955 resultados para Creative Thinking
Resumo:
The Learning by Design Workshop Program 2010, a part of the Queensland Government Unlimited: Designing for the Asia Pacific Event Program, was a one-day professional development design thinking workshop run on October 9, 2011 at The Edge, State Library of Queensland for self-selected public and private secondary school teachers from the subject areas of Visual Art, Graphics and Industrial Technology and Design. Participants were drawn from a database of Brisbane and regional Queensland schools from the goDesign and Living City Workshop Programs. It aimed to generate leadership within schools for design-led education and creative thinking and give teachers a rare opportunity to work with professional designers to generate future strategies for design-based learning. Teachers were introduced to the concept of design thinking in education by international keynote speakers CJ Lim (Studio 8 Architects) and Jeb Brugmann (The Next Practice), national speaker Oliver Freeman (NevilleFreeman Agency) and three Queensland speakers, Alexander Loterztain, David Williams and Keith Holledge. Inspired by the Unlimited showcase exhibition Make Change: Design Thinking in Action and ‘Idea Starters’/teaching resources provided, teachers worked with a professional designer (from a discipline of architecture, interior design, industrial design, urban design, graphic design or landscape architecture) in ten random teams, to generate optimistic ideas for the Ideal City of tomorrow, each considering a theme – Food, Water, Transport, Ageing, Growth, Employment, Shelter, Health, Education and Energy. They then discussed how this process could be best activated and expanded on to build interest and knowledge in design thinking in the classroom. Assisted by illustrators, the teams prepared a visual presentation of their ideas and process from art materials provided. The workshop culminated in a video-taped interactive design charette to the larger group, which is intended to be utilised as a toolkit and praxis for teachers as part of the State Library of Queensland Design Minds Website Project.
Resumo:
The Generation Workshop Program 2010, a part of the Queensland Government Unlimited: Designing for the Asia Pacific Event Program, consisted of two one-day intensive design thinking workshops run on October 7-8, 2011 at The Edge, State Library of Queensland, for 100 senior secondary students and 20 secondary teachers self-selected from the subject areas of Visual Art, Graphics and Industrial Technology and Design. Participants were drawn from a database of Brisbane and regional Queensland private and public schools from the goDesign and Living City Workshop Programs. The workshop aimed to facilitate awareness in young people of the role of design in society and the value of design thinking skills in solving complex problems facing the Asia Pacific Region, and to inspire the generation of strategies for our future cities. It also aimed to encourage the collaboration of professional designers with secondary schools to inspire post-secondary pathways and idea generation for education. Inspired by international and national speakers Bunker Roy (Barefoot College) and Hael Kobayashi (Associate Producer on "Happy Feet" film for Australia's Animal Logic), the Unlimited showcase exhibition Make Change: Design Thinking in Action and ‘Idea Starters’/teaching resources provided, students worked with a teacher in ten random teams, to generate optimistic strategies for the Ideal City of tomorrow, each considering a theme – Food, Water, Transport, Ageing, Growth, Employment, Shelter, Health, Education and Energy. Each team of 6 was led by a professional designer (from the discipline of architecture, interior design, industrial design, urban design, graphic design or landscape architecture) who was a catalyst for driving the student creative thinking process. Assisted by illustrators, the teams prepared a visual presentation of their idea from art materials provided. The workshop culminated in a video-taped interactive design chatter to the larger group, which will be utilised as a toolkit and praxis for teachers as part of the State Library of Queensland Design Minds Project. Photos of student design work were published on the Unlimited website.
