DOCUMENT RESUME
ED 233 533                                          EC 160 059
AUTHOR           _J.lett, Robert E.
                Strategies for Developing Creative Imagination &
                Thinking Skills.
PUB DATE        83
NOTE            182p.; Portions are marginally legible.
PUB TYPE        Guides   Classroom Use   Guides (For Teachers) (052)
                   Viewpoints (120)
EDRS PRICE      MF01 Plus Postage. PC Not Available from EDRS.
DESCRIPTORS     Creative Activities; *Creative Development; Creative
                Thinking; *Creativity; Developmental Stages;
                Discovery Processes; Educational Strategies;
                Elementary Secondary Education; Fantasy; Humor;
                *Imagination; *Instructional Materials; *Learning
                Activities; Learning Modalities; *Problem Solving;
                Sensory Experience; Visualization
ABSTRACT
                A practical guidebook of ideas, lesson materials, and
related resources for developing imaginative and productive thinking
skills of children is presented to assist teachers and parents.
Emphasis is placed on the use of strategies and techniques that
enhance originality, mental imagery, reverie, reflection, humor,
novel playfulness, and divergent (but productive) thinking. It is
suggested that such instruction is important to enable the learner to
think through and effectively deal with the complex world. An
introduction to creative imagination, the human mind, and
developmental stages, and ways to develop imagination through the
educational process, are addressed in the first four chapters.
Chapter 5 considers various instructional models and programs by
which creative imagination can be developed; they involve promoting
relaxation and "centering," sharpening and enhancing the image, and
symchronized learning. In addition, nine goals useful in teaching
creative imagination and problem-solving skills are presented in a
developmental hierarchy. In chapter 6, resource materials and
strategies that may be implemented in lesson form are described.
Chapter 7 presents learning activities that emphasize the importance
of using basic sensory processes, such as touching, tasting, and
hearing in the development of imagination. Chapters 8 through 12
provide learning activities related to the following: directed
fantasy, imaginative situations, creative thinking, linguistic
strategies, and developing a sense of humor and divergent thinking.
Lastly, chapter 13 discusses creativity in general. A list of
approximately 72 references is appended. (SW)
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                                                 THINKING SKILLS
Strategies for Developing CREATIVE IMAGINATION &
                        PREFACE
        This book has been written for those teachers and parents
                                                        of using
  who wish to help children experience the creative joy
  their hearts and minds in learning and thinking. It is a
  practical guidebook of ideas, lesson materials, and related
  resources for developing imaginative and productive thinking
  skills.
        The material presented in this book is a rather concise
                                                         in
  summarization and illustration of current developments
  education.   Emphasis has been placed on the use of strategies
                               originality, mental imagery,
  and techniques which enhance
                                                 and divergent
  reverie, reflection, humor, novel playfulness,
  (but productive) thinking.
                                                     essential
        The author believes that such instruction is
                                       truly educated persons
  for helping children to develop into
                                            effectively dealing
  who are capable of "thinking through° and
  with the complex problems of modern society.
                                                  introduced to
         In the first few chapters, the reader is
                                              how it is developed.
   the importance of creative imagination and
                                        presented as educational
   Then, some materials and lessons are
   models and resources.  The book concludes with a consideration
                                            of the creative spirit.
   of the importance of humor and the power
                                                        this book.
         Teaching strategies are emphasized throughout
                                          illustrations, lesson
   Each chapter presents practical ideas,
   material, followup  suggestions and discussion questions for
   instructional use.
                               (1)
         All persons can improve their creative imagination and
thinking abilities.     But this requires an innovative educational
progre..,m supported by teachers, parents and others concerned.
For example, many school districts are now beginning to pro
vide instruction in thinking and problemsolving skills,
imagjhative computer education, and in the integrated use of
art,   music, and drama with academic subjects such as creative
writing and mathematics.
         Learning disabled and other exceptional persons also
profit greatly from training which improves their creative
imagination and thinking skills.     Such instruction is highly
individualized, increases motivation and rewards continual
achievement.     It also enables the pupil to acquire many new
learning strategies which are helpful in improvir     such basic
academic skills as reading and writing.
         Winston Churchill once commented that although he
always liked to learn he seldom enjoyed being taught.        Many
other persons have shared his feelings due to a lack of
interesting and appropriate instruction.     Hopefully, by
teaching pupils to develop their creative imaginations
F,nd thinking skills, we can also increase their intrinsic
joy of learning --- and that is what true education is all
about.
                                           Robert E. Valett
                                      `x
              this book is dedicated to the creative spirit
              and thought of Mark Twain - and to the child
              in each of us.
                        - ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -
age
13     .   "The Neuropsychology of Mental Abilities" is adapteo
           from CP.SE STUDIES IN SPECIAL EDUCATION by Robert E.
           Valett (Consulting Psychologists Press,   Palo Alto, Ca.
           1982), page 66.
13         "Left/right hemisphere drawing" from DYSLEXIA by
           Robert E. Valett (Fearon Pitman Publishers, Belmont,
           Ca., 1980), page 14.
99     .   "Helpful advice?" cartoon from HUMANISTIC EDUCATION by
           Robert E. Valett (C.V. Mosby, St. Louis, Mo., 1977), page 154.
103    .   "Playback" from GETTING IT ALL TOGETHER by Robert E. Valett
           (Academic Therapy Publications, Novato, Ca., 1974), page 15.
153    .   Blondie and Hagar comics reproduced with permission of
           King Features Syndicate, Inc.
           "Developing the Sense of Humor and Divergent Thinking" is
.155
           adapted from the author's article in Academic Therapy,
           1981, 17,1, pages 25-42.
56     .   "Stimulating creative thinking" illustration reproduced
           from materials distributed by Apple Computer Corp.,
           Cupertino, Ca. 1982.
                      Copyright 0 1983 by Robert E. Valett
   Strategies fcr developing
                 CREATIVE IMAGINATION & THINKING SKILLS
                   by Robert E. Valett
                California State UniversIty, Fresno
                     CON TEN TS
Chapter i.    Creative imagination                page 1
        2.    The Human Mind                            9
        3.    Ages and Stages                          18
        4.    The Edticational Process                 27
        5.    Instructional Models                     37
        6.    Resource Materials and Strategies        54
        7.    Sensory Images                           64
        8._   Directed Fantasy                         80
        9.    Imaginative Situations                   95
       10.    Creative Thinking                       110
       11.    Linguistic Strategies                   124
       12.    Developing the Sense of Humor and
              Divergent Thinking                      143
       13.    The Creative Spirit                     156
       References                                     166
                                (iv)
DEVELOPING CREATIVE IMAGINATION
                                                             "Imagination is more important
                                                                 than knowledge"
                                                                             Albert Epstein
                         Chapter I. CREATIVE IMAGINATION
      Recently, the science fantasy film "E.T." has evoked wonder and joy in they eorts
and minds of people everywhere. In this story b young boy discovers a stranded extra-
terrestrial being, becomes his protector, and develops a strong emotional bond with this
uniquely intelligent creature. With the boy's help, "E.T." is eventually able to return
to his home planet. This fascinating production is the result of Steven Spielberg's
creati,,e imagination - which has also given us other awe-inspiring movies and stcries to
ponder upon.
      Some years ago the writer Robert Louis Stevenson also captivated the public with
his amazing stories and poems. His books KIDNAPPED and TREASURE ISLAND have
stimulated the minds of generations of young people throughout the world. Stevenson's
strange visions and daydreams also eventuated in a symbolic tale about a good doctor
whose personality changed to evil as o result of using experimental drugs. The book,
published as THE STRANGE CASE OF DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE, has also become
a classic film. These products of Stevenson's creative imagination continue to provoke
speculation about escope and personal transformation.
      It seems readily apparent that novelists, poets, artists, film makers, and actors
are among those whose products are dependent upon aood creative imaginations. How-
ever it is not widely recognized that scientists, inventors, and even mother, tir:ians
espouse the value and importance of human imagination.
                                               2
       For example, Albert Einstein relied primarily on the initial development of visual
images and imaginative ideas before he began the rational analysis of available data;
he also believed that schools should give priority to teaching independent thinking and
judgment rather than the acquisition of special knowledge. In the history of science,
Einstein was not alone.
       Samuel Howe invented the sewing machine as a result of dream-like images. The
chemist Friedrich Kekule saw the molecular structure of benzene in a dream. The
physiologist Otto Loewi conceived of the chemical transmission of nervous impulses in a
dream state. Thomas Edison played with imaginative ideas until they evolved into an
experimental design. The archeologist Loren Eisley has aptly described man as a
"symbol shifting magician" who is a constantly changing "cosmic orphan" fascinated
with novel ideas and images. Other scientists, such as the philosopher-mathematician
Arthur Koestler, have pointed out that when the scientist sees an analogy where nobody
saw one before, and the poet discovers an original metaphor or simile - both are rely-
ing on the mediation of unconscious processes and imagination.
      However, it is through the poetic and vivid pictorial forms that the power of
creative imagination is most widely experienced. The compeling visual images are
clear for all to see in the creations of artists such as William Blake, Salvadore Da li, and
others. Likewise, the dreams of great architects appear in thei designs and continuously
changing buildings and monuments. The daydreams and images of poets such as Samuel
Coleric'ge's "Kubla Khan" and the similar works of William Wordsworth seem to have u
magical transforming influence on those who encounter them. The best music of great
composers, such as Giuseppe Tartini's sonatas, have frequently stemmed from uncon-
scious images and states of awareness.
                                               3
       The astronomer Carl Sagan has speculated on the evolution of human intelligence
and has concluded that scientific insights are characteristically intuitive. However,
they are described later and verified by linear analytical argument. Whereas the
creative act has major right-hemisphere brain components the actual validation of
imaginative products is largely dependent upon left-hemispheric functions. Sagan
feels that the most significant creative activities of our culture   legal and ethical
systems,   Art, music, science, and technology      have only been made possible through
the collaborative work of the left and right hemisphere.
Purpose.
       The purpose of creative imagination is to transform persons and the world in which
they live. The distinguishing attribute of the human animal is its unique ability to
imagine and manipulate symbolic thoughts and ideas. Mankind continuously modifies
ilself, its culture, and its physical environment through the never ending interplay of
novel thoughts and symbolic images. All civilizations and their artifacts are products of
creative imagination at a certain point in evolutionary time and space.
      The individual person has vast creative potentialities. All persons possess creative
imagination, intuition, and transformational powers although they may be relatively un-
developed, neglected, or actually suppressed by authoritarian forces and pressures.      But
every man and woman strives to rise above the mundane elements of his or her existence
through play and fantasy. Millions throng to Disneyland parks to engage in the excite-
ment of fanciful play and novel experience. Every person daydreams of becoming a
superman or superwoman - if even for a moment! And we are all thrilled by the mysteries
and illusions of the great magicians, the stories of mythical heroes, and our own personal
dreams of adventure and escape to new and better worlds.
"Creative Art (whether the instrument
of words she use, or pencil pregnant
with ethereal hues,) demands the service
 of a mind and heart   "
                - William Wordsworth
                                               5
       Although we are surrounded by the products of creative imagination, many persons
are unaware o, unaccepting of their own creative ene gies and potentialities. Most
children are not taught that they harbor such wondrous powers within themselves. And
few schools have recognized the importance of developing the creative imaginations of
the pupils they have been designed to serve.
        The great cellist Pablo Cosals proposed that we teach children that they are unique
marvels who nave evolved over millions of years with no identical counterparts.    The
philosopher Henri Bergson also advocated that humans be more fully educated regarding
their place in the perpetual evolutionary creation of novelty and possibility - and that
the vital life force within us can be used and channeled. These views have also been
supported by psychologists such as Carl Jung and Abraham Maslow, among others. Jung
feels that since all the works of man have their origin in the inherited powers of creative
imagination, we must be very careful rot to discourage fantasy in children. And Maslow
has written that education should promote development of the spontaneous, unpremeditated
creative expression of the self wherein esthetic perceiving and peak-experiencing are
seen as central aspects of human life and education rather than as peripheral ones.   There
does seem to be some growing awareness by teachers, parents, and concerned adults that
it is essential that educational systems and programs be developed to enhance the creative
i   aginations of all pupils, if humankind is to continue to survive and evolve.
