Guiding Creative Action: Sidney of Interdisciplinary

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GUIDING CREATIVE ACTION

Sidney J. Parnes

Professor and Director of Interdisciplinary


Center for Creative Studies
Buffalo State University College
Introduction
This article is presented in two sections. Section A will attempt to
provide you with an experiential understanding of the nature and
possible use with gifted youngsters of the Guide to Creative Action
prepared by myself and my colleagues, Ruth B. Noller and Angelo
M. Biondi. (Scribner’s, 1977).’ If you are turned on by the ex-
perience, as many people are, you will almost certainly want to ex-
pose your gifted charges to this kind of thinking. Section B of the ar-
ticle will give you an introduction to this use of the Guide.

In the eventuality that you are left confused or uncertain by the


experience in Section A, the guidelines in Section B will offer fur-
ther explanation of the rationale for what you experienced, and will
explain in greater detail how teachers and parents of the gifted can
use the Guide and its companion Creative Actionbook in helping to

fully develop the creative potential of their charges. The article


draws or adapts from selected explanatory information in the
Guide, as well as Correlated Session 15C, entitled, &dquo;Putting It All
Together.&dquo; That particular session, as explained further below, sam-
ples small bits of the extensive exercises of the Guide and Ac-
tionbook so as to provide one kind of an experiential mosaic of the
processes dealt with in our program. You might later like to test out
the impact of these creative processes with your youngsters in a
similar or modified way. you might even direct the very general ap-
proach used in Section A into a particular subject-matter area.
Students have reported significant transfer of our general creative
problem-solvingprocesses to all academic disciplines,--from English
to Mathematics, from the sciences to Social Studies. Furthermore,
faculty in these areas report the same effects, supporting the
statistical findings of our research in a more generally-
understandable and impressive way. Two examples of faculty ob-
servations, one from mathematics and the other from social studies
are illustrative:

Mathematics: &dquo;The students who were taking Creative Studies


460
seemed to do better on the examination in the sense that they ap-

parently could analyze the questions, some of which were word


problems and some of which were purely geometrical. Regardless of
the type of questions, they seemed to be better able to analyze what
was given, what had to be found, and were then enabled to work

better from that. Not only were they better able to define the
problem but they were more critical, too; where you gave them too
much information, most of them spotted that. Obviously, you are
teaching them to analyze things in ways that they have not been
taught in other fields or other subjects.&dquo;
Social Studies: &dquo;The first lesson plan I graded in my methods
course was written by Karen and it was a very
creative job. I thought that if the paper was typical, I could have a
marvelous time with the class. Unfortunately it wasn’t a typical
paper, and Karen went on to distinguish herself as one of the best
students I had. This year I taught Diane in methods
and noticed the same extraordinary creativity that Karen had.
Karen and Diane attribute their achievements to your class. They
say that you gave them confidence in their ideas and convinced
them to generate many ideas in response to a problem. The results
are very salient.&dquo;

’ T1u> malerial in Secti(Jn A will appear in a f(Jrthc(Jminp t~nnk, New Ways of Grnwth, edited by
Herbert and Roberta Otto.

