(In)disciplined Creativity in Teacher Education

Purchase or Subscription required for access

Purchase individual articles and papers

Subscribe for faster access!

Subscribe and receive access to 100,000+ documents, for only $19/month (or $150/year).

Already have access?

Institutional Subscription

You don't appear to be accessing the site through a subscribing institution (your IP address is 3.239.214.173).

If your university, college, or library subscribes to LearnTechLib, you may be able access full text articles through a login page.

You can search for your instition by name or by location.

Login via Institution

Authors

Punya Mishra, Danah Henriksen, Michigan State University, United States ; John C. Park, Baylor University, United States ; John Lee, North Carolina State University, United States ; Joe Garofalo, University of Virginia, United States ; Carl Young, North Carolina State University, United States ; Douglas Hartman, Michigan State University, United States ; Sara Kajder, Shady Side Academy, United States ; William Cain, Michigan State University, United States

Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference, Mar 17, 2014 in Jacksonville, Florida, United States ISBN 978-1-939797-07-0

Abstract

Over the past several decades, creativity has become a subject of heightened interest to the field of teaching (Plucker, Beghetto, and Dow, 2004). There is a strong, and generally agreed-upon conviction on the relevance and necessity of creativity in teaching (Amabile, 1996; Cropley, 2003; Sawyer, 2011; Sternberg, 1999). How that creativity should be instantiated in teacher education however is a more uncertain prospect. The role of creativity here is not always clear, and varies depending on schools and programs (Craft, 2000). To shed some further light upon these issues, the presentations in this symposium will focus on several different methods courses across different subject matters, examining some ways that creativity has been infused into the content and pedagogy of these courses. The presenters will provide a range of examples of how they have incorporated creative approaches in their pedagogy and the role that digital technologies play in this process.

Citation

Mishra, P., Henriksen, D., Park, J.C., Lee, J., Garofalo, J., Young, C., Hartman, D., Kajder, S. & Cain, W. (2014). (In)disciplined Creativity in Teacher Education. In M. Searson & M. Ochoa (Eds.), Proceedings of SITE 2014--Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference (pp. 1887-1891). Jacksonville, Florida, United States: Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE). Retrieved March 19, 2024 from https://www.learntechlib.org/p/131054.