Learning to Live.
     Psychologically, most men are islands forever struggling to live with themselves and
others. Much of our life and energy is actually spent talking to ourselves and entertaining
our own dreams, images, and aspirations.      Our self image, our social image, and the ever
                                                 6
changing pictures in our minds of the world about us actually determine how functional we
are in daily affairs. These self-actualizing, creative images spring from the persanality
and show themselves in 'H ordinary affairs of life such as in work attitudes, humor, our
open perceptiveness of the natural world, academic learning, physical health, and well
being.
         In fact, great and startling feats have been accamplished by ordinary persons who
purpasely farmulate strong mental image;. Numerous athletes are guided by the dynamic
images of what they want themselves to be.      For example, the famous miler, Glenn
Cunningham, "became that way" by consciously willing and imagining his step by step
recovery fram serious burns. Today, normal healthy athletes of all kinds strive to improve
their perfarmance through creatively imagining the desired golf stroke, basketb            an-
uever, or other body movements. And millions of persons have been caught up in
wholistic health movements which include the use of "haw to do it" books, exercise
records, relaxation tapes, positive assertion films and other means of practical self-
improvement involving creative body imagery.
         Perhaps the most dramatic illustratian of the power of learning to use creative
imaginatian is in the recovery from terminal illness. For example, the renawned editor
and writer, Norman Cousins, has dacumented in same detail how he learned to cope with
the degenerating disease of ankylasing spandylitis where the normal recovery rate was one
in five hundred. Cousins literally willed himself to live thraugh a series of exercises
combining laughter (mainly from joke books and watching Laurel and Hardy films) with
positive visualizations of body regeneration; his experience taught him to never under-
estimate the capacity of the human mind and body to renew itself under the most wretched
                                             7
of conditions. Similar techniques have been used with both cl,ildren and adults suffering
from cancerous diseases.   Dr. Albert Schweitzer used a combination of music (mostly
Bach), laughter, purposeful imagery, and medicine to recover from his own illness. Dr.
Carl Simonton has successfully helped cuncer patients develop positive mental images of
their white corpuscles and body processes to combat the disease.
      In this book however, the emphasis is on using creative imagination to improve the
learning process itself. Aft;-..- ah everyone can use these methods and techniques to in-
prove themselves and to become more productive persons, they are especially valuable
for individuals with special learning problems. Memory, awareness, comprehension,
attention, originality, and productive achievement can all be enhanced through the use
of creative mental imagery. Learning to cope and to function more effectively in school,
at work or play is the major goal pursued in this book.
                 Ch.   1 DISCUSSION QUESTIU5 & ACTIVITIES
1. Discuss one of your favorite novels or short stories
   and explain its attraction.
2. Share an artistic production such as a painting
   or poem that you think would be highly stimulating
   to   ,1   child's imagination.
3. What are some of the ways that you have exprE.ssed
   your own creative potentialities?
4. Select a newspaper or magazine report about some
   unusual new product or creative experience.
S. What makes you laugh?       How might laughter be used
   for personal renewal?
                                             9
                                                          "One's-self I sing
                                                              a simple, separate Person;
                                                           Of Life immense -
                                                              in passion, pulse, and power."
                                                                             - Walt Whitman
                             Chapter 2. THE HUMAN MIND
      The human mind remuins a mystery of varied pulsations, passions, and unique powers.
But it is gradually being explored and understood. And we now know that both the sources
and forces of nature ale present in the human mind and body. Scientists have reminded us
that we are in the most profound sense children of the universe since we are the products of
fifteen billion years of cosmic evolution. But we have also realized that there is much more
to the world than our mind can see, feel, or comprehend.
      In fact, the human mind can only perceive a small part of the electromagnetic spec-
trum while bumblebees see high frequency ultraviolet, rattlesnakes see infrared, dogs hear
high frequency sound waves; pigeons "home", etc. But mankind does introject and respond
to cosmic forces uncons7.iously as well as consciously. And although many of those forces
cannot be perceived directly through our limited senses, we have been able to conceive of
them through our creative imagination and intelligence.
Mental Function:..
     The mind itself is an abstraction of the human imagination. And its functions can be
described in many different vs,ays. However, the human mind does exist and can be character-
ized as the total conscious and unconscious field of human perceptions, feelings, thoughts, and
intuitions. The major functions include-
      .   Sensory perception and processing: the focusing, acquisition, channeling, integration,
               and organization of sensory dr:ta anc2 information. Artists have highly developed
               sensory functions.
                                              .10
          Emotional feelings and interrelatedness: the affective involvement with persons,
               noture, ond things including such complex relationships os love, empothy,
                interest, motivation, volues, and self-esteem. The success of fomily life
               ond social organizotion is dependent on this function.
      .   Thoughtful problem solving: the conscious analysis, colculation, comprehension,
               ond evaluo+ion of knowledge and informotion. Scientific odvancement
               depends on the development of critical thinking skills.
      .   Intuition and creative imagination: the lorgely unconscious insights, symbolic
                  visions, and transformatioral experiences of the humon psyche. Poets
                  and novelists rely heavily on this function.
      The human mind can be represented pictorially as an iceberg slowly moving in o
huge ocean current.   The tip of the iceberg is but a small part of its totality and represents
human consciousness which largely consists of thoughtful behavior. The submerged part of
the iceberg represents the greater mass of unconscious sensations, feelings, ond intuitions
which constitute the human mind. The mind itself, like the icy berg, is forever moving and
changing occording to its ploce in time and space.
      The iceberg also has its own unique molecular structure and internal forces which are
unevenly distributed. In a similar fashion the humon mind is formed and structured through
the evolving brain and its varied impulses ond functions.   For exomple, a thought is made
of hundreds of electrochemical impulses with something like a hundred trillion neuron con-
nections in the human cortex. Not only thoughts, but our feelings, intuitions, and sensa-
tions also have a physicol reolity. Neurophysiologists have demonstrated that conscious
volition, by affecting a single neuron, will trigger off changes in activity in large parts
of the cortical network. So human biology and psychology are clearly interdependent.
Right Brain, Left Brain, ond Inbetween.
      An examination of the human brain will disclose several major parts - eoch with its
own functions. The left hemisphere of the brain is largely concerned with the analytical,
                                 11
           INTUITION and CREATIVE IMAGINATION
                                              /
SENSORY PERCEPTION                            EMOTION ^         FEELINGS
           THOUGHTFUL PROBLEM SOLVING
                1v1 e ri+0...1        --Pu Y-1 Ch 0 n5   -------,
                                             12
propositional, and logical thought processes such as language and mathematics.        The
right hemisphere is given to appositional, imaginative, visual-spatial-perceptual
processes such as Hose required in designing, map reading, and artistic production.
Bet   een the two hemispheres is the corpus col losum which serves as a neural switch-
board with synthesizing and integrating functions for the two hemispheres. The mid-
brain organs and activating systems serve as mediators of our emotional feelings and
biological predispositions. There are also some rather specific localized abilities in
certain areas of the brain.
       Sensory areas for instance, are discrete but clearly interdependent. For example,
several years ago the neurosurgeon Wilder Penfield described operations on patients in
whom electrical stimulation of the left temporal lobe seemed to tap specific long term
memories; one patient named 'Maria" reported hearing the composition "The War March
of the Priests" when this part of her brain was stimulated   and then recalled the visual
image of the record album on which it was recorded, Other researchers have discovered
that special training, such as focused attention or meditation, activates synchronous
brain functioning between both hemispheres which improves perceptual discrimination,
memory, and grade point averages of students.
       maginative creative thinking demands the development and integration of psycho-
logical functions and all parts of the brain. Long term memory is one mental operation
which is basic to functional problem solving as well as creative imagination.   The
memory process involves the synchronization of many parts of the brain.    For instance,
memorization begins with the imprinting of sensory cues such as the phonetic features
                                                                   13
lerriSprlfjfe                         Righi hemsriere
                                                                            THE     NEUROPS YCHOLOGY OF
                                                                                  MENTAL     ABILITIES
                              Major Functions                  Abilities (and Disabilities)                  Activators
          Brain Units
    1. Conscious
       Programming: Thinking:                                                                               Self
                                                        Sociability (asocial/anti-social)                   reinforcement
            Frontal lobes      Planning
            Prefrontal Cur-    Decision Making          Conscientiousness (amoral/immoral)
            tical Areas        Verification             Imagination (constricted)                                  i
                               Correction               Reasonableness (delusional)                         Inner speech
                               Actualization            Foresightedness (shortsightedness)                         I
    2. Information                                                                                                 I
                              Sensation:           Left Hemisphere                Right Hemisphere          Practice
         Processing:
           Cortical             Recording           Convergent think-               Divergent think-
           Association         Association           ing (dissociation)             ing (suppression)
           Areas:              Integration              Writing                     Sports and games
                               Coding                   (dvsgraphia)                (disorientation)        Feedback
         sensory               Retention                Spelling                    Drawing and
                (parietal)                              (disphonemia)               painting (distortion/
                                                        Reading                     reversals)
         auditory                                       (alexia/dyslexia)           Sin:, mg (amusia/
                                                        Computation                 tune deafness)          Exercise
                (temporal)
                                                        (dvscalculia)               Map reading and
         visual                                                                     designing (direc-
                                                        Articulation
                (occipital)                                                         tional confusion)
                                                        (dvsarthria)                                        Sensory
                                                                                    Time orientation
                                                        Speaking                                            stimulation
                                                                                    (lateness)
                                                        (asphasia/                  Geometry (spatial
                                                        dysphasia)
                                                                                    disorganization)
                                                        Memorizing
                                                                                    Industrial arts and
                                                        (anomia/
                                                        forgetfulness)              building (dis-
                                                        R ight-side move
                                                                                    proportionality)
                                                                                    Left-side move-         Biochemical
                                                        ments (paralysis)                                   neurotrans-
                                                                                    ments (paralysis)
                                                                                                            mission
    3. Physical
       Regulation:            Adaptation:
            Reticular          Arousal                  Self-control (impulsive)
                                Feeling                 Balance and coordination (a praxidaw kward)         Nutrition
            Activating
            System              Attention               Concenhation (distractable)                                I
            Vestibular/         Responding              Flexibility (tense/perseveratiye)
                                                        Strength and endurance (weak)                       Genetics
            Propnoceptor        Inhibition
            System
            Cerebellum
                                             14
of 0 word just heard. Then sensory sound impressions are transferred t     image memory
      are primarily visual iorms or pictures. The last stage in memorization is the coding
of these sensory traces into some s;'stem of categories or rules, which is a higher order
rational 'unction. Finally, recall of memorized material is on active process involving
other brain centers concerned with motivation, enactment, and systems of active search.
Learning to spell a new list of scientific words clearly illustrates all of these processes in
action.
      Let us corsider a "good" spelling program in more detail. The word "molecule"
moy first be presented in visual form on some list (right hemisphere stimulation). The
word is then presented through spoken language in an auditory-phonetic sequence (left
hemisphere stimulation). Music might also be used to synchronize the auditory-visual
processes (across the cowus callosum) and to enable the learner to develop some visual
picture of the word (perhaps a particular molecule dancing in space). Then the word is
integrated into a category (such as "organic," molecules) which help to associate and
activate the impression.
      The physician-biologist Lewis Thomas has creatively described thought itself as
consisting of molecules called "notions". When the mind is heated up a little with interest
and excitement, molecular movement increases and notions encounter one another. Then
when certain notions attroct each other an idea is born. Harmonious notions and ideas
become st'eams-of-thougl is which move through the mind like music changinci the moods of
those encountering it.
Mental Impressions.
      Creative thought, then, consists of nctiom of molecular energy which con be per-
ceived as mental images originating in particular sensory impressions. The initial sensory
                                                15
stimulation may determine the impression made on the nervous system and its significance
for later recall and application. The psychologist William James aptly described how
sensations, once experienced, modify the nervous system of the organism so that imaaina-
five copies of them arise again in the mind after the original outward stimulus is gone.
James also described several major types of imaainai-ion inherent in all persons:
      .   Visual Images            (dose your eyes and imagine what was on your breakfast
                                    table this morning).
      .   Auditory Images          (try to recall and "hear" a fovorite tune or song).