SECTIO N A - AN EXPERIENCE IN
CREATIVE PROBLEM-SOLVING
Introduction. In this section of the article, you yourself will have
an opportunity to experience how your youngster can &dquo;turn on&dquo; their
creative processes in a very deliberate manner, following a rationale
that has been developed in our research and development since
1949. You will be in charge; I will merely offer stimuli thay may in-
crease the probability of your deriving some &dquo;aha’s&dquo; from the exer-
cise. Before we embark on the experience, let me first summarize the
basic rationale for it, starting by what I mean by the &dquo;aha’s&dquo; we are
seeking; however, if you are &dquo;chafing at the bit&dquo; to get started, turn
directly to &dquo;Preparation.&dquo;
Let us start with the premise that the essence of creativity is the
fundamental notion of the &dquo;aha&dquo;--meaning the fresh and relevant
association of thoughts, facts, ideas, etc., into a new configuration,--
461
one which pleases, which has meaning beyond the sum of the parts.
Let us assume that the new connection, association, relationship
that you make is harmonious, relevant, valuable, satisfying,
pleasing, etc., to you. It might be something as simple as moving the
body or the parts of the body in a spontaneous new way, in response
to a sound or rhythm that you hear. The &dquo;aha&dquo; may be implicit in
even such a momentary, fleeting relationship of elements as in that
little spontaneous dance routine that so many of us have ex-
perienced.
The typical &dquo;aha&dquo; experience may be considered to be the result
of the new connection of elements residing inside our mind and/or
within our preceptual field. This new and relevant connection or
new and harmonious connection often &dquo;just happens,&dquo; accidentally
or serendipitously. In earlier days, it was frequently thought that
this was the only way it could happen--accidentally--i.e., one had to
just wait and let it happen, like the famous &dquo;Eureka!&dquo; of Ar-
chimedes in the bathtub. However, what research of the last 25
years has made increasingly clear, is that there are many processes
a person can use to help increase the likelihood that the chance con-

nection will take place. Notice that I do not say processes that will
make the oonnection happen, but only that will increase the
likelihood or probability of it occurring.

If I to say to you that one-half of eight is zero, you might


were

scoff, shrug, be
puzzled, or react in a number of ways. Think about it
for a moment. If you happened to smile to yourself or &dquo;light up&dquo; in-
side just a little, it might have been because you experienced a bit of
an &dquo;aha.&dquo; You may have experienced a mild &dquo;eureka&dquo; similar in

type, but not in intensity, to Archimedes’ &dquo;aha&dquo; in the classic


bathtub episode or to Sir Isaac Newton’s in the classic instance of
his insight into the law of gravity when the apple fell on his head.
You may have structured &dquo;one-half of eight&dquo; in your mind to
become &dquo;one-half of 8,&dquo; and then &dquo;one-half of -3,’ and may have then
suddenly seen &dquo;one-half of eight&dquo; to be &dquo;0&dquo; the top or bottom half
--

--
or &dquo;zero.&dquo; Of course, you might then also see it as something else,

depending on how you view or interpret &dquo;one-half of eight&dquo; in your


~nin d® -

Notice that the word AHA reads the same backwards and for-
wards. Forward may suggest outward-oriented &dquo;ahas&dquo; on the en-
vironment --
the &dquo;world&dquo;; backward may be thoght of as inward
&dquo;ahas&dquo; on ourselves. It is here that our courses and institutes may
462
represent the synergistic synthesis of the inward-looking (often
called &dquo;affective&dquo;) programs like sensitivity training, awareness
development, meditation, etc., and the outward-looking (often
called &dquo;cognitive&dquo;) programs like problem-solving, decision making,
etc. Through the &dquo;inward-looking&dquo; processes we may better be able
to sense problems or challenges --
to become more aware.inour lives;
the &dquo;outward-looking&dquo; processes may help us to cope with these
problems or challenges we uncover.

The problem-solving process per se is not substantially different


in our programs in terms of its steps or logical processes
--
from --

those of John Dewey, Graham Wallas, or any of the well-known


problem-solving models, historic or modern. However, the plus

ingredient that Alex Osborn introduced was the deliberate and

exaggerated use of the imagination; this provided a powerful force


when effectively harnessed within a total problem-solving model.

One might view the deliberate development of creative behavior


in our programs as an exaggerated push for change: we &dquo;stretch&dquo;

people beyond their normal limits in an oscillating process of


imagining and judging, during all stages of problem-solving in piling
up facts, in defining viewpoints of the problem, in generating ideas,
in recognizing criteria, for evaluation, and in finding ways of in-
suring the successful implementation of ideas. Thus we provide
practice in intensive stretching between conceptions and actions in
this oscillating process. The result of this intensive practice is in-
creased ability to take more factors into consideration, in a given
time, in making decisions. This is what I will ask you to attempt in
the experience I will provide, and that you can then do for your own
youngsters.

