom in which students use their imaginations to study content, play with ideas, and imagine new possibilities should be an engaging one. Engaging students is something we hear about all the time, but we know that some colleagues assume that student engagement means “teaching-lite.” “Teaching-lite” is a view of teaching whereby teachers are deemed to use superficial activities, social media, and games to convince students that learning is “fun,” thereby securing favorable student evaluations. Effort, hard work, and struggle seem excluded in this stereotype. Colleagues subscribing to this caricature usually assume that engagement means going easy on students and never asking them to take on anything challenging. A false dichotomy is then created between engagement and “real learning”; that is, between learning that is superficial and that which is substantial, important, not much fun, and requires enormous effort.
We agree that learning sometimes is fun. But equally we know that learning is sometimes difficult, frustrating, and a long hard slog. We acknowledge that although classroom learning is certainly enjoyable at times, it also involves struggle, arduous work, and, yes, boredom. Before we can engage creatively and critically with ideas and practices, we often have to struggle to learn the fundamentals of a discipline, the grammar of a subject. We need to understand axiomatic principles, practice basic skills to a point of expertise, and assimilate foundational building blocks of knowledge. One of us (Stephen) teaches critical social theory, a dense, jargon-ridden body of work for which both a dictionary and considerable powers of perseverance are necessary to make progress. Stephen is the first to admit that his continuing struggle to understand this material is one that involves a lot of hard, and often frustrating, labor.
But living with frustration, motivating oneself for the long haul of learning, and negotiating continual challenges is helped considerably by moments of imaginative engagement. When we come at difficult material in new and unexpected ways, when we try to convey complex meanings visually or kinetically rather than through language (dancing our PhD!), and when we ask the question “What would this look like if …?,” we often find our energy for the hard slog is renewed. The important point about using imagination is that we are using it to engage students with the most challenging, difficult, and substantial learning that we judge they need to undertake. Engagement is precisely what it says: helping students engage with knowledge, concepts, ideas, and skills to an ever-higher degree of expertise. There is nothing inherently superficial or unchallenging about engagement; in fact it's the opposite of superficiality. Indeed, we would argue that it is the only hope of ever getting students to understand complex content or develop exemplary skillfulness.

The Three Axioms of Student Engagement

In engaging students—in helping them to develop deeper levels of understanding and to demonstrate higher levels of accomplishment—we need to be imaginative in thinking about different ways to teach that provoke learning. Our position regarding the importance of imagination in teaching is built on three essential pedagogic axioms:
  1. Student learning is deepest when the content or skills being learned are personally meaningful, and this happens when students see connections and applications of learning. Connections and applications occur when creative synthesis takes place, when people suddenly see unexpected patterns emerging, and when new questions are posed. Doing these things involves creativity and imagination.
  2. Student learning “sticks” more (in other words, retention of knowledge and skill is increased) when the same content or skills are learned through multiple methods. A monochromatic approach that adopts one pedagogic strategy overwhelmingly (always using discussions, always lecturing, always studying independently, always using language to communicate learning) is at odds with the empirical reality of students' multiple intelligences, different models of information processing, and variety of culturally preferred learning styles.
  3. The most memorable critical incidents students experience in their learning are those when they are required to “come at” their learning in a new way, when they are “jerked out” of the humdrum by some unexpected challenge or unanticipated task. We naturally remember the surprising rather than the routine, the unpredictable rather than the expected. One of the best ways to create memorable learning moments is to ask students to use their imaginations to ask “What if?” Upending the normal and familiar can be threatening and confusing, but it is usually also unforgettable. So a large part of student engagement entails creating moments of productive discomfort when expectations are reversed and different faculties are called into play—as, for example, when students are asked only to draw or dance their ideas, or to use Legos to build a model of their developing understanding of a topic.
Our belief in the importance of engaging imagination rests on these three axioms, so let's say a little more about them.