          Motor Kinetic Images     (imaginatively enact driving a manual shift sports car).
          Touch 'haptic Imagrs     (imagine stroking your dog or cat).
      Sensory impressions vary according to type (visual, auditory, kinetic, haptic, etc.),
novelty, exagp ration, time, and duration. For example, a novel and exaggerated
sensory impression is most often a lasting one. That is why most effective learning takes
place in stimulating situations involving some form of kinetic or dramatic involvement and
fantasy. Ghost stories, science fiction films, and adventure novels are usually exaggerations
of reality and therefore carry more lasting impressions. Once seen, who can forget Snow
White or "E.T."? So, too, we find the catchy tune, an unusual vacation, or a strange and
erie experience easy to recall.
      For educational r     poses it is most effective for the teacher to present the stimulus
material to be learned in somewhat exaggerated form. That is why good teacl ers tend to be
"Lam actors" who present the unusual, excite the imagination, and exaggerate the visual,
auditory, or other image just enough to "register" in the human mind. Such vivid sensory
impressions or images may arise from either internal or external sources. Most formal educa-
tion programs consist of a series of externally imposed auditory, visual, and kinetic stimuli
                                              16
(which is seldom synchronized, integrated, novel, exaggerated, or exciting) to the
student to learn.
         Conversely, those mental images that stem from within the person are usually the
most powerful educationally. The unique predispositions, talents, fantasies, dreams,
and aspirations of the individual person are driving forces. On a more unconscious
level, the primordial images of mythic heroes are also present in every individual as part of
the inherited powers of human imagination and these exaggerated impressions continue to
make last:ng impressions.
         Creative imagination is a natural psychological function of the human mind and
brain.    It consists of integrated sensory impressions acquired by time, experience, and
education. Images, mental pictures, and novel ideas are dynamic entities within the
mind. When activated through personal recepti\,eness, volition, and action these forces
can produce both material and psychological changes in individuals and the culture in
which they live.
    Ch.2 DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & ACTIVITIES
1. What is your strongest or "best" human function?
   How do you know?
2. Are you primarily a "left brained" or a "right
   brained" person?   Why do you believe so?
3. Discuss the importance of inner speech as an
   activator of the human thinking function.
4. What are the most impressive "notions" that have
   occured to you?    How and when did this happen?
5. Experience one of the visual, auditory, motor, or
   touch/haptic images suggested in this chapter.
   Attempt to exaggerate the image and share your
   impressions.
                                                18
                                                                     Imagination is the celestial
                                                                       star in humankind
                                                                                       Carl Jung
                             Chapter 3 . AGES AND STAGES
      Creative imagination is a natural human ability which developes with time and ex-
perience. It requires an open receptiveness to sensory impressionism and parological thought
processes and springs from creative human inclinations, propensities, tendencies, and poten-
tialities that are shaped by life and education.
      Creative imagination also requiree spontaneity, integration, self-acceptance, and
personal courage to engage in the following mental operations:
           Fantasy: Ability to create wishful, ingenious, visionary, exaggerated thoughts and
                 images.
       .   Originality: Ability to think in novel, independent, divergent, and flexible ways.
       .   Reverie: Ability to enter a state of dreamy, intuitive, inspirational reflection or
                meditation.
           Playfulness: Ability to move and act in an open, frolicking, delightful, or humorous
                 WO   y
           Creative Language: Ability to use language forms to express associative, symbolic,
                 or allegorical-metaphorical ideas and relationships.
           Transcendence: Ability to explore, to inquire, to wonder, and the will to transform
                 know1.2dge and experience.
      It can be readily seen that these kinds of mental abilities are ones that are generally
found in young cnildren before they are unduly conditioned by their culture_     V,;th formal
schooling, thought control and shaping begin and the person may actually be punished as he
or she grows older and fails to conform to the prevailing conventional ways of feeling, think-
ing, and acting. In this way, our natural creative instincts and intuitions are frequently
                                              19
 inhibited and thwarted    if not actually destroyed.
       As a result, many children with creative potentialities actually suffer through their
school /ears but are still able to make major contributions to self and society. Thomas Edison
 final!: dropped out of school when it interfered with his imaginative explorations. Winston
Churchill endured a conventionally restrictive education and later stated that although he
hated being taught, he loved to learn. The writer, William Saroyan, left elementary school
and never returned so he could spend time in the public library reading and writing creative
works. Many other individuals have rejected formal education programs and left high school
early to establish new electronic firms, other businesses, or to engage in compelling explora-
tory and creative experiences.
      According ly, educators hav3 become increasingly concerned about the actual regres-
sive and destructive nature of the curriculum which is limited to conventional left-brain
informational and analytical ski Ils, or which devalues or is actually hostjle to a creative
wholistic education. Numerous researchers are now insisting that parents and teachers si,ould
give more attention to the inspirational phase of creative imagination and should become
more interested in the creative process itself rather than in the oroduct alone .
Sources of Creative Imagination.
     The source of creative imagination, energy, and int, ligence is to be found within the
psyche or central self of each person. Creative imagination is an intuitive function which
springs from the deeper levels of our subconscious and finally culminates in the impulsive
and rational actions of everyday life.
      The psychologist Carl Jung has demonstrated that when this force of our collective
unconscious becomes a living experience and is brought to bear upon the conscious outlook
of an age, or on a k,.:rnan problem-solving situation, the event is a creative act which may
he of importance For the future of mankind. For example, Dante's Divine Comedy and
Goethe's Faust were attributed to unconscious creative forces and greatly influenced the
time and perspective of those concerned. Likewise, Shakespeare referred to his own un-
conscious creative source as an "affable Familiar ghost which nighty gulls Him with intelli-
gence" (Sonnet 86).
      It is becoming increasingly clear that imagination and intuition are vital to human
understanding and behavior. Although the usual popular opinion is that they are chiefly
childish and immature tendencies of little value (except possibly to poets and artists), as
we have seen, creative imagination is equally vital in all the higher grades of science,
where it supplements the "notional" intellect and its appl'cation to specific problem sol iing.
And it is now well documented that even physics, the strictest of all applied sciences,
depends to an astonishing degree upon intuitive imagination working throigh the uncons-
cious mind.
      The primary source c.,r creative thought and imcgination lies within the unconscious
personality itself and not in the self-conscious logical mind and rational efforts of the
individual person. Accordingly, education must be a balanced one that also involves and
attempts to develop one's unconscious processes and potentialities through such means as
dramatic arts, music, play, invention, creative writing, and other wholistic activities.
Developmental Steps.
      fine development of creative imaginatio' occurs naturally, but is greatly influenced
by training and experience. The mental processes involved tend to be interdependent and
cumulative in their effect on behavior and can be described by the following five stages of
                                                2
                                               21
grow+ and development:
     Stage One:    Sensory Exploration.      The major behavioral characteristic at this stage
                   is playfulness, as demonstrated by the child's flexible and enthi siastic
                   encounters with the environment. This begins shortly after birth and
                   continues to be actively demonstrated through the preschool years.
                   However, it is important that playful sensory exploration be continued
                   by adults with creative and imaginative aspirations. For example, the
                   outstanding jazz musician, Miles Davis, said that "I'll play it first and
                   name it later".
     Stage Two,.   Eaocentric Speculation. During this stage, the person's thought and
                   actions are dominated by fantasy and the exaggeration of intuitive
                   impressions. The child tends to be carried away with belief in his or
                   her magical powers and projects these views on the surrounding world.
                   Young children create dolls, toy animals, and even imaginary friends
                   and imbue them with life and special qualities. As adults, the
                   constructive use of fantasy provides inspiration, escape, and transfor-
                   mational possibilities.
      Stage Three. Personal Experimentation. During the early school years the child's
                   natural inquisitiveness begins to result in a more systematic experimental
                   "trial-and error" approach to the world. Initial visual and auditory
                   images are now "put-to-test" experientially. For instance, one child
                   said "Mommie, if my Sunday school teacher told the truth and people are
                   made from dust and return to dust after they die - then somebody is either
                   comin' or goin' under my bed". Similarly, another child reported that
Developmental ages and stages
                                        2.3
              the four seasons of the year were "Christmas, rabbit season, summer, and
              football." Of course, creative imagination must involve some degree of
              experimentation and refinement in order to be realized in productive
              form.
Stage Four:   Symbolic Representation. This stage is usually reached by late childhooc
              and is characterized by awareness, insight, and ingenuity. The person
              is now able to represent imaginative experiences in symbolic forms such
              as drawings, formulas, words, dance, paintings, sculpture and other
              forms. An imaginative verbal response at this stage is:
                      Question    "Does life really begin at 40?"
                      Answer     it begins at 3 for me."
                      Question    "My?"
                      Answer     "Because that's when school lets out."
              Unfortunately, many adults have never learned or been encouraged to
              play with symbols representationally which has severely restricted the
              development of their creative imaginations.
Stage Hve.    Functional Verification. This stage is marked by the emergence of
              inventive, productive, and applied forms of behavior. In early adoles-
              cence and throughout adulthood, the person uses accumulated experience
              and "wisdom" to create new changes in self and the environment. If the
              prove fruitful and "work" in the lire situation of the "inventor" they ore
              the final culmination of creative imagination.   For example, one young
              man creatively and imaginatively defined the word "character" as "the
              ability to carry out a good resolution long after the conviction leaves yor.
                                   - DevelopMENTAL   ABILITIES -
L of -VS retina          -guuscirfo.,31                        R icsNt-Virttivi"            VIC11 OM 1
                 VERBAL           LOGICAL                ORGANIZATIONAL        SPATIAL       INTUITI
fICAL
              Proverbial                                 Self-direction Written prose        Creative
Lonal                           Hypothetical
                wisdom                                    & control                              inve
Jlas                              reasoning
                                                         Self-correction     Mapping &       Ingenuit
n               Poetry         eversibility
                                                                              designing
Lying                                                    reinforcement
               -'uency            Rules &                   Accuredy &       Drawing          Imagini
asing
                                abaurdities                   precision
                                Analogous                 Task compla-   Figural Memory      Humorou
ronic           Sin gi in
                                "if-then"                  tion & review                       inclii
ulation
                               relationships
                                                          Self-pacing &   Comparative    Diverge'
     &         Concepts &    Multiple                                   "likenesses &
    imation      analogies Classification
                                                           persistence                     next
                                                                            differences"
                                                          Planning &         Tracing &        Insigh
    tation    Rhymes &          Conservation               overviewing        copying          disco
                riddles
                                                          Follouing         Directional     Inquisit
7ement          Basic          Cause & effect
              vocabulary          relations                 directions       -orientation     curios:
                                                         Focused             Form             Fantasy
.ng &         Labeling &       ategorization              attention &          constancy
:kxng          classifying                                 concentration)
                                                          Attitude &        Matching &      Explorat
    &         Emotive          Serial                        interest         sorting
Jpings          expression       ordering
:t                                                       Task awareness Figural
                Verbal         Informational               & definition disoriminatioo        Playful
,ondence      imitation          knowledge
, one)
                                              25
                    Verbal behaviors such as this may require further consideration while
                    material inventions in art, industry, or science are more self-evident
                    of creative imagination being realized.
Implications.
      For educational purposes it is important to be aware of stages of human development
and what might be done to further the growth process of any child or person of concern. Al-
though the human imagination is but one developmental function, it is the most important and
spontaneously active one in that it tors both the conscious and unconscious levels of the mind.
Therefore, psychologists such as Roberto Assagioli have concluded that imagination may need
to be controlled or dispersed when excessive, to he trained. when weak, and
                                                                            certainly to be
directed and utilized because of its great potency and influence on other human behaviors.
      Humans become unique persons through the development and utilization of their imagina-
tive functions working harmoniously with their affection, will, and thoughts. While the
intellect focuses attention on manipulating matter and relationships, creative imagination and
intuition are evolutionary. if education is to be successful, it must not only inform but must
inspire - and the development of imaginative functions is central to that end.
 Ch. 3   DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & ACTIVITIES
1. Which of the mental operations involved in creative
   imagination have you most often e, gaged in?
2. What is the source of your own creative imagination?
   How do you get in contact with it?
3. Why is it important for educators to be aware of
   developmental ages and stages? Give an example.