Thus the problem-solving process becomes one of opening up the


self to the fullest possible awareness of the storehouse of energy and
resources within oneself in one’s vast mental library of life ex-
--

perience --
as well as in the vast data of the external world.
Problem-solving becomes the task of synergizing the greatest num-
ber of inter-connections and interrelationships among these vast
resources, including the layer-upon-layer of primary information
stored in our brain cells from birth and even from embryonic states.
One searches for the kinds of synergistic connections that one can
make toward the solution of one’s problems, goals, wishes,
aspirations, hopes and dreams for oneself or -others in any subject
area or endeavor.
463
experience I provide on the following pages, I will attempt
In the
to capsulize the kind of interactive programming we have created
between creative problem-solving, synectics, sensitivity, art, fantasy,
meditation, body awareness, etc., in one session that will ex-
perientially~ provide you with a brief montage of what our programs
are designed to accomplish. You will probably need at least an hour
for the experience to have significant meaning for you. It will be
your personal experiment with the processes we suggest in your at-
tempt to both cognitively and affectively deal with real concerns you
may have.

Preparation
In getting ready for the experience, please gather several diverse
odors. One might be a plant, another a spice, another a chemical,
another a perfume. If you can get someone else to provide these
odors for you in unlabeled containers or plastic bags, in such a man-
ner that you cannot identify the items by sight, this would be

preferable. Ideally, when I call for their use, you should not know
what the item is that you are smelling. You will also need a pen,
several sheets of paper, and a source of music, ideally music with a
&dquo;descriptive&dquo; quality that will tend to stir you in some way.

The experience will serve as an example of one of infinite &dquo;com-


positions&dquo; that might be conceived by putting the pieces of the
problem-solving process together in new and different
arrangements, just as an infinite number of musical compositions
can be generated by rearranging the notes within various
frameworks. As I provide the stimuli for your thoughts, allow your-
self to be; allow your thoughts to flow freely as each stimulus is
presented, without analyzing or evaluating them in any way other
than as the stimulus of the particular moment suggests.

If your time is limited to one hour, then pace yourself quite


rapidly a minute or so only on each response. I will present many
--

diverse stimuli in an attempt to increase the probability of a greater


number and intensity of personal &dquo;aha’s,&dquo;or new connections. If you
should happen to solve a problem ahead of my suggestions, it might
be advisable not to dwell on it, but rather to record it and then move
ahead to another challenge, continuing to follow the stimuli as
provided. Also, if you find after getting started that you are making
progress or accomplishing something important but that my stimuli
are getting in your way, go right on without me. Remember that the

objective is to accomplish something valuable to you. My stimuli are


464
only designed to help increase the likelihood that this will happen.
Do not read ahead before completing each instruction, unless you
are only interested in understanding what I am doing rather than

experiencing your creative processes. If you should decide to read


only and not to write as suggested, I urge you at least to think your
responses to each instruction before reading on.

Lastly, please don’t try to figure out why I am providing a par-


ticular stimulus as you respond to it. Just respond, spontaneously;
then go back later and analyze, if you like, why the items were
provided in the way they were. But respond to each first as you
would to a musical composition. You might later like to analyze the
arrangement of notes, the purposes the composer had in mind, etc.
But you probably wouldn’t want to do that kind of thinking as you
were listening to the music for pure enjoyment. So just experience
the process as it is laid out in this particular composition. If you are
interested enough for detailed theory and explanations, you will
find that elsewhere in my writings.

