|
Showing 1 - 13 of
13 matches in All Departments
The authors' purpose in this seventh book in the "It Works for Me"
series is to demonstrate that "everyone possesses creative talent,
though it may be latent in some and difficult to bring out in
others. It's not just a talent possessed by artists and engineers,
mind you, but everyone." Furthermore, "Creative people have figured
out consciously or un- that a small seed of creativity can be made
to grow by having the proper environment and a minimal set of
skills. And people can be taught or self-taught this process." The
authors/editors also believe that "all creative ideas link
themselves to other creative ideas to develop something new and
useful, be it a concept, a process, or a product. In order to
disseminate and perpetuate their] belief that the creative impulse
resides in all of us, they] have asked a host of friends to
demonstrate it with essays and practical tips touching on
supportive creative environments, strategies that foster and
enhance creativity, and assessments that demonstrate creativity has
indeed taken place." This easy-to-follow guide is separated into
several sections: Overviews The Creative Process The Creative
Environment The Creative Product Assessing Creativity. Hal Blythe
and Charlie Sweet have each won the prestigious Acorn Award, which
is presented annually to the outstanding college professor in the
state of Kentucky. In addition, they have over 800 publications,
including 12 books, articles running the gamut from literary
criticism to educational research, and popular fiction. Other books
in the "It Works for Me" series can be ordered from New Forums
Press.
Here is a new text that fulfills an emerging need in both higher
and public education and stands to break new ground in addressing
critical skills required of graduates. When working on their last
book, It Works for Me, Creatively, the authors realized that the
future belongs to the right-brained. While Daniel Pink and other
visionaries may have oversimplified a bit, higher education is ripe
for the creative campus, while secondary education is desperately
seeking a complement to the growing assessment/teach-to-the-test
mentality. You don't have to study the 2010 IBM survey of prominent
American CEOs to know that the number one skill business wants is
students who can think creatively. To meet the demand of new
courses, programs, and curricula, the authors have developed a
200-page "textbook" suitable for secondary or higher education
courses that are jumping on this bandwagon. Introduction to Applied
Creative Thinking, as the title suggests, focuses not on just
developing the skills necessary for creative thinking, but on
having students apply those skills; after all, true creative
thinking demands making something that is both novel and useful.
Such a book may also be used successfully by professional
developers in business and education. For this book, Hal Blythe and
Charlie Sweet are joined in authorship by Rusty Carpenter. He not
only directs Eastern Kentucky University's Noel Studio for Academic
Creativity but has co-edited a book on that subject, Higher
Education, Emerging Technologies, and Community Partnerships (2011)
and the forthcoming Cases on Higher Education Spaces (2012).
Introduction to Applied Creative Thinking is student-friendly.
Every chapter is laced with exercises, assignments, summaries, and
generative spaces. Order copies now or contact the publisher for
further information.
Seldom do readers have an opportunity to see inside the worlds of
other writers. This makes "It Works for Me: Becoming a Publishing
Scholar/Researcher" very special. The contributors to this book are
inviting us to visit their private worlds. Before you begin
exploring their worlds, think about your own world of scholarship,
and sort out the topics that you find the most exciting. This
reflection will prepare you to do more than visit these other
worlds; once inside each world, you want to immediately look around
and take something back with you. Knowing your passions in advance
will enable you to capture those ideas that connect to your own
world.
The authors' purpose in this book remains the same as that of their
first-to provide "a collection of practical tips drawn from
real-life experiences." However, their sources have expanded. In
the first book they drew from only Kentucky institutions of higher
learning, but in this latest collection they present advice from
across the country. Thanks should go to all the contributors,
especially the attendees of the Lilly Conference on College
Teaching, for submitting such a wide scope and high quality of
tips.
It Works For Me, Online is designed primarily to aid instructors in
two major types of classes: fully online and web-enhanced/hybrid
courses. Those who teach fully online classes will find tips on
such things as tricks you can use with synchronous chats, how to
use blogging in your classroom to replace traditional chat-rooms
(talk about your superannuation), and even ways of adapting
Blackboard to meet administrative needs. Those who prefer web
enhancements to the traditional classroom will find advice to
navigate between the virtual and real world. And, truthfully, we
are hopeful that even dyed-in-the-wool, card-carrying Luddites will
skim through these pages and realize it is possible for old dogs to
learn new tricks (we and many of our contributors are either
retiring or nearing retirement, yet found the brave new world of
technology as exciting as we did our Erector Sets as kids or
learning to beat our own kids at Pac-Man). Use It Works For Me,
Online both as a handy desk companion filled with practical
strategies and as a springboard for generating your own strategies
for making your classes as effective as possible. Like the first
two books in this series, It Works For Me and It Works For Me, Too,
this handbook runs the gamut from short to long pieces, from very
course-specific suggestions to general pieces, from some
theoretical applications to down-to-earth tactics. But the
following tips share one important common characteristic-they all
work.
|
|