4. Provide a sample learning activity which might facilitate
   developmen   of "divergent flexibility" as specified
   on this chart presented in this chapter.
S. Discuss the implications of Assagiolis' conclusion
   regarding what should be done with imagination.
                                            2 7
                                                         The only time my education was
                                                         interrupted was when I was in
                                                         school"
                                                                       - George B. Shaw
                      Chapter   47   THE EDUCATIONAL PROCESS
    Creative imagination can be facilitated or impaired by special educational processes.
Mast parents and teachers hope to enhance mental growth and developmen?. Education
is essentially a process of facilitating natural growth - somewhat similar to that of a
gardener attempting to raise distinctively beautiful flowers such as prize winning roses or
orchids.
    While the gardening analogy may not be entirely appropriate it aptly illustrates the
major steps involved in the growth process itself . These are preparation, incubation,
illumination, realization, and regeneration. Each of these will be considered in some
detail. Some of these steps have been discussed in depth in Graham
'Lianas' book THE ART OF THOUGHT.
Preparation.
    The first step in growing or daveloaing anything is to create a positive environment
For such growth to occur. This requires weeding out destructive influences, selecting the
appropriate ground or soil for planting and seeding, tilling, and caring for the germ that
has been selected.
    H schools thj, begins with the positive personality, attitude, and goals of the teachers
immediately involved. Above all, teachers must value the development of creative imagina-
tion and thinking in their own selves, and treasure and promote it in the children they work
Niith. Also, teachers must not be threatened by divergent, imaginative thinking and other
expressions of creative abilities in their pupils. And they must become more willing to pro-
vide their students with open, flexible, individualized opportunities for creative develop-
ment.
                                                4 LJ
     Of course, oreparotion also requires instruction in the bask skills and help in the
acquisition of relevant knowledge and experience. Many schools emphasis convergent
thinking and the acquisition of lower level cognitive skills and facts that con7ribute to
the intial preparation for creative thinking and imagination. But this is inadequate
since we have seen that the primary unconscious processes must themselves be prepared
for the more advonced stages of development to be achieved. Generating interests,
motivation, and enthusiasm are crucial elements in preparation for nil kinds of learning.
Incubation
     The second step in facilitating creative imagination is incubation. This is a time of
"internalization" of acquired knowledge and experience whereby the information and
data is gradually assimilated and integrated without undue interference or distraction.
Fertilization has taken place and germination begins with self-nourishment of interacting
symbolic images, ideas, and latent potentialities.
     During this time the child, like the planted seed, requires protection, security, and
continued care. Parents and teachers must learn to be patient with children to give them
time, space, and opportunity to grow and develop in accord with their own maturational
timetable. A proper home and school environment is one that provides initial stimulation
and adequate time to reflect, to daydream, to be open and silent, and to value the grow-
ing interplay of thoughts and action.
     It is essentio, of course, that the necessary skills, facts, and information be taught
during the preparation period since incubation and reflection must use such kinds of
sensory input.   But too many facts can actac:Ily constrict and narrow one's creotive imagi-
nation and thereby restrict thinking and problem solving,   Most persons hove a substantial
fund of factual information on which to buiid, but tend toward impulsive actions and lack
                                                        3
the receptive attitude and personality attributes to allow the incubation process to proceed
H a slow and deliberate manner.
    Maria Montessori advocated that schools provide CI "quiet time" when pupils sl-oula
learn the value or silence by closing her eyes, being still, and reflecting on their
experiences. The psychologist, Ann Anastosi, also feels that since creative solutions are
more likely to occur during periods of relaxed dispersed attention than during periods of
octive concentration on the problem, the educational program must be sure to include
periods for relaxed, dispersed, and receptive awareness to rake place. Other educators
have successfully experimented with biofeedback, focused attention, and varied forms of
meditation to produce a reverieimagery state that permits both the conscious and uncon
scious mind to incubate and mentally brew the arising sensory impressions.
    As we have previously discussed, novel and exaggerated sensory date and factual in
formation are more easily processed and incubated. Educators at the Wisconsin Research
and Development Center for Cognitive Learning found th3 t creative imagination and problem
solving is in part a voluntary act that can Le promoted by the schools striving to develop
creative awareness in children; this can be accomplished through the use of such novel
educotional techniques as brainstorming (generating a long list of tancifu; problem solutions),
attribute listing (mentally changing parts of objects and ideas to create new ones), and
various idea checklists.
    An example of a novel ideo checklist is to present the learner .Nith a sheet containing
the following aids for helping a person think of physical changes that might be made in an
object such as an automobile, a bicycle, or a house:
         Change the design or style.
         Chonge the color.
     ,   Change the moterials.
     .   Change nne ;hope and or size.
     .   Clange by rearramiing parts of the object.
         Add something to cr subtract something from the olo;,ct.
     If a learner is adeo; ate!y prepared and properly stimulated with novel thoughts and
exciting information thi-, material will inculcate well. And eventually, promising mental
images and ideas will be generated.
Illumination.
     When the astronaut, Nell Armstrong, from his vantage point in the Apollo spacecraft,
looked back and saw the earth in space he felt something strange hoppen to him and he
soid "I'll never be the same!" Armstrong kad experienced an insightful illumination which
resulted in a unique awareness cf the interrelatedness of man and the universe. All of a
sudden his previous scientific training end knowledge fell into place because of a highly
unusual "hoppening".
     Illumination means mental clarity or insightfulness. What was once vague, confusing,
ar misunderstood now seems to fall into place and became comprehenoable ond meaningful.
This is sometimes referred to as the "Ah ha i" experience. When a flower bud is nourished
and stimulated by rhe light of the   in ond the nutrients of its environment, It begins to un-
fold ond take form and shape.
    As o person gains insight, his cr her behavior chonges, Previously strange symbols and
shapes seem to "fall into place" and the creative imaginotion begins to see relationships and
possibilities that did not previously seem to exist.   The transforming elements in this process
oppear to be movement and warmth. As long as the person continues the search toward the
light of understanding, it is inevitable that growth will occur.
    In most cases, illumination it a spontoneous association of new or novel images and
ideas.   The person feels thot "I've got it" and is moved to further conternplotion and action.
                                         31
In such a way the scientist envisages a new modc , the poet apprehends the proper metaphor,
and the child grasp:, the joke or pun.
     Educationally, illumination appears in an atmosphere of acceptance and permissiveness
where free association, mental play, and novelty is openly encouraged. It is developed
and facilitated when the person is taught ;-o value and to record his or her insights - how-
ever incomplete or fleeting they may seem to be. As the child learns to draw, write, tape
record, and to explore these dynamic images, he or she begin      to refine and explore them
in more derail. In such a way, practical breakthroughs are made and new ideas are born.
Actualization.
    Eventually, if all goes well, the flower bud is actualized as a blooming rose and the
symbolic image is crystalized into dynamic form     be it art, music, science, literature, or
the practical invention of everyday life. Actualization is fruition, attainment, and achieve-
ment.
     It is frequently said that the goal of education is self-actualization. Hermann Hes3ahas
written that when we move from potential to deed, from possibility to realization, we are
becoming rue human beings. We begin the journey toward self-actualization and fulfill-
ment as children, but the search continues throughout our lives. Even as mature adults, we
continue to learn and discover new things about ourselves and our world, and our dreams,
imaginatian, and deeds change accordingly. An anonymous poet has written:
                             "Like a flower I do grow,
                              striving for the light
                              and joy of becoming
                             that which is hidden within me."
    When creative imagination is actualized into dynamic form within the human mind, the
person begins a transformational process to self-realizolion. In this way the powerful ideal-
ized image becomes the real in life.
                                            :32
       Within the schoui, creative imagination is actualized in numerous products.    The child
conve/s his personal and family myths and images into storybook form, engages in dramatic
play and language, transforms and recreates cartoons and humourous expressions, conducts
       ative science explorations, and produces indus 'al and artistic designs and forms. What
  r,    ,fired is an expectation that actualization will occur under proper provision and encourage
ment within the educational environment and curriculum.
Regeneration.
       Creative imagination culminates in the regeneratior of the person and the society in which
he or she lives. To a considerable extent we are the products of our imaginations and our lives
and civilizations evolve accordingly. The truly creative image is c seed for continued develop
ment.
       When the rose blossom is actualized it full beauty, it has a lasting influence on thos, who
behold it. Nor does it completely die and wither away since .ne actualized flower transmits
its seed to be regenerated in new or varied form. So, too, is the gardener caught up in the zyr
of planting, fruition, and regeneration. The growth and full actualization of his plants restore!
his faith in the value of the entire process, enhances his feelings of personal power and success
and challenges him to prepwe again for new plantings and idealized forms that are yet-to-be.
       We are all captivated by the manic of our success. The child who receives praise end
acknowledgment for participation in puppetry, language experience stories, puzzle play, singil
eurhythmic movement, sculpture, or whatever creative experience is chosen, will continJe to
generate and explore ever new forms of c.r,.otiwe imagination.
       Education then is an on-going process of developing creative imagination and the harmoni-
ous integration of other human functions. It should involve the total person and culminate in
increasing self-actualization and personal regeneration. To occomplish this end, successful
education requires supportive parents and teachers who themselves are aware of the power of
the human imagination to teach and transform the person.
         lb
I.
     M
                                36
An Imaqin,itive Exihople.
        The process of creative thinking is summarized in tne
chart. An example of the process being used with young children
is the imaginative transformation of the story "The Three Billy
Goats Gruff."
        the title of the story is placed on the chalkboard and
children are asked to suggest uords that go with it.       These
are written on the board as given and define i and discussed.
The teacher then tells or reads the traditional story. A picture
book might also be used to involve the children in relating to
the figures, asking questions, and sharing information.
        Then the teacher asks the pupils to close their eyes and
reflect on the story by visualizing what the different goals
and trolls might look like, how they might feel, etc. Music
(such as "The Hall of the Mountain King") could also be used
during this time.
        During the "illumination" phase pupils could categorize
te words and ideas on the board, discuss related concepts
                                                        questions"
(kinds of bridges, foods, etc.), respond to the "wonder
("how do we know what troll's eat?", "why are the goats crossing
the bridge?"etc.), and restate the main ideas involved.
        Productive enactment of the story might include sequencing
word or picture cards,      the use of puppetry or other dramatization,
and the divergent expression of words and ideas.
        Finally, pupils would be asked to change or transform the
story and to consider questions such as:
      Imagine what would happen if the roles of the troll and
      goats were reversed?
                                                  `'or Two" and
  .   Look at the picture card "A Friendly Dinner
      rewrite the story.
"A Friendly Dinner for Two"
                            36
   Ch. 4 DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & ACTIVITIES
1. Think of a highly effective teacher you have had.
   Describe how this teacher "prepared" you for learning.
2. What might be some of the difficulties in establishing
   an   "incubationreflectionsilent time" in your class?
3. Describe a personal insightful or illuminating
   experience. How did it come about?
4. Give an example of how a friend has actua3ized his
   or he: unique potentialities.
S. How might a child be renewed and regenerated through
   participation in music or the dramatic arts?
                                 4
                                            37
                                                         "The charm of imagination, and the
                                                          power it gives to the individual to
                                                          transform his world into a new uni-
                                                          verse of order and delight, makes
                                                          it one of the most treasu red of all
                                                         human capacities"
                                                                               - Frank Barron
                        Chapter 5: INSTRUCTIONAL MODELS
       Crea!-ive imagination can be developed and directed through appropriate instruction.
Researchers such as Jacob Getzels and Philip Jackson have demonstrated that there is
low correlation or relationship between re-creative imagination (the ability to reconstruct
symbols and ideas into new patterns) and intelligence tests. They have also shown that all
children have potentialities for creative performance, boldness in thinking, and free rein
to their imagination. To promote these abilities, schools need to develop a more positive
attitude toward the importance and values of creative thought and imagination       and to
facilitate them within the curriculum.
       The social critic George Leonard has also written that as a nation we are terribly
concerned about the reading and mathematics achievement scores of school children, yet
we have not yet seriously considered a curriculum that would both improve these scores
and also tc'    the transformational skills necessary for human survival. However, there
are many instructional models and pro;     1; which have proven successful in developing
creative imagination and related skills. Some of these will be summarized here.
Receptive and Focused Attention.
