Sunday, January 01, 2012

ANS -- While the teachers said they wanted creative kids in their classroom, they actually didn’t

 a snippet.....  A very short article with scientific evidence of what the title says.  but I think it's an age-old problem for anyone who deals with kids.  My mother used to say she wanted us to think independently, but she demonstrated the opposite.
Find it here:  http://johntropea.tumblr.com/post/15121949777/while-the-teachers-said-they-wanted-creative-kids-in  
--Kim


While the teachers said they wanted creative kids in their classroom, they actually didn't…

While the teachers said they wanted creative kids in their classroom, they actually didn't. In fact, when they were asked to rate their students on a variety of personality measures - the list included everything from "individualistic" to "risk-seeking" to "accepting of authority" - the traits mostly closely aligned with creative thinking were also closely associated with their "least favorite" students. As the researchers note, "Judgments for the favorite student were negatively correlated with creativity; judgments for the least favorite student were positively correlated with creativity."

This shouldn't be too surprising: Would you really want a little Picasso in your class? How about a baby Gertrude Stein? Or a teenage Eminem? The point is that the classroom isn't designed for impulsive expression - that's called talking out of turn. Instead, it's all about obeying group dynamics and exerting focused attention. Those are important life skills, of course, but decades of psychological research suggest that such skills have little to do with creativity.

- Jonah Lehrer

(Source: scienceblogs.com)

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