Remember, also, that this exercise is often given at the end of a


creative studies course or institute, after intensive practice in
processes designed to increase the flow of ideas. So don’t be
frustrated if you find the going slow or arduous. Just move along
from item to item, trying always to allow your thoughts to flow
wherever they take you in response to my stimuli. And if something
is not clear to you, just take it for whatever sense it makes to you at
that moment; respond to that without worrying &dquo;if you are doing it
right&dquo; Good luck in your adventure!
The Experience
A. Objective- Finding
1. List any thoughts youhave in mind: challenges or problems you
would like to solve; goals, objectives, aspirations you have; ideas
you would like to use, etc. These may refer to work, home, school or
social life, If ideas or solutions pop into mind, jot them down. Use
the following as a check-list to spur your thoughts:
a. What would you like to do, have, accomplish?

b. What do you wish would happen?


c. What would you like to do better?
d. What do you wish you had more time for? more money for?
etc.?
e. What more would you like to get out of life?
f. What are your unfilled goals?
465
g. What angered you recently?
h. What makes you tense, anxious?
i. What misunderstandings did you have?
j. What have you complained about?
k. With whom would you like to get along better?
1. What changes for the worse do you sense in attitudes of
others?
m. What would you like to get others to do?
n. What changeswill you have to introduce?
o. What takes too long?

p. What is wasted?
q. What is too complicated?
r. What &dquo;bottlenecks&dquo; exist?
s. In what ways are you inefficient?
t. What wears you out?
u. What would you like to organize better?

2. List six or more roles you play in your life (example: daughter,
politician, student, etc.)
3. List more thoughts that now pop to mind re your challenges,
problems, goals, etc.
4. Think of a non-verbal message which you migat give to someone
you know. How might it be done? How might it feel as it is done?

5. Add more thoughts to the list you were making.


6. Choose (from your list) one problem, challenge, or idea you
would most like to do something about

B. Fact-pindling
1. List all you know about the problem, challenge, or idea chosen.

2. Record as much as you can in an attempt to produce a clear


verbal picture of what is happening and/or what is not happening
with regard to the chosen problem, challenge or idea. Answer the
following questions: Who is and who is not concerned? What is or is
not happening? When does this occur, and when doesn’t it occur?
Where does and does not this occur? Why does it happen? How does
it happen?

3. Now introduces whatever emotions and feelings come forth to


466
create an &dquo;interpretive painting&dquo; from the picture. Write more

thoughts as they occur.

4. Smell deeply from the packages you assembled earlier. Deal


with them slowly, reflecting, ruminating, as you breathe in the
aroma from each one. Draw associations from these odors; do not

attempt to identify the odors, but simply record what thoughts or


memories the odors &dquo;trigger.&dquo; The sense of smell is one of the most
powerful triggers to awakening- memories.
5. Connect to your earlier facts and interpretations whatever you
can from the thoughts you just recorded.

6. List yourstrength4 without being modest. Brag a little, about all


aspects of yourself, your personality, your abilities, etc., that are
positive forces for you.

7. Now add new thoughts that may have surfaced--to the facts you
were listing.
8. Look around you; taste, touch, listen, smell--then add more
thoughts that are triggered from your memory bank facts which --

are related but which you may have forgotten.

C. l~mblem-~ind ° ~ (
1. List as many questions as possible surrounding the situation you
described. Try to start the questions with the words, &dquo;What
ways might I ....&dquo; --
&dquo;What might I do to ....&dquo; If &dquo;Should I&dquo; or
&dquo;Do I&dquo; questions come to mind, change them to &dquo;What ways
might I decide ....&dquo; or &dquo;What ways might I find out ....&dquo; etc.
2. Stop a moment and ask, &dquo;What is the real problem?&dquo; the --

essence of it? &dquo;What is my basic objective?&dquo; &dquo;What do I want to


accomplish here?&dquo; Ask &dquo;Why&dquo; of each question you have listed.
(&dquo;Why do I want to do this?&dquo;) As a result of these questions you
ask yourself, try to restate and broaden your problem. For
example, if you asked &dquo;Why&dquo; of the problem, &dquo;How might I
catch the mouse?&dquo; it might lead to the restatement, &dquo;How might
I get rid of the mouse?&dquo; Try, similarly, to find problem
statements (questions) that allow you the largest number of
possible approaches. Try paraphrasing, changing the verbs in
467
your statements, etc. Keep listing as many additional &dquo;What
ways might I&dquo; questions as you can about the situation.