      Recent studies by neuropsychologists show how verbal and attentional functions are
enhanced through imagery training ard self-verbalization strategies. The basic prepara-
tory step in developing creative imagination is to train the person to openly reflect,
concentrate, and attend to whatever images may come. Some educators, such as Gay
Hendricks and Russel Wills, refer to this as the "centering" process.   This usually begins
                                                   4
                                                 38
through relaxation and body awareness instructions and lessons.
        Several years aao William Linden s'udied the effects of reflective meditation training
on the cognitive and affective functioning of third grade children. He divided the children
into an experimental cnd control group. The experimental group consisted of 26 pupils who
received training twice a week fos 18 weeks. The meditation program trained the individual
to focus his attention on on object or image and to resist distraction from other sources of
stimulation. The results showed that the experimental students became less anxious, more
independent, and improved in concentration and self-control.
       Another similar program involved children and parents using relaxation tapes in a
home training program. A total of 13 hyperactive children were provided with 20-minute.,
daily home training sessions for three months.   The tapes emphasized visual imagery and
significantly reduced anxiety and increased attention on criterion tests.
        Recently, numerous forms of relaxation, centering, and reflective meditation have
successfully been used with all kinds of persons with learning and behavioral problems. People
are being taught to quiet themselves, to reduce their bloodpressure, to slow their breathing
rate, to reduce stress and test anxiety, to   ;;en themselves fully to sensory stimuli in their
environment (such as natural sounds or important messages), to learn more quickly, and to
recall more effectively.
       One clinical example is of a 9 year old boy who was highly distractible. The school
psychologist, Edward Workman, demonstrated a highly effective training program consisting of
six 30-minute sessions within the school setting. The boy was taught to relax and imagine him-
self sH;na quietly, attending to task, and engaging in self-rewarding activities. Imagination
training was continued in the regular classroom with highly significant positive changes in
behavior.
                                              39
 harpening The Image.
       Once the person has been prepared through relaxation and centering activities, most
educational programs shift to sharpening and enhancing the image. For example, contemplate
trying to read without picturing the story, doing c geometry problem without imagining the
symbols in your head, or remembering something without seeing important associations. A
number of successful -nethods have been devised to sharpen sensory images.
        Betty Edwards is an art instructor who has experimented with several techniques for
helping pupils to draw. In her remarkable book, DRAWING ON THE RIGHT SIDE OF THE
BRAIN, she discusses the importance of helping the person to concentrate on pictures and
sensations rather than words and labels. By invertirg drawing models of pictures and objects
it becomes difficult for the left brain to label and classify them. Consequently, the right
brain patterning function comes into play and the pupil can concentrate on lines, form, and
sensory qualities of the model. By such methods, the direct perceptual image is strenthened
and results in dramatic improvement in drawing skills in a very short time.
       As o result of his stage work with children over many years, Art Linkletter concluded
that the "imagery muscles" of a child's mind could be exercised and developed in the same
way that his biceps are built. However, he found that motivation and practice were essential
for creative imagination to occur. In this respect, he discovered that the use of "whopper"
stories, tall tales, jokes, and humorous incidents helped to sharpen and develop mental images.
        Two outstanding memory experts, Harry Lorayne and Jerry Lucas, have stated that the
secret in memory training is to develop silly, ludicrous visual images which link key ideas to a
picture symbol code. Very young children have no trouble using her imaginations and farming
ridiculous pictures; they not only do it easily but think it is a lot of fun. An example of this
                                               40
technique is in training a young child to correctly pronounce the word "caterpillar" by
first haying,    picture a cat chasing crawling things up a pillar.
         Visual imagery training has also been used to help learning handicapped children
to read and to spell. For example, Barbara Cordoni taught a 12 year old boy in the sixth
grade to improve four grade levels on reading tests as a result of one-half ear of visual
imagery training. The boy also improved his spelling grade from "F" to "A".       Her secrel-
was to have the child associate visual images with words and then to recall and reproduce the
words through revisualization. Her technicrJe also included drawing the word pictures and
configurations including seeing letters in their proper location and then having him write the
word on spelling paper.
Synchronized Learning.
       Most instructional models combine relaxation, focused attention, visualization, multi-
sensory materials, and positive reinforcement. The integration and synchronization of sensory,
affective, cognitive., and intuitive functions of the human mind make for more effective
learning.
         In one pioneer experiment, Stanley Krippner involved 48 children in a creative imagina-
tion program extending over a five week period. Among other things, the program included
perceptual motor movement activities, relaxation, visualization, experience stories, book
writing, and self-reinforcement techniques. The average improvement was five anc one-half
months on standardized reading tests with one pupil making       two year gain.
         In a similar study, Gerald Jampolsky used focused attention, centering, and sensory
motor stimulation to aid children with ,!arning disabilities who wet, raking number and letter
reversals. By using visualization and kinesthetic training       was able to completely eliminate
the reversal problem in all children in relatively short time.
                              141
     Receptive and focused attention can also be enhanced
in most regular school programs through the use of systematic
training procedures.    For example, the form on the following
page presents some personal strategies for developing attention
and concentration.     The assignment might be any curricul
subject such as reading, spelling, math, or science. Or it
might also be used with the dramatic arts, music, shop
and construction projects. The four steps of task orientation,
instructional modeling, selfdirected instruction, and self
evaluation are clearly specified.      A very important part of
these strategies is when the pupils visualizes completing
the assignment in an orderly way.      Some persons need con
siderable help in visualization and many of the creative
imagination activities presented in this book are valuable
in such training.     If the learner is also trained to reward
himself or herself with points or tokens for completing
each task, the system becomes more effective.      This combi
nation of task analysis, visual imagery, and rrgfreinforcement
is increasingly being used in both regular and special
education programs.
      As the cartoon implies, selfevaluation is a critical
 step in the creative process.      Hoover, it is important that
 the person not be overly critical to the point where it may
 actually interfere with the future production of novel thought
 or action.
                                         4;
                                   PERSONAL STRATEGIES
                                          for
                      DEVELOPING YOUR ATTENTION AND CONCENTRATION
                                        Assignment                   Date
Pupil's Name
                                                                     yes ?   no
I.   TASK ORIENTATION:
      1.    I have carefully listened_ to the teacher's
            explanation of this assignment and what I am
            to do.
      2.    I have verbally_restated the topic and purpose
            of this assignment and how I am to proceed.
      3.    1 have briefly scanned and Previewed_ the instruct
            ional material in order to better understand what
            I will be working with.
II. INSTRiCTIONAL MODELING:
     1- I have carefully observed_
                                    the instructional model
        presented by my teacher and I understand how the
        work is to be done.
     2. I have verbally explained
                                   to myself how I will proceed
         to imitate the instructional model and exactly what
        I need To do.
     3. I have .closed my eyes and have carefully visualized_
         myself completing the assignment in an orderly way.
III. SELFDIRECTED INSTRUCTION:
     1. I have asked myself (or written out) the most
        important questions which I need to answer in
        completing this assignment.
     2. I have organized myself by getting everything to
        gether for this assignment and I have noted (marked,
        highlighted, outlined, etc.) my progress.
     3. I have talked to myself and guided_ my progress
        step by step.                           .
 IV. SELFEVALUATION:
      1. I have completed my assignment and compared and
         checked it with the instructional model.
       2.       I have noted and corrected my errors and mistakes.
       3.       I have Praised and rewarded mysel: for learning
                and completing myassignment.
V.   SELFIMPROVEMENT PLAN:
      What I need to do to improve myself is to _ _ _
                                                     t):1
                      4
              Z_
("Self Evaluation")
          Ti ese methods have also been used with older pupils. Dorothy van den Honert
described her successful junior high school program which emphasized neuropsychologicai
integration of varied sensory inputs.   For instance, one boy was provided with special
 linguistic lessons using stereo earphones and dual tape recorders. Baroque music was
presented in his left earphone for transmission to his right brain. At the same time he
received language training through the right ear which was transmitted to his left. hemis-
phere with amplification. He was also provided with visual sequencing training of words
and symbols. In one year of 65 lessons he gained four years on a standardized reading
test.
          The Lozancv method synchronizes music and positive suggestions and was developed
in Bulgaria. Sheila Ostrander has reported tliat this method uses creative visualization,
boroque music, and body contrrol or autogenic lessons. It appears that Baroque music is
unique in that it integrates right and left brain stimuli and facilitates both conscious and
4,   -onscious recall, improves alertness, and improves concentration. Studies with first grades
disclosed a significant increase in language learning over a short time period. Other studies,
showed improvement in older students and athletes who were taught to visualize and synchro-
nize mind-body movements.
          In Los Angeles, Beverly Ga [yew; taught teachers of 10th grade students to use guided
imagery to improve writing skills. For example, when pupils were trained to carefully
visualize and identify with a rose projected on a screen, they were later able to recall the
visual image and to draw and write about it with much improvement. Significant gains were
recorded on pre and post tests of composition skills.   In addition, students became quieter and
more attentive, and motivation and interest in writing also improved.
         Several government study panels have also v erified the importance of creative imagina-
tion and the role of the arts in education. One such report cited programs that integrate
                                               GS
creative art activities with basic instruction which improved reading performance at twice
the normal rate. The value of innovative programs such as these has been well established
and could well he emulated by all concerned.
        There is considerable evidence supporting the value and effectiveness of creative
imac:ination programs in education, arts, and science. However, the development or
creative imagination is also increasingly recognized as vital for improving performance in
sports and athletics, health and physical fitness, personal development, and business and
industry. Recently, a professional critique by Dan Dorman of university business school's
Mc.;str..r of Business Administration (MBA) degree programs concluded that these students were
being overly trained in methodology at the expense of their obility to effectively use her
"intuition and vision." When business leaders such as these verify the need for training and
development of intuitional and visionary abilities and caution us about the limitations of
methodological and mechanistic learning, most practical minded persons become interested
because they begin to understand the effect of such training on their own lives.
       Whoever we are and whatever we do, we all generate the power to change our lives
in accord with our creative aspirations. Our personal images and visions of what we might
become are powerful intuitive forces thcf help to shape our destiny. Creative imagination
can be developed, focused, synchronized with other human abilities if we have the person&
will and determination to do so.
A    Taxonomy of Educational Goals.
                                                       long
     Great poets, philosophers, and psychologists have
                                                        For
extolled the vale of developing creative imagination.
                                               that the collec
example, Carl Jung advocated teaching persons
                                                 potentialities
tive unconscious mind consists of the inherited
                                           and developed.
of human imagination which should be used
                                                   that tree
Another psychologist, J.P. Guilford, demonstrated
                                                 thought and
structure of human intellect includes divergent
                                                 and challenging
transformational abilities which an imaginative
                                          thinking exercises.
teacher could develop through productive
                                             consider a taxonomy
For instructional purposes it is helpful to
                                         pragmatic format.
which classifies educational goals in a
     Nine major goals useful in teaching creative imagination
                                          below in a develop
and problem solving skills are presented
mental hierarchy.   Theseskills are also classified on the
                                                  (body) domain
accompanying chart as follows: The psychomotor
                                         skills.   The cognitive
includes sensing, playing, and renewing
                                                  and trans
(mind) domain incl,,d?s thinking, communicating,
                                                   feeling,
forming.   The affective (spirit) domain includes
    relating, and idealizing.
                                                       by levels Or,
         These nine goals are further differentiated
                                                       focuses on
    development.   For beginning instruction, Level I
                                            learning to feel good
    intrapersonal ("self") skills such
    about oneself.   The second instructional emphasis is Level :I
                                                  (6f,Jcial") skills
    which specifies some critical interpersonal
                                          Level III presents some
    such as communicating with others.
                              ("universalworld") skills such as
    important transpersonal
                                            might become some day.
    being able to idealize what the world
                                           skills is l_sted with
         On the chart, each of the major
                                       Related curricular subject
    common subskills in parentheses.
                                           right hand corner of
    matter areas are listed in the lower
    each cell.
                                                  First a poetic
         The following pages discuss each skill.
                                                  definition of
    illustration is given. This is followed by a
                                    rationale for the goal and
    the instructional goal. A brief
                                              strategies, concludes
    related objectives, and some educational
    each section.