Resumo:
Purpose – This paper aims to outline the challenges and tasks involved in a organising and marketing a new venture from conception to sales. It presents an interesting situation with which readers can identify and apply knowledge and skills associated with entrepreneurship and marketing and link this with the key learning objectives of a new venture marketing study unit. Design/methodology/approach – The case is constructed around key principles of marketing and entrepreneurship linked to a description of a contemporary venture written from a participant observer perspective supplemented with knowledge from interviews and archival research. Findings – The case shows how effective a diligent, creative approach to developing and selling a new venture can be. It demonstrates that effective marketing requires more than rote adoption of basic principles – it requires creative thinking and enterprising adaption of relevant principles to address the specific and well defined objectives of the venture. Research limitations/implications – The case is not intended to prescribe a particular marketing method or process; rather it is meant to stimulate creativity in the use of marketing knowledge and skills. Practical implications – The case represents an effective resource for both formal and informal teaching and learning. It demonstrates the requirement for innovative and creative adoption of marketing concepts to fit the demands of a new venture. Originality/value – The case specifically addresses an identified need for learning resources and information tailored to the area of entrepreneurial new venture marketing.
Resumo:
Critical literacy (CL) has been the subject of much debate in the Australian public and education arenas since 2002. Recently, this debate has dissipated as literacy education agendas and attendant policies shift to embrace more hybrid models and approaches to the teaching of senior English. This paper/presentation reports on the views expressed by four teachers of senior English about critical literacy and it’s relevance to students who are from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds who are learning English while undertaking senior studies in high school. Teachers’ understandings of critical literacy are important, esp. given the emphasis on Critical and Creative Thinking and Literacy as two of the General Capabilities underpinning the Australian national curriculum. Using critical discourse analysis, data from four specialist ESL teachers in two different schools were analysed for the ways in which these teachers construct critical literacy. While all four teachers indicated significant commitment to critical literacy as an approach to English language teaching, the understandings they articulated varied from providing forms of access to powerful genres, to rationalist approaches to interrogating text, to a type of ‘critical-aesthetic’ analysis of text construction. Implications are also discussed.
Resumo:
This presentation tells the story of an initiative in middle schooling at Kelvin Grove State College that begins in the Art studios, but reaches out to other disciplines and approaches, and to community and industry partners. It is inspired by the potential of 'future thinking' to become a compelling focus in contemporary art and design. Ethically it espouses a simple premise": every student in our classrooms now has a stake in creating livable, democratic and creative futures. Every student has the potential to be an active force in making that future. "100 Futures Now" is a project that envisages creative and imaginative students working in collaboration with artists and designers to visualize amazing futures and communicate their vision through art and design. "100 Futures Now" is one in a series of innovative curriculum initiatives at Kelvin Grove State College designed to build sustainable practice in arts education with the support of partners in industry and universities and with resident artists and designers. The model blends elements of art and design methodology to focus on the critical and creative thinking skills prioritised in ACARA and 21st century curriculum. The organisers are developing a sustainable model for working with resident artists that goes beyond a single arts intervention or extension/enrichment experience. In this model artists and designers are collaborators in the design of learning experiences that support future programs. This model also looks to transfer the benefits of residencies to the wider school community (in this case to middle schooling curriculum) and to teachers in other curriculum areas, and not exclusively to the immediate target group. In "100 Futures Now", story-making is the engine that powers the creative process. For this reason the program uses a series of imaginative scenarios, including those of speculative fiction and science, as departure points for inquiry, and applies the methodologies of arts and design practice to explore and express student story telling and story making. The story-making responses of student teams will naturally be expressed multimodally through visual art, design artifacts, installation, performance and digital works. The project’s focus on narratives and its modes of communication (performance/installation) are inspired by the work of experimental contemporary design practices and the speculative scenarios of U.K. based designers Anthony Dunne and Fiona Raby. Thanks to the support of an Arts Queensland Artist-in -Residence grant in 2014, resident artists and designers who work with a diversity of ideas and approaches ranging over science, bio-ethics, biodiversity, behavior and ethics, ambient sound, urbanism, food, and wearable design, will work with middle school students as catalysts for deeper thinking and creative action. All these rich fields for future speculation will become triggers for team inquiry into the deeper connections between the past, the present, and future challenges such as climate, waste, energy, sustainability and resilience. These imagined futures will form the platform for a critical, sustainability/design futures approach that will involve questioning assumptions and empowering students as agents rather than consumers of change.