3. Now think of a &dquo;peak&dquo; experience in your life. Close your eyes,


and relive that experience in your imagination.
4. List additional &dquo;What ways might I ....?&dquo; questions suggested by
the peak experience you visualized.

5. Break down some of the above questions into sub-problems, ad- --

ditional aspects, parts, stages, operations, etc., in order to ob- --

tain more &dquo;In what ways might I ....&dquo; questions.

6. Draw a personal symbol to represent yourself.

7. Now write additional &dquo;What ways might I ....?&dquo; questions, con-


necting aspects of the symbol to the situation you are defining.

8. Select the &dquo;What ways might I ...?&dquo; question which looks most
promising or most interesting for the moment.

D. Idea-Finding
1. Deferring judgment as fully as you can and allowing your ideas to
flow freely - without any evaluation at the moment list as --

~ many ideas as you can as leads to attacking the problem or


F challenge you just chose.

2. Now magnify, rearrange, etc., in seeking additional ideas. Ask


yourself what would happen if you made it bigger, smaller,
reversed elements or positions, etc. As you imagine these
changes, do not evaulate the ideas that occur. Just continue to
jot them down.
3. Look for strange analogies to situations you are working on, in
searching for additional ideas. (Example: if the situation has to
do with the home, think of a &dquo;circus&dquo; or a &dquo;battleship&dquo; and try
to draw relationships from another &dquo;world.&dquo;)
4. Play some music that has a &dquo;descriptive&dquo; quality which will tend
to stir some
response from you. As you listen to it, concentrate
on the music and forget about what you have been writing. This

will allow you to &dquo;incubate&dquo; on the problem. Move with the


468
music --
physically move in a new way. Make new &dquo;physical
connections,&dquo; if only with your head, fingers, toes, etc.

5. As the music concludes, write more ideas that now come to mind.

6. Close your eyes, and think of your own &dquo;personal paradise.&dquo;


7. Write more ideas, connecting aspects of your personal paradise
with the problem you are working on.

8. Try to &dquo;force&dquo;
relationships with what you see, feel, hear, smell,
taste, in your present environment - triggering and listing ad-
ditional ideas.

9. Choose from your total list the ideas which look most promising,
interesting, exciting, etc., and/or which you like best to use at
this time. The choice may be totally a &dquo;gut-level&dquo; one, even if
you have no awareness of how the idea can be implemented.

NOTE: If your original problem statement was quite broad, you


may find that your ideas listed are really &dquo;sub-problems.&dquo; For
example, consider the problem &dquo;in what ways might I become a
more effective person?&dquo; You might list ideas such as &dquo;become a
more outgoing person,&dquo; &dquo;find new interests,&dquo; etc. In cases like
this you could choose one of these &dquo;approaches&dquo; at a time, and
then probe for more specific ideas (&dquo;In what ways might I find
-

new interests,&dquo; etc.) -

E. Solution.Finding ..
z
1. List evaluative criteria: ways to decide how &dquo;good&dquo; or &dquo;bad&dquo; the
idea is; elements which might make it fail, or those which mightt
make it better; who and what might be affected; etc.

2. In your imagination, be something in the situation other than


yourself; become another person, thing, animal, etc., imagining
fully, empathizing; then add additional criteria from the new
connections that you may have made.

3. Glance over the criteria you have listed, and bring them to the
fore-front of your awareness.

469
F. Accep ta nce-Fanding
1. Mentally apply the criteria to the ideas your chose earlier,
deciding upon the best idea or combination of best ideas. If you
have selected a &dquo;gut-level&dquo; idea which doesn’t generally meet
the criteria, &dquo;tailor&dquo; it to fit the criteria--or fantasize it working,
then adapt the fantasy to reality by modifying it as necessary.

2. Produce a free flow of ideas for gaining acceptance and putting


your idea to use ideas which make new connections toward
--

aiding in implementation, insuring success, improving the


original idea, showing its advantages, gaining enthusiasm of
yourself or others, overcoming objections, anticipating possible
misconception, etc.