         INS
"SP1 RI T"
                                      8
1. SENSING:            "Imagination is a power in the mind
                       which assembles images by means of
                       sensations"    Mary Warnock
         .   To be able to imaginatively experience varied sensory
             impressions through physical contact with the environment.
     .       The basis of all creative imagination is to be found in
             personal sensitivity to and awareness of environmental
             sounds, sights, smells, textures, and movement. Pupils
             need to attend to, and integrate, the forms, patterns,
             and rhythms of their time and space.
     .       Get in touch with body rhythms such as muscle movements,
             breathing rate, heartbeat, etc. Listen quietly to natural
             sounds in the immediate environment.  Smell foods and
             ?lowers. Touch and explore things while wearing blindfolds.
             Observe, draw, and construct things upside down or backward:
             Taste different foods.  Imagine that you are an astronault
             or an animal exploring a new sensory environment, etc.
2. THINKING:           "An image is a conscious abstract repre
                       sentation of thoughtful intent"  Jean Paul Sarte
     .       To be able to understand 7,nd imaginatively intr:'ret
             the patterns and relatio; nips between things and concepts.
     .       Creative thinking and problem solving requires the com
             prehension, analysis and synthesis of knowledge or infor
             mation followed by speculative and novel application.
             Productive creative imagination is usually evaluated and
             verified with time an(   experience.
     .       Figural thought focuses on patterns and pictures such as
             cloud formations, H.-?signs, images, dreams, and objects.
             Semantic thought manipulates words such as novel questions,
             verbal expressions and definitions. Symbolic thought
             involves formulas, mathemati,:a epressions, codes and
             metaphors. Imaginative thinking strategies should involve
             figural, semantic, and symbolic activities sich as drawing,
             storytelling, computing, etc.
                                      49
3. FEELING:              "We are all worms but   I   do believe
                         that I am a glowworm"       Winston Churchill
         .   To be able to experience feelings and emotions and to
             imaginatively getintouch with one's heart and creative
             spirit.
     .       Imagination is an inner power which helps us to feel and
             shape reality.  The feeling of wellbeing and personal
             significance stems from our awareness of and identifi
             cation with our "self" and the natural forces of the
             universe.
     .       Explore personal feelings, intuitions, and impressions
             about things.  Provide quiet/silent times for meditation
             and selfcontemplation. Imaginatively explore the feelings
             of others such as friends, aliens, pets, etc.   Role play
             the possible feelings of artists, poets, and other persons
             who have created something of value.   Engage in creative
             laughter and humerous expressions such as jokes, cartoons,
             comedy films, etc.
4. PLAYING:              "I'll play it first and name it later"
                                           Miles Davis
     .       To be able to enjoy creative and imaginative play
             and fantasy.
     .       The human mind craves novelty, play, and mirthful
             diversion.  Playful discovery and invention increase:
             selfkhowledge and creative problem solving.     Play is
             f:Itrinsically rewarding and stimulates learning.
     .       Provide ample opportunitizs to playfully manipulate,
             explore, and experience the environment in varied End
             imaginative ways. Promote dramatic portrayals of stories,
             fantasies, puppet and talent shows, etc. Use popular
             games, educational toys, videoelectronics, sports, and
             teams as part of the educational process. Encourage
             pupils to create and teach new games, etc.
5. COMMUNICATING:     "The right words excite the imagination"
                                          Norman Cousins
         To be able to effectively communicate with others
         through the use of oral, written, and body lancLage.
         The ability to express one's thoughts, feelings, aspira
         tions, and imaginative ideas is a fundamental part of
         education.  Accumulatedwisdom, cultural values, aid
         problem solving techniques are transmitted through
         various kinds of spoken and written languages. Creative
         writing and speaking require the integration of imagina
         tion and reasoning.
     .   Facilitate verbal communication and expression of life
         experiences, interests, and concerns.  Encourage the
         imaginative exchange of ideas, dreams, and revel associa
         tions.  Value the production and expression of divergently
         creative imagination. Promote written language expression
         activities   recognizing spelling and grammatical expression
         as secondary priorities.  Provide time for story telling,
         oral reading, charades, drama, and other forms of creative
         communications.
6. RELATING:       "We live by admiration, hope, and love"
                                          Willia; Wordsworth
         To be able to socially relate to other persons in coop
         erative, helpful, and caring ways.
         Much of the success of personal, family, and community
         life is determined by how well persons get along with
         each other.  Being able to imaginatively predict the
         consequences of one's actions is a critical social skill.
         Model and reward cooperative projects, activities, and
         behavior.  Plan home, school, and community improvement
         and responsibility programs.  Roleplay conflict resolution,
         empathy, and sharing.  Engage pupils in challenging and
         imaginative lessons on providing for the common good,
         community welfare, peace, history, civics, etc.
                                     7)   1
7. RENEWING:          "Live naturally"
                          - Henry David Thoreau
     .   To be able to imagine and become renewed and to restore
         one's vital energies.
     .   Human life is a continuous cycle of self-creation,
         growth, and change. Persons need to learn how to re-
         create tnemselves through such means as healthful life
         styles, diet, exercise, humor, mediiption, and purposeful
         involvement.
     .   Search out and explore varied growth experiences and
         opportunities. Encourage outdoor encounters with nature
         such as walking, gardening, camping, etc. Conduct field
         trips and travel excursions to parks, hospitals, and
         new places.     Provide daily exercise breaks and activities.
8 TRANSFORMING: "From this hour I ordain myself loos'd of
                 limits and imaginary lines, going when I
                      list, my own master, total and absolute"
                             - Walt Whitman
     .   To be able to imaginatively change and realistically
         transform oneself or a thing into something new or
         different.
         Person, are engaged in a continuous creative process of
         adaptation and environmental change. We constantly
         design and construct objects, buildings, and new life
         styles.  Productive problem-solving requires contemplat-
         ing existing patterns and relationships and transforming
         them to meet new and emerging needs and demands.
     .   Challenge pupils to suggest imaginative changes or trans-
         formations of themselves, their family, school, community,
         and the larger world in which they live.  Reward divergent
         and innovative ideas and products.  Provide opportunities
         to build, construct and redesign models, tools, appliances,
         games, and inventions.
                                              6 ,}
                                 52
9. IDEALIZING:     "Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his
                   grasp, or What's a heaven for?"
                                     Robert Browning
     .   To be able to imaginatively propose personal and
         social goals and valued waysoflife.
     .
         Civilization is a product of the human imagination and
         cooperative effort.  For personal peaceofmind and
         human survival, it is essential that we imagine ourselves
         significantly involved in creating our lives and the
         ideal world in which we wish to live.
     .   Encourage and explore pupil hopes, dreams, aspirations,
         and values.  Help pupils willfully purpose and pursue
         goals and ideals.  Celebrate personal and social accom
         plishments and occasions. Cultivate personal hopes,
         wishes, dreams, and aspirations.
                                                      is just
     It should be recognized that the above taxonomy
                                 creative imagination and
one of many ways of classifying
problem solving skills.   This taxonomy, like most others,
contains some overlap and requires integrated instructional
strategies.  However, it does present some meaningful goals
                                                  teacher.
and possible objectives for use by the interested
                             53
   Ch.   5   DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & ACTIVITIES
1. Use the Developing Your Attention & Concentration
   form with a pupil and discuss the results.
2. Present your class with en "upsidedown" drawing
   assignment (ela Betty Edwards). How does their
   work compare to their usual rightsideup drawings?
3. Share an exaggerated tall tare that you have long
   remembered.    Why did this impress you -n much?
4. Have your class enact a favorite fairy tale. Describe
   some of the new or different behaviors expressed by
   your pupils.
5. Use the Creative Imagination and Problem Solving
   Skills taxonomy to rank order the educational goal:.
   for one of your pupils.    Explain your top prioritic
                                             54
                                                                "Every act of creation is first an
                                                                 act of destruction"
                                                                                      Pablo Picasso
                    Chapter 6: RESOURCE MATERIALS AND STRATEGIES
          Every new creation arises from the dust and residue of prior experience. We grow,
change, and evolve insofar as we are able to constantly adapt and reorganize our perceptions
and impressions. This requires concerted effort and will to dust the mental cobwebs from our
eyes, to set aside preconceptions, and to enthusiastically encounter the possibility of new
forms of being or becoming.
          The regular school curriculum seldom offers adequate resources or instructional
materials for helping oupils to develop their creative imaginations. However, most such
materials are not elaborate and tend to consist of a series of strategies which may be imple-
mented in lesson form. A representative number of those will be considered here.
Commercial Sources.
          There are no all-encompassing successful commercial programs, kits, or curricula for
developing creative imagination and other intuitive abilities. Bur several excellent source-
books and reference materials do e.x:st and have long been used Dy teachers 'nd others con-
cerned. In addition to the commonly used fantasy stories, dramatic plays, c' 'idren's
literature, records, magic kits, and ar' materials of all Id is, sum_ .pecia I resources will be
  Inmented on below.
          The Dr. Seuss Books are very special and easily avail,,ble in al libraries and 1->ook-
stores,   Phis series of highly stimulating and imaginative         Hc!...7.-   '-AT IN TN, HA.T,
O SAY CAN YOU SEE, 0 THE THINKS YOU COULD                                          .s other v.,!, mes
which evoke vivid visual and auditory images in persons oc                           '1<F,     typical
of the best that be used directly with pupils with suppleme'otal                             1;,fig, and
art projects. The humor and imagery in such creative poetry books as Shel Silverstein's
WHERE THE SIDEWALK ENDS and A LIGHT IN THE ATTIC will stimulate children's
imaginations and often result H their own creative art work and poetry.
        Another classic is Richard De Mille's PUT YOUR MOTHER ON THE CEILING.
This is a collection of children's imagination games for developing listening skills, mental
images, language, writing, and story models. It is also an excellent guide for dealing
with the feelings and concerns that children bring to school with them. Tkis material is a
great sourcebook for ideas for developing the spontaneous imagination of young learners.
De Mille dramatically demonstrates how "irr.ogining" can change behavior as effectively
(or more so) than the usual rational cognitive materials used in the classroom.
        There are many good textbooks available for use by teachers.    Several popular paper-
back books are available through bookstores.   Gloria Castillo's LEFT-HANDED TEACHING
contains a unit on imagination consisting of eleven different lessons; the same book also
contains fascinating lessons in related areas of sensory awareness, communication, art, nature,
space, and coping with aggression. Jack Canfield and Harold Wells are the authors of 100
WAYS TO ENHANCE SELF-CONCEPT IN THE CLASSROOM which includes fantasy lessons
for helping pupils to become successful, to plan ahead, and to capitolize on personal strengths.
For adults, the book VISUALIZATION by Adelaide Bry is especially effective in presenting
ways and means, scripts, and self-directed activities for developing positive mental images and
creative behaviors.
       Of course, some packaged commercial materials have proven of value. Among these
are the PEACE, HARMONY, AND AWARENESS tapes consisting of six audiocassettes, seven
color photographs, and a teacher's manual for guided fantasy stories, developing visual imagery
                                            57
and self-control. The PRODUCTIVE THINKING PROGRAM contoins five seporote kits for
developing creotive inquiry skills and reloted problem-solving ',-ect r-cues ond includes
numerous lessons, charts, teocher guides ond monuols. Additionoi resources of ocodemi-
colly reloted instructional moteriols are listed ond described in detoil in my book DEVELOPING
COGNITIVE ABILITIES: TEACHING CHILDREN TO THINK,
Imagination Time:
        As with other kinds of leorning, children need guidonce ond structure obout whot they
are expected to do and just how they ore to proceed to begin to feel ond think creotively. One
mojor strategy for implementing such o progrom is to estoblish o "creotive imogination time" as
a regulor part of the doily clossroom schedule. To begin, it k necessory for pupils to leorn the
volues of silence and reflection for developing irnoginotive thoughts ond ideos from their own
intrinsic sources, rather thon from continuo! relionce on external stimulotion. This frequently
storts with some form of integrated reloxotion and focused ottention octivity such os the following:
        BUTTERFLY
              Purpose: The purpose of this exercise is to help you leorn to increose your obility
       to relox, to attend, ond to visuolize pictures in your mind by using your imaginotion.
              Posture: Sit or lie down in a quiet ond reloxed ,,osition with your eyes closed.
