Creativity and learning in secondary English : teaching for a creative classroom / Andrew McCallum.
By: McCallum, Andrew
Publisher: New York, NY : Routledge, 2012Description: xv, 159 p. : ill. ; 25 cmISBN: 9780415620697 (hardback); 9780415620703 (paperback); 9780203122488 (ebook)Subject(s): English language -- Composition and exercises -- Study and teaching (Secondary) | Creative ability | EDUCATION / General | EDUCATION / Secondary | EDUCATION / Teaching Methods & Materials / Reading & PhonicsDDC classification: 808/.0420712 LOC classification: LB1631 | .M3937 2012Other classification: EDU000000 | EDU025000 | EDU029020 Summary: "Creativity, in secondary English lessons today is a democratically conceived quality that all pupils are expected to achieve and a resource on which all are entitled to draw. But what exactly is creativity? And how does it relate to English? Creativity and Learning in Secondary English answers these questions, and others, by arguing for a version of creativity that sees it as an ordinary, everyday part of successful classroom practice, central to processes of meaning-making, dialogic interaction and textual engagement. In this construction, creativity is not just linked to learning; it is the driving force behind learning itself, offering pupils the opportunity to transform their knowledge and understanding of the world around them. The book borrows from a range of theories about creativity and about learning, while remaining largely practical in focus. It contains numerous examples for teachers of how to apply ideas about creativity in the classroom. In doing so, it attempts to maintain the subject's core identity while also keeping abreast of contemporary social, pedagogical and technological developments. The result is a refreshing challenge to some of the more mundane approaches to English teaching on offer in an age focussed excessively on standardisation and teaching to tests. Practical applications of creativity include: - Using picturebooks and graphic novels to stimulate multimodal responses - Placing pupils in the role of the teacher - Devising marketing campaigns for class novels - Adopting experimental approaches to redrafting - Encouraging "extreme" forms of re-creative writing - Focusing on how to "listen" to texts - Creating sound-scapes for poems"-- Provided by publisher.Item type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Circulation | Sibalom | Sibalom Circulation | 808.0420712 M1225 2012 (Browse shelf) | 1 | Available | UAMAIN 11102 |
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808.042 St6e 1999 Effective writing : A practical grammar review / | 808.042 T99 1985 Writing voyage : an integrated, process, approach to basic writing / | 808.042 T99 1985 Writing voyage : an integrated, process, approach to basic writing / | 808.0420712 M1225 2012 Creativity and learning in secondary English : teaching for a creative classroom / | 808.042076 L2718 2013 Exploring writing: : sentences and paragraphs/ / | 808.0427 An2r 1998 Reading rhetorical texts and introduction to criticism / | 808.0427 B76i 1998 Identity matters : Rhetoric of difference / |
"Creativity, in secondary English lessons today is a democratically conceived quality that all pupils are expected to achieve and a resource on which all are entitled to draw. But what exactly is creativity? And how does it relate to English? Creativity and Learning in Secondary English answers these questions, and others, by arguing for a version of creativity that sees it as an ordinary, everyday part of successful classroom practice, central to processes of meaning-making, dialogic interaction and textual engagement. In this construction, creativity is not just linked to learning; it is the driving force behind learning itself, offering pupils the opportunity to transform their knowledge and understanding of the world around them. The book borrows from a range of theories about creativity and about learning, while remaining largely practical in focus. It contains numerous examples for teachers of how to apply ideas about creativity in the classroom. In doing so, it attempts to maintain the subject's core identity while also keeping abreast of contemporary social, pedagogical and technological developments. The result is a refreshing challenge to some of the more mundane approaches to English teaching on offer in an age focussed excessively on standardisation and teaching to tests. Practical applications of creativity include: - Using picturebooks and graphic novels to stimulate multimodal responses - Placing pupils in the role of the teacher - Devising marketing campaigns for class novels - Adopting experimental approaches to redrafting - Encouraging "extreme" forms of re-creative writing - Focusing on how to "listen" to texts - Creating sound-scapes for poems"-- Provided by publisher.
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