Guiding Creative Action: Sidney of Interdisciplinary
Guiding Creative Action: Sidney of Interdisciplinary
Guiding Creative Action: Sidney of Interdisciplinary
Sidney J. Parnes
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.
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
--
or &dquo;zero.&dquo; Of course, you might then also see it as something else,
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.
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.
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?
B. Fact-pindling
1. List all you know about the problem, challenge, or idea chosen.
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 --
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 --
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 --
5. As the music concludes, write more ideas that now come to mind.
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.
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.
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.
~
~
&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
--
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.
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:
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.
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.
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.)
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.
476