              Meditation: As you remoin very quiet, you find thot you will begin to relax all
       over. Just let yourself go and remain very still onc; let oll the tenseness drain from
       your body. As you do so, you will begin to breothe deeply, which will help you to
       relax even more. You are alreody feeling very good throughout your entire body and
       you ore increosingly owore of your breothing. Now concentrote on your exholotions
       ond focus on the deep sense of relaxation thot you experience with eoch breoth thot
       leoves your oody. Very good, just let yourself go ond relox even more.
                                                   6U
                         58
         "IMAGINATION TIME" LESSON MATERIALS
* Steve Halpern Spectrum Suite: An excellent stsreo
    tape cassette featuring music of the colors for
    meditation. Source: Halpern Sounds, 620 Taylor
      Way #14, Belmont, Ca. 94002.
* MM
  Hoist
     Wim
           The Planets:IM. Anothe
            MEW   Maw.
                                   ape recording for
      meditation ("Venus" is especially good). Boston
    Symphony William Steinberg. Source: Record stores.
* Imagine: A delightful board game based on fairy tale
    characters which stimulates the powers of the
    imagination. Source: Arden Press, Box .44, Huntington
    Beach, Ca. 92648.
* Imagination and Language   A workbook of lessons by
                              :
    Linda Wermuth for use with junior and senior high
    school students. Source: PrenticeHall Learning
    Systems, Inc. P.O. Box 47X, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.
* Tickle_M/ Fancl: A series of creative writing, poetry,
    and art activities by Julia Alarie and Elizabeth
    Coulon. Souce: The Monkey c'isters, 22971 Via Cruz
    Laguna Niguel, Ca. 92577.
* images of Fantasy: An outstanding collection of twelve
    full colored transparencies for stimulating creative
    writing and thinking by Sara Jenkins. Source:
    Milliken Publishing Co., St. Louis, Mo.
* Developing Thinking Skills    A cleverly illustrated
                                  :
    workbook of imaginative and challenging problems
    by Hollis Green. Source: Frank Schaffer. Publications,
    G.W. School Supply, 5626 E. Belmont, Fresno, Ca.
* Imagine That_: A set of fiftysome original poems
    which help children explore their senses, feeling,
    and the world about them. Source: Human Development
    Institute, Dept.B, 7574 University Ave., La Mesa, Ca,
       Gradually you are becoming aware of and getting in touch with your
center of self-energy that is moving up through your body and slowly coming
to rest at the point between your eyes. You are feeling very good and re-
laxed as your center of energy now begins to brighten and form a picture.
Just give , ourself up ro your creative imagination. Your imagination will
now begin to create a picture from this center of energy which is focused in
your mind,
       The scene is of a beautiful sunny day with a slight breeze. You are in
a Dark sitting c,,ietly and looking     a chrysalis of a butterfly that has been
attached to a stalk of a greer bush -   :I-   is iust about time for the pupa to be-
gin to open. As you watch you see it begin to happen. Watch the pupa
quiver and move. Now it is mo\           gain. The transformation is taking
elate and slowly the hard cover is splitting, and now the chrysalis is opening
and the new butterfly is struggling to emerge.
       It is a fascinating scene as slowly, so very slowly, the butterfly pure_
itself out of the stalk and moves itself about, Watch haw it rest_ and then
very slowly begins to move about in the sun. Gradually it is drying in the
sunlight. Much time has gone by, and now the butt-!rfly is stretching its legs
and expanding its wings. Now you can see the beautiful colors and patterns
in its wings and body as it spreads itsellj and reflects the surlight.
       It is becoming more active now and is moving out on -J leat          `r'uu enjoy
watching the beautiful creature as its wings begin to move. The color, on +3
wings are glowii    in :lie light of the sun. It seems to be waiting for the breeze.
There it ..:omen   and the butterfly .:5p6      ntly, coaches the breeze,    fluttering
                                               tij
      and circling higher and higher in the air and moving up toward he warm sun.
      As it flutters and flys away, you feel its joy of transformation            freedom.
      You feel light and breezy and very good inside as you watch He butft:rfly
      slowly drift away in the rays of the sun.
               Now quietly watch the butterfl,, and imagine who' ,t will do ext             how
      it moves and where it will ao. In c n-Thute you will c....pc;..../c-Jr. eves Dad use
      the crayons on your desk to draw a picture of the 1-3)tt:?,rf!.   os        magined it
      to be. Then share your picture with someone as you ex                  v,H; you imagined
      it to be and what it would do next.
      Once a "creative imaginat--, time" has been est..::-;ied,                 r e n c,v;ckly beer
adept at the techniques invol. ed and require less direct-ion and supe.-v;sion.         lc, most
   ivities, however, an open and reflective attitude is required which can be initiated
           a quiet period of directed mental imagery. This c-..;(1 then        followed with many
 ,rms of more active involvement.
Active Learning Tasks.
       Several directive ins ructions have proven fruitful H helping pupils to recall un-
conscious feelings and images which can then be used for numerous educational purposes.
Some of the more simple directive suggestions include asking a pupil to describe in detail:
      1.     Your most important wishes and aspirations.
      2.     A vi id drum that you have experienc:.J.
      3.      Some recurring thoughts or ideas that have appeared to you.
      4.      The most unusual experience you have ever had.
      5.      Some i 'lines or sensations that you have had that seemed to be beyond               )ur
              control.
                                              61
      6.   The visual images or impres,ions that occur to you during a 3-minute period
           of quiet reflection and meditation.
      7.   Sit quietly with your eyes closed and listen to a classical record (such as
           Bark's Concerto for Two Vir,;i-is H D minor) ror a few minutes. Then open
           your eyes and use fingerpaint tc ,:.eate a picture reflecting the mood of the
           music.
      8.       :me when you said sorri_t-hing or acted in some way that surprised you in
                  "slipped out of your unconscious.
      Other forms of highly imaginative instructional activities include futuristic think-
in   and playing "famous people".     i    Is can be helped to imagine such futuristic things
as their next birthday party, their next vacation, how garbage and pollution might be dis-
posed of, what a person in the year 10,000 A.D. might look like, and even how world
peace miohl be estahlished. Famous people games require identifying with, acting,
dressing, thinking, and talking like such personalities as Abraham Lincoln, John Kennedy,
Louis Armstrong, Martin Luther King, Babe Ruth, Vincent Van Gogh, Thomas Edis_             Or
others of special interest.
      The following are a few examples c      ommonly used learning tasks that require
children to organize and synthesize facts and information in new and creative ways:
           Select a series of    mon objects and ask the child to suggest how many
           different ways they night be used (brick, roasting pan, cardboard box,
           can, etc.).
           Present several pictures (pr-it-k, moon, ocean, etc.) and ha 'e the child free-
           ,,,,,nriate what might go with each one.
           Present a problem: If you came to a river and there 'as no way to get across
           since there was no bridge, how might you cross e river?
           Have children listen ca:;fully as you read a paraoraph of a current news article
           and then respo    to questions (what, where, how etc.) and sr ulate about
           what other endings might be possible under different
           Present a problem: Suppose your best friend's dog just had the most wonderful puppies
           ;n the world. You really want one, but your mother says that you are not old enough
           to take care of it. How do you think you cr,,.ild convince
                                                   U
                Present a problem: Here are      materials to work with (clay, paper, ue, rock,
                crayons, etc.). Pretend that     '7 re living in the future and you are going to
                take o trip to Mars. From these rhinos, imagine and create something that you
                might need on Mars and then show me and tell me how you would use it.
                Present a problem: Pretend you c.re a Christmas tree that can talk. Describe
                your feelings and experiences to me.
                Have the child use    i   c _;paint to make a picture of a dream that he or she can
                remember and t!,ti-        all about it.
         Imaginative learni               can also be extended or modified to include more traditional
forms of academic learning activities. For learning handicc-nped children, many imaginative
listening activiti       nay serve as a prelucie           remediation of specific auditory processing
deficits os suggested by Pamela Gillet. P.eiriled                   exp--.-ience activities can also be
incorporated into o "cic,aHve imagination time.' Fci example, Bruno Bettelheim has shown
how telling, enacting, and reading f-ntasy and fairy toles can help stimulate the child's
imagination, kelp develop the *ntellect,           Iarify emotions, improve attention, and arouse
curiosity for further learning. leactiers -ave a           imnroved moti-otion and reading compre-
hension through the use of creative poetry-writing exercises (with each student contributing
a line to a poem on the chalkboard) derived from imaginative personal experiences. In my
       k on DYSLEXIA, a series of lessons for use with children with severe reading disorders
helps to illustrnti-_,. how focused attention and creative rnertc! imagery can be used to improve
basic c   .   demic skills.
         Every school -r educational center has materials which may be adapted For teaching
CI (    ive imagination. For example, stimulating pictures from old readers, papers, and
magazines may be cut- up and rearrange:: into new tales of fantasy or adventure. Humorous
,:artoons can he rewritten and presented in unique Forms.             ; and musical activities can be
us(     to synthesize cr expand upon traditional assignments.        The teacher with creative pro-
pensities will r2,, his or her own imagination to transform the muncia          into novel possibilities
for ,;rovith and Jew-T-1;m; .
                             53
   Ch.   6   DISCUSSION QU7STIONS & ACTIVITIES
1. Develop and give a lesson using one of the Dr. Seuss
   books.    Evaluate its effectiveness and how it might
   be improved.
2. Select three rethE:f unusual books from your school
   library                    L:ley might be used as imagina-
   tive ins t :          raterial,
3. Use,the Butt         Exercise in r: chapter.    Describe
   sore of thP               escci:at7.   and pictures
   produced.
4. Select a current movie or television show and
         ass how it might be used as an instructional
   reso ::e.
S. Write a ,group poem about "E.T. and Me" by having
   each pupil compose one li J which you place on the
   chalkboard.
                                     64
                                          IPLfX,E75
                                         HYs iron. Human sensations
         t   .
                                          ,,E,nunter new and verie
                   whi'                    rc3ult in some form of
dru:.tive endeavor.
    t;ur  mi.:;74s and Gobi -s ere constantly ,.ombarded by
sensory stimuli fton tne natural environment.        The inter-
nlny of sounds, colors, textures, and numerous other
         sensations all sbntriHute to our varied mental.
i7Inressions
     ,-suevr, the physiL:al Jor1H around us is seldom ob-
surveri Larefull';.                          uc willfully et em;       to
creatively play wit`   our sensor,/ inagos and experiences.
    In this c`nH-..er, a vn:IL:y of sensory images will be
exnerienceh        tnn a           oresenLed.  The activities
       use   as person:11 rso,Ircns or lesse material. All
of the activities emnhn-ize the importance of 'usinc- basic
sensory process such as touching, tastinE, hearing, etc.
       developmen     our imanination.
     hese activities should be expLriended prior to proceed-
    H. the more mental or cohniLive act5vities oresente7±
   the           harter   uich follow.
      f course, nl: of thrs-? activities              r ed exporli!nr ps are
                                 should he modify`(- nc supplemntec
                                    65
Now fo Use !hose Activities.
     Teachers           prepare their pupils for these activities.
usually, a careful introduction serves to interest and motivate
oersons to become involved in what is to follo. Some useful
suonestions are presented beh,u:
     .   Explain chat we experience our environment through
         our sense organs.    Ask pupils to lis_ the    major senses
         and to give some examples of strong sensations thsy have
         experienced.
     .
         !lake every effort to establish an atmosphere of trust
         and playful adventure before and during the activities.
         Discuss each activity prior to giv-ing it, ask pupils to
         define the senses inv    ved, and answer r,Jlevant question
     .   Explain that creative imagination stems, ?com the novel
         combination of sensory impressions.    Ask pupils to
         share some imaginative sensory impressions (such as
         dreams, "ghosts", strange sounds, etc.).
     .   Encourage pupils to modify and extend the exercises
         according to net    rtnd interest.
     .   Avoid the tendnry to analyze or evaluate experiences
         until pupils have completed the activity or have exhausted
         all associations and expressions.
BODY   IMAGES                                 Itillfteftua
                                                                                --;:n    if
                                                         0tia0y Droath-Hd.
