Article Getting Schooled: When Arts Teachers Become Students
Learn what makes up the five core elements of effective teacher development with a focus on learning in and through the arts.
Many educators and parents are troubled by the disappearance of creativity in education. Sir Ken Robinson, an education scholar, recently said, “Creativity is as important now in education as literacy and we should treat it with the same status.” His concern about the current state of education is that “we are educating people out of their creativity capacities.”
Creativity is a key skill identified for the 21st-century workplace. Yet much about our current educational climate defeats creativity in schools—rigid curricula that do not allow for deep exploration of ideas; high-stakes testing that creates a culture where mistakes are not learning opportunities but something to be avoided; and a lack of resources in our funding-starved schools. Every day these “creativity killers” creep into our classrooms.
Teachers can take seven simple steps to create an environment that is friendly toward creativity. Here are some ways to embed creativity in your classroom.
Modeling creative behavior is a key skill for teachers of creative classrooms, say Joan Isenberg and Mary Jalongo, authors of Creative Thinking and Arts-based Learning. They encourage teachers to foster creativity by engaging in “democratic interactions” with students by holding high expectations, listening to students with respect, providing students with decision-making opportunities, and expecting students to accept the consequences of those decisions.
Creativity is not uncontrolled chaos in the classroom. Far from it. First, a creative classroom requires the teacher to provide firm, fair, and reasonable limits. All creative work in the real world has limits, too, be it time or finances, or the laws of gravity. The freedom comes from student decision making and ownership of learning. Giving students the freedom to explore and experiment with ideas within limits develops and fine-tunes creative thinking.
Beginning in about fourth grade, problem-solving is an avenue to creative thinking. Often called “problem-based learning,” students must identify problems, possible outcomes—and potential pitfalls to those outcomes—and, ultimately, a solution. Problem-based learning requires investigation, imagination, and revision—all-important creative processes.
Storytelling is a powerful method to convey a point to students. Brin Best and Will Thomas, authors of The Creative Teaching & Learning Toolkit, suggest that both factual and fictional stories can illustrate and instruct in a creative way.
Look for opportunities within the curriculum to bring the outside world into the classroom. Some possibilities include a discussion about a local event or a video about what’s happening in another part of the world. Connecting student learning to real-world situations and issues is a platform for greater student engagement and critical thinking, which are key components of creativity.
Creative work typically requires both independent and collaborative work. Look for opportunities for assignments and projects to incorporate these orientations together, suggest Dominic Wyse and Pam Dowson, authors of The Really Useful Creativity Book.
Play can be misunderstood as wasted time. For children under 10, play is an active form of deep experiential learning and can take many forms, including games, dramatic play, and constructive (or problem-solving) play. Joan Isenberg and Mary Jalongo encourage teachers to use reflection with play to help students identify their learning and build on it in future opportunities to play. Dress-up clothes, puppets, and board games are all instructional tools that are play-based.
The arts are often thought of as the curricular area that fosters creativity. But Mark Runco at the University of Georgia reminds us that creativity is a necessary tool across the curriculum—including technology, math, and science. Creativity contributes to a complete education.
Writer
Patti Saraniero
Editor
Lisa Resnick
Producer
Joanna McKee
Updated
December 10, 2019
Learn what makes up the five core elements of effective teacher development with a focus on learning in and through the arts.
Use these tips to connect with school board members in meaningful ways to ensure they make arts education a priority.
As a teacher you can help parents become strong arts education advocates.
Introduction to performance assessment, which provides educators with "real-world" arts assessment strategies.
In this K-2 lesson, students will examine how illustrations contribute to the telling of a story. Through picture books (without words), students will discuss and interpret details about the characters, setting, and plot. Students will create illustrations to accompany a text and then write text to accompany illustrations.Â
In this 3-5 lesson, students will learn about the Harlem Renaissance and create original jazz artwork. They will listen to audio samples, analyze elements of jazz, research musicians, and learn how jazz became a unifier between community and culture.
In this 6-8 lesson, students will learn how light interacts with matter through the creation of puppets in shadow plays. Students will examine how light travels and how an object's shadow is affected by the intensity and position of the light in relation to both the object and the surface on which a shadow is cast. This is the first lesson designed to accompany the Shadow Puppet Plays lesson.
In this 9-12 lesson, students will explore different cultures’ supernatural explanations for human existence. They will make comparisons between creation myths then write an original creation myth play script to perform for an audience.
Generous support for educational programs at the Kennedy Center is provided by the U.S. Department of Education.
Gifts and grants to educational programs at the Kennedy Center are provided by The Paul M. Angell Family Foundation; Bank of America; Capital One; The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation; Carnegie Corporation of New York; The Ednah Root Foundation; Harman Family Foundation; William R. Kenan, Jr. Charitable Trust; the Kimsey Endowment; The Kiplinger Foundation; Laird Norton Family Foundation; Lois and Richard England Family Foundation; Dr. Gary Mather and Ms. Christina Co Mather; The Markow Totevy Foundation; Dr. Gerald and Paula McNichols Foundation; The Morningstar Foundation; Myra and Leura Younker Endowment Fund; The Irene Pollin Audience Development and Community Engagement Initiatives;
Prince Charitable Trusts; Dr. Deborah Rose and Dr. Jan A. J. Stolwijk; Rosemary Kennedy Education Fund; The Embassy of the United Arab Emirates; The Victory Foundation; The Volgenau Foundation; Volkswagen Group of America; Jackie Washington; GRoW @ Annenberg and Gregory Annenberg Weingarten and Family; Wells Fargo; and generous contributors to the Abe Fortas Memorial Fund and by a major gift to the fund from the late Carolyn E. Agger, widow of Abe Fortas. Additional support is provided by the National Committee for the Performing Arts..
The content of these programs may have been developed under a grant from the U.S. Department of Education but does not necessarily represent the policy of the U.S. Department of Education. You should not assume endorsement by the federal government.