3. Close your eyes and concentrate on physically relaxing yourself


from the top of your head to the tips of your toes, thus providing
another moment of &dquo;incubation.&dquo; You may want to tense your
muscles as you explore which ones need to be more relaxed.
Tense them; then relax them fully.

4. Now list additional ways of getting your idea to work --


but with
an emphasis on specifics, and those which are verifiable or
demonstrable. For example, change &dquo;cut down on smoking,&dquo; to

~
~
&dquo;smoke one cigarette less each succeeding day until I’ve stopped
entirely.&dquo; The checklist, &dquo;who, what, when, where, why, how,&dquo;
may again help at this point (Who might help? Who else? What
resources might I use? What special times? Occasions? Places?
etc.?)
5. Now spell out in writing a final plan for the moment, listing as
many specifics as possible, including first steps you will take,
schedule, follow-u.ps, etc.

6. Fantasize putting this plan into action, as you would like to see it
happan; visualize every detail experience in your imagination
--

every expression, feeling, reaction, etc.

7. Now bring into the &dquo;picture&dquo; an unexpected development; then,


using your imagination, &dquo;watch&dquo; the consequences.

8. Add further ideas to the plan in order to take into account what
you just &dquo;saw&dquo;, in order to further insure the effectiveness of
your plan. 470
9. Now visualize and list new challenges which might result from
implementing the plan.
10. As a final step for now, review in your mind any new connections
which you have made as a result of the new challenges you just
listed. Adapt the details of your plan accordingly. Then &dquo;in-
cubate&dquo; further on the plan and continue extending your effort
toward meeting the challenges which you have just been con,
sidering, as you put your plan into action --
remembering
always that &dquo;nothing is final!&dquo;

Summ.dry. Hopefully you were able to gain some new insights into
the conoern you chose to deal with. And, hopefully, you can un-
derstand better what the Guide to Creative Action and Creative Ac-
tionbook are all about. As a summary of where to find further
development of the specific processes you experienced, the following
may be useful to you. It shows specific sessions where we par-
ticularly emphasize certain abilities.

The ability to sense problems - See Unit 1, Session 1.


z
The ability to define problems - See Unit 2, Session 2.
The ability to defer judgment and break away from habit-bound
thinking - See Unit 3, Session 3.
The ability to see new relationships - See Unit 4, Session 4 and/or
Unit 13, Session 13.
The ability to evaluate in full light of the consequences of one’s
actions - See Unit 5, Session 5 and Unit 11, Session 11, Part 2.
The ability to implement ideas - See Unit 6, Session 6.
The ability to observe carefully and discover the facts - See Unit
8, Session 8.
The ability to use checklists to discover new ideas - See Unit 10,
Session 10.
The ability to refine strange ideas into useful ones - See Unit 11,
Session 11, Part 1.
The ability to use a methodical approach to problem-solving - See
Units 7, 9, 12, 14 and 15 of Sessions 7, 9, 12, 14 & 15, respec-
tively.
Section B will now give you more understanding about the material
and how you might use it most effectively.

471
Section B - The Instructional Materials
Guide to Creative Action provides the most pertinent learning and
instructional guides, as well as reference materials, that have
emanated from a quarter century of research and development in
the stimulation of creative behavior at State University of New York
in cooperation with the Creative Educaton Foundation. The book
includes:

(1) detailed explanations of 225 hours of instruction


(2) guides to several hundred practice exercises
(3) some twenty-five of the most significant articles on the

development of creative behavior


(4) information on several hundred methods and programs for
stimulating creative behavior
(5) an annotated listing of 175 films on the subject
(6) information on scores of tests of creative ability
(7) over 100 questions and topics for research
(8) a bibliography of almost 2,000 books on creativity in the past
twenty-five
j years.