Resumo:
Migraine is a common neurological disorder classified by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as one of the top twenty most debilitating diseases in the developed world. Current therapies are only effective for a proportion of sufferers and new therapeutic targets are desperately needed to alleviate this burden. Recently the role of epigenetics in the development of many complex diseases including migraine has become an emerging topic. By understanding the importance of acetylation, methylation and other epigenetic modifications, it then follows that this modification process is a potential target to manipulate epigenetic status with the goal of treating disease. Bisulphite sequencing and methylated DNA immunoprecipitation have been used to demonstrate the presence of methylated cytosines in the human D-loop of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), proving that the mitochondrial genome is methylated. For the first time, it has been shown that there is a difference in mtDNA epigenetic status between healthy controls and those with disease, especially for neurodegenerative and age related conditions. Given co-morbidities with migraine and the suggestive link between mitochondrial dysfunction and the lowered threshold for triggering a migraine attack, mitochondrial methylation may be a new avenue to pursue. Creative thinking and new approaches are needed to solve complex problems and a systems biology approach, where multiple layers of information are integrated is becoming more important in complex disease modelling.
Resumo:
This paper presents an analysis of inquiry skills in the Australian Curriculum version 6. It juxtaposes the inquiry skills strands in the scope and sequence of Science, History, Geography,Economics and Business,and Civics and Citizenship with the Critical and Creative Thinking and Information and Communication Technology general capabilities. In doing so, it reveals the extent of inquiry skills embedded in the Australian Curriculum and identifies some misalignments and omissions.
Resumo:
In this chapter we consider how the iPad and selected applications such as Draw and Tell (Duck Duck Moose, 2013), Popplet (Notion Inc., 2013) and Puppet Pals (Polished Play LLC, 2013) can assist children in collaborative storying, retelling and sequencing story moments that can assist young children in their acquisition of oracy and their understanding of the world, both real and imagined, and their personal relationships. The data gathered from the project will also analysed through the lense of “critical and creative thinking” (ACARA, 2013, p.20-21) skills articulated as one of the general capabilities required in all subject areas of the Australian national curriculum, but which has particular application to The Arts subject areas. In this chapter, we consider artefacts created by preschool children using iPads and selected apps and interviews conducted with preschool children and their caregivers during our research project. We then offer examples of practice to assist preschool teachers in supporting children in their storymaking using the iPad and discuss approaches for engagement that twins the live and mediatised representation of a story.
Resumo:
Recently, the debate around critical literacy has dissipated as literacy education agendas and attendant policies shift to embrace more hybrid approaches to the teaching of senior English. This paper reports on orientations towards critical literacy as expressed by four teachers of senior English who teach culturally and linguistically diverse learners. Teachers’ understandings of critical literacy are important given the emphasis on Critical and Creative Thinking as well as Literacy as General Capabilities underpinning the Australian Curriculum. Using critical discourse analysis and Janks' (2010) Synthesis Model of Critical Literacy, interview and classroom data from four teachers of English as an Additional Language or Dialect (EAL/D) learners in two high schools were analysed for the ways these teachers constructed critical literacy in their talk and practice. While all four teachers indicated significant commitment to critical literacy as an approach to English language teaching, their understandings varied. These ranged from providing access to powerful genres, to rationalist approaches to interrogating text, with less emphasis on multimodal design and drawing on learner diversity. This has significant implications for what kind of learning is being offered to EAL/D learners in the name of English teaching, for syllabus design, and for teacher professional development.
