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1. 5 Creative Ways to Make Your Home Office Feel More Fun 2. 6 Ways to Make Your Creativity More Productive 3. How to Overcome Creative Blocks 4. 10 Creative Ways to Use Technology in the Classroom 5. The Benefits of Creating Art for Mental Health 6. 8 Ways to Foster Creative Thinking for Children 7. How to Think More Creatively 8. How to Unlock Your Creative Potential and Find Inspiration 9. Creative Problem Solving Strategies and Examples 10. How to Use Creativity to Find Solutions to Problems
Finding focused practice is not as much of a challenge as coming up with meaningful practice for advanced students. Workbook-like exercises are plentiful. If you're search of creative and meaningful practice with reduced adverb clauses, take a look at my handout. I offer two sets of practice items. One task requires learners to decide if…
Teachers are often drawn to education in hopes of exercising their creative freedom to make a difference in children’s lives. Yet it can be a crushing blow to realize when they enter the teaching profession that it involves far more than passion, intellect, and creative freedom. Teachers must constantly navigate an array of hierarchical structures, from top-down initiatives to rigid personnel policies to observation protocols that measure and ensure teacher compliance. There is likely nothing quite as frustrating for creative and passionate intellectuals as to realize that they’ve been ensnared in a complicated web of rules and mandates—that the autonomy
Resistance is not futile, Melanie Dusseau writes. Maybe the professionalization of creative writing as an academic discipline was always a bad idea. Do we belong in English departments? When I was a graduate student, the director of rhetoric and composition delighted in the university’s three-year M.F.A. program. Fledgling teachers in front of first-year writers was a winning combination of us winging it by throwing creativity at the wall and students appreciating our authentic advice that writing isn’t really something you learn or teach—it’s something you practice.