Indexed for easy reference, this volume is a convenient mini-


encyclopedia of creativity-development, a combined &dquo;source book
and guide&dquo; for the deliberate cultivation of creative behavior. In-
troductory sections attempt to relate the contents of the volume to
the burgeoning literature, research, and developmental efforts in the
subject of creativity. Headnotes accompanying readings in Part 3
allow teachers and students, as well as general readers, to select
pertinent materials.
The Guide and Actionbook may also serve as a home-study
program or as a review source for students. Detailed explanations of
the various uses of the book are provided at the beginning of its Part
2.

The material is organized so that the instructor can draw all


background material, examples, and exercises directly from the
Guide and its companion, the Creative Actionbook. The Actionbook
is designed to be used in the creative problem-solving programs
outlined in the Guide. It contains classroom or self-study exercises
and materials that are explained in the Guide and is designed to be
used in conjunction with the latter--not alone.

472
Pad of the Guide contains four chapters designed to provide
background understanding of the philosophical, psychological, and
sociological bases for a program for deliberate development of
creative behavior. (If you already have this background, you may
move right on to Part 2 of the book.) The first chapter deals with an
overall orientation to our program. Chapter 2 provides a fuller
perspective of the program within the realm of developing human
potential. In Chapter 3, a more detailed rationale is provided for
programs designed to deliberately cultivate creative behavior. Chap-
ter 4 provides a summary of research on our developing program. It
is drawn from various research reports over the years of scientific
evaluation of the program.

The thesis presented is that a prime &dquo;medium&dquo; for instruction is


the imagination of the individual. It is commonly accepted that any
instructional medium must first engage the student and capture his
or her attention. What could possibly capture one’s attention faster
or more completely than personal realization of the power to
discover--to create knowledge. Thus each has a &dquo;built-in-medium&dquo;
for the teacher or facilitator to use-- imagination, the nucleus of the
student’s mental energy.

This self-fulfilling approach does not minimize the need for sub-
~i
ject matter. We can give individuals the opportunity to grow
creatively within their milieu, rather than only outside it. The
mastery of subject matter can be provided concurrently with op-
portunity and exercise for creativity development< The teacher can
learn to utilize more fully the medium of the student’s imagination.
Educators have too frequently been accustomed to pouring in from
without, rather than drawing out from within, as the word
&dquo;educate&dquo; literally means. We can cultivate talent in the way soil
nurtures a seed. It provides for the growth of the seed; it does not
tell the seed what to become.

Underlying all of our program’s approaches is the basic objective


of getting the student to interrelate more freely and effectively both
what she or he already knows and what she or he acquires through
the senses, so as to be able to find relevance where it was not seen
before. Hundreds of examples and exercises designed to help toward
this end are suggested in Part 2 of the Guide as part of the program
presented therein.

473
Many educators have revised the material to suit their own pur-
poses more directly. This is encouraged, and the material is
designed to lend itself to that end. Paul Torrance reports that the
program or its modifications have been among the most popular ap-
proaches used in elementary and high school attempts to teach
children to think creatively. Moreover, he points out that twenty of
twenty-two scientific studies using the program or modifications of
it have resulted in successes - the highest percentage of success for
any of the more popular programs and methods he’studied. (The full
reference for the study is: Torrance, E. P. &dquo;Can we teach children to
think creatively?&dquo; Joumal of Creative Behavior, 1972, 6(2), 114-
143.)

Part 2 of the Guide provides the actual detailed instructional


program for cultivating creative behavior. Teachers are urged to
read the introductory pages to Part 2, which provides.important in-
formation on use of the instructional materials. The following
headings will provide a notion of the kind of detailed explanations
offered for helping teachers apply the material more effectively:
using unit outlines; alternation between individual, team, and group
involvement; peer-tutoring; sessions emphasizing awareness-
development ; film sessions; modifications; timing of sessions;
flexible program schedules; expansion or shortening of sessions;
progress-testing exercises; guests as resources; room arrangements,
materials and supplies; grading plans and evaluation; readings;
outside projects; alternate ways of using program materials (in
creativity courses, for training of specific mental abilities and in
other subjects); and references for further study.

