So why doesn't the government white paper mention creativity?
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Stephen Heppell, a regular writer in The Guardian writes on creativity and observes, how, in the latest white paper, "Higher Standards, Better Schools for All" it never once mentions 'creativity'
"Standard" is mentioned 144 times,
"fail" appears 53 times.Rather surprisingly, the words "creativity" and "creative" are not mentioned at all, probably uniquely for an education policy paper in the 21st century. Someone has taken their eye off the ball, haven't they?
Comments
visitor
24 March 2006 - 8:10pm
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Sonja :)
Jonathan
30 March 2006 - 7:50am
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Jonathan
Is that because government officials aren't brave enough to use terms such as fun and enjoyment when talking about learning?
visitor
28 March 2006 - 11:10am
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Stephen Powell
visitor
4 April 2006 - 9:20am
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Tom
visitor
4 April 2006 - 6:42pm
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Sonja
visitor
5 April 2006 - 11:41am
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Tom
visitor
6 April 2006 - 5:27am
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Stephen Heppell
visitor
24 May 2006 - 2:14pm
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visitor
visitor
4 January 2007 - 8:51pm
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Phil
I would agree with the last few posts. The Government has largely left it to the arts to tap into the creative ability of children. There are so many tools available now to help people explore and use their creative ability. Take mind mapping there are many software packages such as Spark-Space that enable users to record there creative ideas. Why aren't such software packages making it into the classroom?
Jonathan
4 January 2007 - 11:11pm
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Jonathan
I suppose you have to look to the Local Authority support services that would advise schools and teachers on the use and implementation of such tools. The responsibility of this shouldn't lie just with the ICT training and development agencies, but the Numeracy and Literacy teams also.
In my experience, these training and development agencies have a huge influence on the activity that takes place in the classroom, through the many courses and INSET courses that they run.
BETT 2007 will host a wide range of exhibitors, many of whom selling their software to all and sundry. 28,000 people attend the annual show, but that won't necessarily mean that the implementation of new tools is guaranteed. It very much depends on the right people identifying with the software who is able to see how such tools can be utilised in the authority.
I believe we need strong advocates of the mind mapping and creative tools to trail-blaze their use of them in schools and for people to take note of the many benefits. We are then ever-hopeful, that the training and development agencies take heed and sell that to their clients in the Local Authority.
visitor
17 June 2011 - 1:53am
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LED Grow Lights
I suspect the reason they don't use the word creativity is that the authors of the paper are stuck in their own rhetoric which at the moment is obsessed with choice and standards. Choice and standards may well be good things, but they are only, at best, part of the picture and don't address the key question of what is it that we want our education system to deliver. Thank you.
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