Karl Pearson, in his famous book, The Grammar of Science, published in 1892, stressed creativity as a separate feature of "the scientific method." Alex F. Osborn authored Applied Imagination and founded the Creative Education Foundation. Most Productive of All: |
Stage #5 You can solve many problems the same way many great discoveries have been made - by trial and error or by using gradual, systematic, steady, analytical, and judicial reasoning and logic. Search out other people's ideas. Use as they are or adapt for your particular problem by combining reflective thinking and your creative abilities. Creativity is usually described as taking two existing ideas and combining them into a new and better idea. It may also be termed:
Successful people have also found imaginative thinking helpful in deciding what ideas or directions not to use or consider in detail. Following are what I consider to be the most important methods: Reflective Thinking
Triggers
At that point, you then:
While you are doing all these things, you are reflecting on your problem as you acquire more information. Exercise problems, textbook problems, puzzle problems, and game proglems are used extensively in schoolwork and in tests. while usually referred to as "problems," they really should be called what they are - oneof the above names. Schools are teaching the methods, techniques, formulas, strategies, and domain-specific information needed to slove them. While they serve a useful purpose, they are not sufficient preparation for the everyday, real-world problems that we must face. These require more real world logical reasoning and the sue of creative thinking and methods. The teaching of these in our schools needs to be increased. Paul D. Hurd, in an article in AAAS's book, Scientific Literacy (1989), reports that since 1983 over 300 reports on the condition of education in the United States have been issued. He states: Consensus also exists among the reports' goal for science education. The goals ae to develop the abilities to solve problems encountered in the workplace and in the conduct of personal life and civic responsibility ... |
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