Resumo:
Dissertação que pesquisa o desdobramento de espetáculos teatrais em imagens de potencial plástico fecundo na interação entre a cenografia e as artes visuais. Estudos de caso de obras de Robert Wilson que elaboram as questões da tensão entre a ficção e a biografia, além de abordar imagem, corpo, movimento e espacialidade. Desenvolve-se em análise das posturas do espaço quando atravessado por trabalhos que promovem o pensamento acerca da imobilidade e de seu contrário. A reprodutibilidade esteticamente explorada é observada enquanto elemento fundamental na proposta que trata a disponibilidade do corpo justaposta à imagética que este é capaz de produzir. Na análise aparecem alguns materiais - imagens - resultantes de processos artísticos de Robert Wilson bem como de outros artistas como Marina Abramovic e Rineke Djcstra. Estruturado no encadeamento de imagens partícipes de processos de construção e condução de performances artísticas que abrangem as perspectivas da colaboração imagética incorporada ao pensamento criativo que recondiciona o corpo no campo da superficialidade enquanto abrangência poética
Resumo:
This study investigated the major characteristics of creative thinking development for the school children in Beijing with paper/pencil tests. The “Creative Thinking Test” was executed. The representative samples were two groups of students who came from the classes in 3rd-grade to 12th-grade of normal schools in Beijing. The classes were selected at random, one grade one class. One group is composed of 387 students (218 males, 169 females) in 1993, the other is composed of 420 students (181 males, 239 females) in 2006. According to the data analysis, the major characteristics and the changes over the 13 years of the development of creative thinking for student were explored and discussed. 1) The development trends of three types of creative thinking were all flexuous increase with grade moving up. The mean score of elementary school students was the lowest. And scores of junior high school students and senior high school students were significant higher than elementary school students’. 2) The most rapid increase occurred from the 5th grade to 6th grade. 3) Slumps occurred in the 7th grade in PNE curve and also in the 9th and 12th grades in TPC curves. There was no slump in FGA curve. 4) The girl’s scores in PNE and TPC tests were significant better than boys’. No obvious gender difference was found in FGA test. 5) The scores of three creative thinking tests in 2006 were all better than those in 1993. Separately, the scores of FGA and TPC tests in 2006 were significant higher than the corresponding scores in 1993, and no significant difference was found in two PNE tests. 6) There was no significant difference in the maximum scores of the three creative thinking tests between 2006 and 1993. 7) The most rapid developing period of three types of creative thinking in 2006 were the 5th grade and the 6th grade. The same period in 1993 was from the 7th grade to 9th grade. 8) In 1993, there is no significant gender difference for each creative thinking test. In 2006, PNE and TPC results had remarkable gender difference that girls were higher than boys. No significant gender difference was found in FGA tests.
Resumo:
Objective. To create, implement, and evaluate a workshop that teaches undergraduate pharmacy
students about entrepreneurship.
Design. Workshops with 3 hours contact time and 2 hours self-study time were developed for final-year
students. Faculty members and students evaluated peer assessment, peer development,
communication, critical evaluation, creative thinking, problem solving, and numeracy skills, as well
as topic understanding. Student evaluation of the workshops was done largely via a self-administered,
9-question questionnaire.
Assessment. One hundred thirty-four students completed the workshops. The mean score was 50.9
out of 65. Scores ranged from 45.9 to 54.1. The questionnaire had a response rate of 100%. Many
students agreed that workshops about entrepreneurship were a useful teaching method. Additionally,
they agreed that key skills were fostered.
Conclusion. Workshops effectively delivered course content about entrepreneurship and helped
develop relevant skills. This work suggests students value a program that includes instruction on
entrepreneurship.
Resumo:
This essay investigates the changing dynamics of interaction and paradigm of communication in the design studio. It analyses the process of practical implementation of interactive tools in architectural education which placed the
diversity of students’ cultural experiences, contextual awareness and individual interests as crucial resource for design innovation and inquiry. Building on Brian Lawson’s thesis on creativity in design thinking, this research project undertook
comprehensive investigation of students’ satisfaction of their roles in the studio and the room for liberal thought they are given to elaborate on genuine approach to architectural matters. The cyclical development of interactive learning strategy is explored through two different settings: first, it analyses architectural students’ position as passive/active in the studio, considering their relationships with tutors’ ideals; second, it reports on empirical strategy of students-led workshops at British schools of architecture, during which students have taken the lead of their creative design agenda. The practical implementation of interactive learning tools proved influential in helping students to personalize their design direction and to build a sense of confidence and independence.