Engagement Is Personally Meaningful

The first axiom focuses on meaningfulness, on students appreciating that the knowledge and skills being learned are important and necessary in some way. Now, importance and necessity are not the same as utilitarian. We can study something that has no immediate vocational application yet find it enthralling. An artist can be fascinated by the scientific principle of falsifiability (the idea that unless something is open to empirical disconfirmation it cannot be considered scientific), and a scientist can be enthralled by the creativity of a Cyril Power or the Clash. But we believe that the scientist and the artist in these two examples are captivated because something about scientific falsifiability or artistic creativity “speaks” to them.
In other words, some truth, which might not be able to be concretely articulated, rests in the respective objects of contemplation. Perhaps the artist finds falsifiability an interesting notion because it is so contrary to her experience, and therefore poses an interesting challenge. Or perhaps falsifiability is intriguing because its emphasis on the importance of direct experience is also compelling for her in artistic expression. The scientist, at the same time, may find that Power's linocuts, or Joe Strummer's vocals, prompt an immediate visceral response that is very different from the pleasure derived from science. Maybe there is a suggestion of the erotic or animal, or a fascination with line or form that seems totally unrelated to scientific convention. But in both instances the connections with new forms of understanding are personally meaningful; they are not apprehended at a distance, but rather felt as somehow personally significant.
Of course, it is much easier to see learning as personally meaningful in situations in which students understand that a direct application to their life, work, or self-awareness is entailed. Thus, studying philosophy is often justified as preparing students to work through ethical dilemmas or to live with the ambiguity they will find in adulthood. Social work or engineering courses are deemed to provide vocationally necessary skills that will secure employment and advance a career. Psychology is taught to help students develop insight into their own actions and the justifications for these so that they become more self-aware. Our position is that where such clear connections are absent, it is still pedagogically important to find imaginative ways of helping students discover personal meaning in learning.

Learning “Sticks” When Multiple Methods Engage the Imagination

This axiom regarding engaging imagination is much less philosophically dense than the first. As researchers into student engagement have shown (Barkley, 2009; Bean, 2011), asking students to “come at” the same knowledge or skills in different ways has multiple benefits. First, it is more successful in promoting “deeper” learning (Ohlson, 2011); that is, learning where students understand the complexity of content and the contextual application of skills, and where they can reinterpret experience to change their understanding of the world. It also keeps student interest at higher levels. The more you change up different teaching methods and ask students to try out different classroom, online, or homework activities, the more they stay awake and involved. Alternating verbal and visual modalities, silent and oral ways of communicating, individual and group activities, kinesthetic and cognitive activities, and abstract and concrete ways of processing information keeps the class moving as it calls on different elements of students' personalities and skill sets.
Stephen has spent twenty years collecting data from students across multiple disciplines and institutions regarding their reactions to classroom learning. Through the use of a Critical Incident Questionnaire (CIQ; http://stephenbrookfield.com/Dr._Stephen_D._Brookfield/Critical_Incident_Questionnaire.html)—an anonymous student response form—he has found that the most enduring reality of college teaching is that the greater the modality of teaching methods used, the higher the level of student engagement; that is, the more students were successful in actively striving to comprehend material, make connections, and apply concepts. The CIQ specifically asks students to identify moments when they were most and least engaged as learners, and actions that helped or hindered this engagement. Repeatedly, students say that the classes where they were most engaged were those where three or four different teaching modalities or learning activities were used.

Students Are Engaged When Something “Jerks” Them Out of the Routines

The most charismatically engaging lecturers and the most responsively alert discussion leaders can still occasionally fall victim to routine. For students, nothing wakes up attention to learning more than being asked to do something unfamiliar and expected. When a student is asked to represent his or her understanding of a concept by building a Lego model, or when a group is asked to draw the discussion they have just had for the whole class to interpret, a level of productive dissonance, of helpful creati...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Titlepage
  3. Copyright
  4. Series
  5. Contents
  6. Preface
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. About the Authors
  9. Part 1 Understanding the Role of Imagination in Learning
  10. Part 2 Engaging Imagination Tools and Techniques
  11. Part 3 Negotiating the Emotional Realities of Engaging Imagination
  12. References
  13. Index
  14. Cross-Merchandising Advertisements