Part 3: The authors of the readings presented in Part 3 need little


introduction to the serious reader concerned with creativity and
problem-solving. They will be recognized as some of the leading op-
ponents of the growing movement that focuses on the nature, nur-
ture and application of human creativity.

The thirteen articles following the opening one by J. P. Guilford


are a response to his statement that &dquo;an informed people, with skills
in using this information, is a creative, problem-solving people.&dquo;
They relate to cognitive creative problem-solving methods and
programs available to users who wish to push for deliberate
solutions to problems. J. H. McPherson’s selection puts them into
perspective. He points out that the problem-solving method(s) selec-
ted will be contingent upon (1) the nature of the problem to be
474
solved, and (2) the unique nature of the individual(s) attempting the
solution. Appendix A in the book augments McPherson’s thrust with
an extensive, representative listing of programs and procedures

(with references for each) used in developing problem-solving ef-


fectiveness.

Lewis Walkup was impressed by the way in which creative in-


dividuals seemed to have discovered and then intensely developed
the ability to visualize mentally in the areas in which they were
creative. He further observed that creative outcome seemed to
depend largely upon the degree the mental images could be
manipulated and the skills by which the individual could sense the
properties of the new combinations of things. Thus articles 15-18
deal with visualization, the second important emphasis in this sec-
tion.

The third emphasis in Part 3, highlights the Human Potential


Development Movement and its concern with the fact that the nor-
mal productive person seems to be functioning at approximately 10
percent of his or her capacity. Herbert Otto’s article traces the
development of 300 growth centers around the nation beginning
with the 1962 Esalen Institute at Big Sur. The centers serve to bring
to popular awareness the many kinds of human-growth programs
described in articles 19-22.

The conscious integration of the human-development principles


with creative-development programs has generated impactful ad-
vanes toward greater human fulfillment. When Alex Osborn was
first channeling his efforts toward helping individuals create ideas,
he noted that the techniques had a very positive effect on individual
personalities. It seemed that as individuals became increasingly
aware of their creative potential, they achieved a new level of con-
fidenae which enabled them to cope more adequately.

The two final articles in Part 2 focus on highly challenging


programs geared to assist the individuals to deepen contact with
their greater potential as they prepare to cope with the
geometrically expanding problems of today’s life. Because of their
current embryonic stage of development, readers may find the
material contained here less immediately applicable.

475
The articles in Part 3 relate to and extend or reinforce the various
sessions of the program. Titles and brief headnotes provide for quick
selection of appropriate readings to amplify particular sessions.

Appendices A-F provide the information mentioned earlier on

related methods and programs, films, tests, research questions, and


bibliography.

Self-study explanation. Appendix G provides further detailed


session-guides for teachers using the material for the first time, as
well as a self-study explanation for students using it outside of class.
Full explanation is provided for the student who may be working
through the material alone. It has been subjected to extensive
programming research as described on pages 23 and 24 of the Guide.
&dquo;The results finally demonstrated that the revised material could be
adequately understood and successfully followed by students
working alone.&dquo;
In the introduction to Appendix G, suggestions are provided for
making the self-study approach more palatable and effective by
such patterns as team study. &dquo;Study with someone you like so that
the experience is an enjoyable one. Some students have made
pleasant study-dated out of the session assignments. It might be a
good idea to form small student ’clubs’ for working on the material.&dquo;
Suggestions are offered for making such team study most effective.

Age Levels. Although the material was formally tested with


average college-bound high-school seniors, it should certainly be
useable as is by gifted high-school or even junior-high students.
Many teachers have already used it in this way, and many more
have adapted it successfully at lower levels, all the way down to the
primary grades; parents have done likewise in many differentandef-
fective ways with youngsters of all ages.

If you become involved with these creative problem-solving


processes and apply deliberate creative effort on your part toward
stimulating deliberate creative thinking on the part of your
youngsters, you may derive new satisfaction from your respon-
sibilities. You may experience the delight that one teacher enjoyed
when a youngster exclaimed, with eyes twinkling, &dquo;I’ve been
thanking!’ .

476

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