Resumo:
O presente estudo inscreve-se na área científica da Formação de Professores, incidindo, particularmente, na compreensão do processo de desenvolvimento das competências reflexivas percebidas como factor de promoção do seu próprio desenvolvimento profissional e pessoal, do desenvolvimento da capacidade de pensar dos seus alunos, da revalorização dos processos curriculares de ensino-aprendizagem e de inovação dos contextos educacionais. Num contexto de complexidade, incerteza e mudança, importa repensar estratégias de formação de professores e de alunos para que possam constituir-se como fatores potenciadores do desenvolvimento da competência reflexiva. Estratégias que convocam, quer o professor, quer o aluno, para um tipo de questionamento de maior exigência reflexiva e consideradas potenciadoras do pensamento crítico, criativo e de cuidado com o outro, numa perspetiva educativa centrada no cuidar, que valoriza a dimensão humana, a atuação responsável, ética e solidária, em todos os planos da vida. Neste estudo propomo-nos retomar algumas das estratégias de formação já configuradas no movimento Filosofia para Crianças e que se constituíram como um programa de formação em contexto, no qual se procurou aprofundar e compreender as múltiplas dimensões e modos como interatuam os diferentes participantes da relação educativa em práticas curriculares reconfiguradas à luz dos pressupostos que sustentam este estudo. Do ponto de vista metodológico, a investigação inscreve-se num paradigma de natureza qualitativa e interpretativa, de matriz hermenêutica e ecológica, configurando uma abordagem de tipo complexo, e com características de estudo de caso, que considera indispensável a participação ativa do sujeito na construção do conhecimento próprio, bem como o carácter de imprevisibilidade e de recursividade das condições e subsistemas em que tal ocorre. No sentido de construir uma visão integrada do objeto em estudo, foram desenvolvidos procedimentos específicos (mixed-methods), nomeadamente análise documental, entrevista semiestruturada, observação participante e inquirição por questionário. O estudo, que decorreu na região centro do país, envolveu 5 professoras do 1.º Ciclo do Ensino Básico, 100 alunos do mesmo nível de ensino e os seus pais/encarregados de educação, inquiridos através de questionário e desenvolveu-se em duas fases. A primeira destinou-se à formação teórico-prática das professoras e, na segunda, foram desenvolvidas sessões práticas de Filosofia para Crianças com os alunos. Os portfolios reflexivos construídos pelos participantes e pela investigadora principal constituíram outra fonte da informação recolhida no estudo empírico. Os resultados do estudo situam-se a quatro níveis: no que respeita aos saberes básicos, ao perfil de competência dos professores, à sua formação e às estratégias e recursos considerados como potenciadores de um pensar de mais elevada qualidade. Quanto ao primeiro nível, o presente estudo releva o carácter estruturante e epistémico de aprender a pensar (bem), salientando que este se processa numa maior amplitude e profundidade dos conteúdos da própria reflexão, às quais subjaz uma visão ampla de cidadania planetária e socialmente comprometida, evidenciando uma ampliação do quadro referencial dos saberes básicos e considerados imprescindíveis para a educação dos cidadãos. A um segundo nível, salienta-se a exigência de um perfil de competência profissional que permita aos professores desenvolver nos seus alunos um pensar de qualidade e, simultaneamente, melhorar a sua própria competência reflexiva. Neste sentido, o estudo aponta para a continuidade das respostas que têm vindo a ser equacionadas por vários autores nacionais e internacionais que, ao abordarem a problemática da formação, do conhecimento profissional e do desenvolvimento identitário dos professores, têm acentuado a importância dos modelos crítico-reflexivos da formação e de uma supervisão ecológica, integradora, não standard e humanizada, no