Elementary students, creativity, and technology


Autoria(s): Proctor, Romina; Burnett, Paul C.
Data(s)

27/08/2002

Resumo

This article reports on the impact on student personal creativity of a longitudinal study that had as its major goal the creation of a unique intervention program for elementary students. The intervention was based on the National Profile and Statement (Curriculum Corporation, 1994a, 1994b) for the curriculum area of technology. The intervention program comprised thematically based units of work that integrated all eight Australian Key Learning Areas (KLA). A pretest/posttest control group design investigation (Campbell & Stanley, 1963) was undertaken with 580 students from 7 schools and 24 class groups that were randomly divided into 3 treatment groups. One group (10 classes) formed the control group. Another 7 classes received the year-long intervention program, while the remaining 7 classes received the intervention, but with the added seamless integration of their available classroom computer technologies. The effect of the intervention on the personal creativity characteristics of the students involved in the study was assessed using the Creativity Checklist, an instrument that was developed during the study. The results suggest that the purposeful integration of computer technology with the intervention program positively affects the personal creativity characteristics of students.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/26846/

Publicador

Haworth Press

Relação

DOI:10.1300/J025v19n01_04

Proctor, Romina & Burnett, Paul C. (2002) Elementary students, creativity, and technology. Computers in the Schools, 19(1), pp. 33-48.

Direitos

Copyright 2002 Haworth Press

Fonte

Division of Research and Commercialisation

Palavras-Chave #Creativity #Intelligence #Computers #Elementary #Students
Tipo

Journal Article