desenvolvimento das sociedades contemporâneas. Conforme os dados sugerem, admite-se que a formação integral dos cidadãos passa pela inclusão e interligação de diferentes áreas do conhecimento que, concertada e complementarmente, possam contribuir para o desenvolvimento da sensibilidade, do pensamento crítico e criativo, de uma cultura da responsabilidade e de uma atitude ética mais ativa e interventiva. Neste sentido, reafirma-se a importância de um trajeto formativo que promova a efetiva articulação entre teoria e a prática, o diálogo crítico-reflexivo entre saberes científicos e experiência, que focalize o profissional na sua praxis e saliente a sua conexão com o saber situado em contexto vivencial e didático- -pedagógico. Realça-se a pertinência de dinâmicas formativas que, a exemplo de “comunidades de investigação/aprendizagem”, na sua aceção de redes de formação que, na prossecução de projetos e propósitos comuns, incentivam a construção de itinerários próprios e de aprendizagens individuais, mobilizando processos investigativos pessoais e grupais. Evidencia-se a valorização de práticas promotoras da reflexão, do questionamento, da flexibilidade cognitiva como eixos estruturadores do pensamento e da ação profissional e como suporte do desenvolvimento profissional e pessoal, corroborando a importância dos processos transformadores decorrentes da experiência, da ação e da reflexão sobre ela. Finalmente, no que respeita às estratégias e recursos, os dados permitem corroborar a riqueza e o potencial do uso de portfolios reflexivos no desenvolvimento de competências linguísticas, comunicacionais, reflexivas e meta-reflexivas e o entendimento de que o processo de construção da identidade profissional ocorre e desenha-se numa dinâmica reflexiva- -prospetiva (re)confirmadora ou (re)configuradora de ideias, convicções, saberes e práticas, ou seja, identitária. De igual modo, a investigação releva a importância da construção de portfolios, por parte dos alunos, para o desenvolvimento da qualidade do seu pensamento, sublinhando-se o seu carácter inovador nesta área. Evidencia-se, ainda, a diversidade de estratégias que respeitem os interesses, necessidades e expectativas dos alunos e o seu contexto de vida, tal como o recurso a materiais diversificados que, atentos ao conteúdo da mensagem, possibilitem a autonomia do pensamento, o exercício efetivo da reflexão crítica e do questionamento, na sua articulação com as grandes questões que sempre despertaram a curiosidade humana e cuja atualidade permanece. Materiais e recursos que estabeleçam o diálogo entre razão e imaginação, entre saber e sensibilidade, que estimulem o envolvimento dos alunos na resolução de problemas e na procura conjunta de soluções e na construção de projetos individuais na malha dos projetos comuns. Reafirma-se, pois, a importância da humanização do saber, a educação pensada como vivência solidária de direitos e deveres. Uma perspetiva educacional humanista que assenta nas trajetórias de vida, na recuperação de experiências pessoais e singulares, que procura compreender a identidade como um processo em (re)elaboração permanente. O presente estudo integra-se na rede de cooperação científica Novos saberes básicos dos alunos no século XXI, novos desafios à formação de professores sendo que, e na linha das investigações produzidas neste âmbito, destaca que o alargamento das funções do professor do 1.º Ciclo do Ensino Básico, que colocando a tónica da ação pedagógica no como se aprende e para quê e na possibilidade de aprender e incorporar o imprevisível, incide no desenvolvimento de um conjunto de capacidades que vão para além das tradicionalmente associadas ao ensinar a ler, escrever e contar. Releva-se, pois, a pertinência da criação de ambientes educativos nos quais professores e alunos entreteçam, conjunta e coerentemente, conhecer, compreender, fazer, sentir, dizer, ver, ouvir e (con)viver em prol de uma reflexão que nos encaminhe no sentido de ser(mos) consciência.