                                 our n71nc:s, arm                                  Inns, and
                                 hod y                   moinh.                  Incrdasd thd
                  td--,;o7 for a 7iduto and tnan                                              nc"!
        ri        ti on CH It aoain hut ima-2inn that yhu are
        t-;hin!                    !-:;'oozed      Li'   5o7eone or somothimo-
        tH.r                                    :Jhsc_:rLe                              iThf:E3 and
                                                     n     F.!   F.?    "C,'n                 7 a     Ur
                        1r- :a fool and describe your feolinos
       Kee:- yOU:                   CI0S0d and :7PC000 conciouF, of '10100
       ueirnt or'         Lhn ilorr and the texture of the c]ote5
       flP    yr-2,Ur   e0y,        thiu ima,-*           L113t you aro hr-2uino
       ljnint,or and lioFlter.                Thu inaninc' tha_ you are
       :nocorninn acavier and havier.                                   Descrihe all of your
       r,oncentrate nn your stomach.                                   lunar-inn thac you are
       your nThrTWAC*                    den,nrihd now you are fcrlinn.
                 /dui- on           dinsod and focus your attention or
             nrot in     T..-r    ni'Hin Of '/Our' forrhd.                                    'OnniO12
                                                                            uihh           do linnt
             'jhnirn tn ru!, On               ;!    PidLurP.                    Lot one ni(2.t!Jr
       Yr:'              Jr.              uhaL             ,,xrcriendod.
                                                    67
                                                              \re
P LE AS AN T SOUN0s                                      %.....0
    nun your eyes and imagine that you       or the
           0001 115 thT21. I 5J-7:st to you.
           Inn non that you are [3y the ocean and tha'.: you
           nun    r     the sound of the sea with the eaves breaking
           In- Ins           the racks. Imagine the sound of the inceminq
                                 the diffnreTt -,nunds of t.!ater rcodirn in
                                                     'hn sounns of tha ':;irdn in
                             aTH            the s,fl:Plinn. 7)Rsnrihn it to nu.
            In:       ;r--1,E:n4ne   a favorite tune.  ;jay it over in
           ',.nur mind.              Do not darn oboe. the words - just
                             thu tune 7-rd rhythm safltivatinn your at.tcrtion
                      frolin.               H*1 the nourd and tune in 00:
           Hun               ':urn    tfl    ynur!-.3elf. Hescrihe it to mn.
      C. Innine thet you      .re inn plane where you hear an
                    but ,-lnasant round. Listen carefully to
           it as it is gettii;g louder.  Describe it to me.
       .    nun         'nor                                        that you non hear
                                               T-.nd nlayinn.       -nu   'iii
                        't fly ;5r ror              J27,71H1?                    nor' and bear.
                                         68
         E KFAT
HL.1!,   your oyeg.
         Tmai;ine your hfll_IP no it 'Jae this morning.
         ThLihe your room and uhat you did before goino
         to   7i-ia;-fast.
              imaoire ydursg. hoino to toe breakfast table.
               OE,. you roe on thu tat Lot hoscribe everythino
         you pee     n same dotal'.
         ::ou ;magihp how it ens uhcn you were actually
         e atioci your       e!:fost.    Descrbe the food. How
                                   hnh
                                                                 Llhy?
         Mot hid you like Hest about your breakfast?
         The ea.?, at the hreakfa-t table with you?       ;low are
         !he" dressed
         De5orc.hr, hnythino else that you sou or that happened
     7. Keen you nyu5  1' 000 and carefully observe the entire
             fart rnna after vpu finished natinc.     ':ihat color
                           H.:_rWp of ruroitul-e and household
                   on oh unto Ho you          hoc':
                                       69
ENSORN/
-im{YRS5 LOWS
         t;hL:           Ha    Floor or       n          j1
  Ics        oiH orç           rn     rni.nxnrj on your ion:7
   Hoon Le Leenly and slouly. Silently count
      dper hreeths.  jith each count try to
   :;reethe reerer and slnuer.                     DDS        the the
   eens'!tirrL involved.
   1.jHTF.
   r:Jna        '.'our eyes,    L-7,-:ethe deenly, and listen
   nuiotly to 500              rhy            :lessisal music (such
   an                   oonccr:             For thrfln m_Thutes.            Then
   o0:20 your                               7:7ey-'; 77 felt polls to
     ran r.:elnred                   2hri                fls   you continue
   to li::ten to the 7usis.
   :-3TOLE7.5
   Pled° severel unusual and 77retty stones                             n   ront
   of you.         3.it nuietly and study them closely.                        How
   tarn one In y']ur hands and feel it.                          Hescri:_u its
   sizm, cnJnr, and texture.                      Thu close your eyes anc
                  that you are cart of the stone; describe
           your         rsions are in some detail.
                               70
E PR EssIvE            MOVEMEN-1
         S.
                  Al.....               '   I.
                                                          I   r
              I
                                                     i;
                                                 .            i't01
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               CZFAH
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                                                                     r
                                                                           11;!fl';
                                           n7-,
                                                                 c-:2flL       ,Inr! Firnt
     ',17cirn                                                            tHe
          h;         niOmOs       :]   hip cF vani2,72 on the ch000late.
J.            hr:     nlacoL3                     or r;oneh on the               \./--,nii1;2   .
7.   rJou imaninc tht he nuts                                 rho of strawberry on
     The last.                               Comm is totter trickle.
     Imai)ir:                                ',       th,r, ::ono and you pre lickinn
     it Fron             ,    :-,,:               ,
                                                          Taste the mutter brickle,
     the .Y.t7               _.,,                     :::h, thd vanilli_l, and the
     nhocol;.
     Innfl'                     you ar,:
               inur                          Coin: in the 10 CFEflM cone
     helm i and Co5,or                      :ou you im;minr:(1 it to look and emote
                                                           72
 5./ .7rL:
         f      f'                                   flfl :fl
     .:n
                                    u         of'          p        n   ?                         12,"
                                    n7;--17,         on =hc: chn7:hcnr':.
2.           inn                    'nu son o cnlororf nirci.n, :3fluere,
     ::nr!   Lrjnr]p on the chalkhnJ:rd.                                         Uhot colorc
                             In W,T:t crer                        fcI   t.,72.' comp?
               all                                                                flVf7i5   '":7-11]
       nicIl                00          '?'         00IJ       :non ,JitH noon noo nloscld.
                          hot             :
                                               see ,,,our hoHse run!]er nnrj nd5ress.
     1:nrnfull.y notion the numbers nod toll no
                           71r3r)        nt the nur771:ers
     flflfljP: InIec lost, PtC.                                  Oflnn       your r-,,ys on              'JFH
        or House nur:lher nod then ohonS to coo if 'mu
     nnulci noon 11 it bncHJnrds.
     -1Pnninn                                  see o :Hone Valentine dn,, he2rt
                                              CU 1TOO1OII Sm S '/OLI coo n 0710ll
                      Inrrl :-no_                      T..77nr:;.n,2                   .7nn      n     Wiffe.7r:nh
                                                      nn37,,r'              fl       -1-r_1-)c it to
                     nn                  flyfl7, nod flrnflLfl
                                         n000          iI no or i
flOL          DNI
                             cI   40       g:Tn   ,InuA   pupL.,rJuTbLmT
       nuA               LJuTnu.,                                     JO
                                                                   300:2..lIj
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r1;,,   ;Jr,                    1,7/MUI,4    Cic4            D;iS       a    aua        ap,,,;uT
                       -LJu      auraeLii       7:auq      FIL/,    a   OS    4          i_JLH
                       J113                  aw4                    LiOJJ         u     nau
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                        :rn tnn               mr LIji175            (74-1    tho uinn5,
          fl=   I             71flflrH    flflr   CHnnriHr: yflur            uttr:rfL/,
                                                           tht yntl
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                             76
                                                                       I
                        "Whoops: T'!-
                         Fjon it :72T
(;11                    hHpp,inim          in
                         7               .;H:                EriH
                                                    77 you    5_7',1
                    closflr!
        r'    `)rd or             uh r*                  !     ur,
             Inr3   Listo c;7!r7full.:
  nior 1,;rins or                                   rn Mn7;
       ninturu 1,1 your.          F1i7
                                                T
DREAMS
   )IJ
         r
         1       r
             -,,Hr   Yr_.)   r
Follow-up Suggestions,
     .
             After each activity ask pupils to evaluate their own
             sensory experience and to suggest some modifications
             or extensions.
                                                           (such
     .       Have pupils share similar sensory experiences
                                                    hospital, etc.).
               OL-' sensations while sick or in the
             Encourage puls to suggest other relevant activities
             and to lead the group in exploring them.
                                                               first
     .
             Play sensory impression games during which pupils
             describe a sensation    "reels soft and fuzzy and purrs",
             etc.) followed by naming the senses involved and the
             objects of concern.
             Take a field trip to a park or garden.     Have pupils focus
         .
                                                              to their
             their attention on some natural th5.no according
             individual intere            .nE.act, leaf, rock, etc.,
                                                              and then
              ;snse it in as many different ways as they can,
             share thn experience.
                                                 classroom whero unusual
         .   Develop E "sensory center" in the
                                                    etc,) may oe placed
             objects (te,,tures, plants, pictures,
             rid experienced.
     Ch.   7   DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & ACTIVITIES
1.    What is your most underdeveloped sensory abilty7
      Now might this be enhance?
      Obtain a beginFiers book on yooa exercises. Try
      several Cr them anr:   L:±191--    the new sensations you
      expe:1
      Design several differ             rinds of sensory exercises
      using water and ice.
4.    Suggest several other kinds of to.ichinc             ('Filysica]
      contact comfort ")   e;:erci:,     7;   which cou1,1 b: uz
      young children.,
5.    Try to describe s7ime of the sensations-and
      from the most vivid dream you can remember.
                                              i7
                                                                         !Ji
                                              tnt::         mn7
                                        1:!nnnim.:771
-fl0           7'                                       r;c1tn7.,
SflVE-:7P1                                                          :)ctiv-His
                          -112CH                                       71F            flfl
                              ,flL1 j       ,-!nd
 1-r]                                                                LILJ7w;
                              flOM o,               i      toxt*cc;.:s.
                                  r4flvr2,1Dflc-: intn 'nnn:in-r2
   .    ;":7        7,11r-1    .1r2r1Lnri     in              D.,Lnpr Liam
                                    rtn:;),              nnr:L'iurnflor:'      nrr-
                                                                    nr rrnJ .i.v.
hon   o Use These Activit:.
      Introduce these activities with a brief discussion on
the general imporc.ance or 'antasy in human life      such as
Portrayed in novels and artistic works.      The following
 ugges'-ions may be especially hlpful:
         Clearly est,Iblish that everyone has fantasies
         which vary from person to person.     Reassure pupils
         that fantasy is one form of enjoyable normal human
         behavior.
      2. List on the chalkboard as many different kinds of
         fantasies that the class can suggest.     Discuss any
         concerns that pupils may have about Lnem.
      3. Encourage pupils to associate to each others fan.r.asi:;s,
         to "hitchhike" cn    '.teresting ideas, and to modify
         and play with some of the image3 oresened.
      4. Oo not ridicule or critize any fora of exptessie
         fantasy. Help the person to rorYAit the farr.asy
         through further discussion, dramatic ers,"-,mblt, etc.
      5. Remember that fantasiE- may result it ingenious
         ideas, designs, or inventions.    Occasionally play
         inventive fantasy games including drawing, building,
         and construction of things (including :hose that do
         not seen. to have any practical appli,:ation).
Lii   k-k AT"   IT ?
                       )
EAT   AT E nzi V g4U-I---e-A
WAT   p?
    J
(
t,1E-yv s   x--r RA
131-1AT-   IF
                     /-
                C-
                     88
This girl has found a magic wand. What can
  you imagine she will do with it?
                       89
    ----iMake   up a story about this picture
I
                              9
                  90
Imagine that you were a zookeeper and   I
had to weigh. a sick elephant.  How
would you do it?
                  91
Pretend you were a Christmas tree
the day after Christmas. If you
could talk what might you say?
                 92
      J
                           /
     4f-
Imagine that you could communicate with    i
life on other planets by means of radio
or television.  What questions would you
ask them?
                                93
Follow up Suggestions.
     .   Have pupils selcted and color one of the pictures
         in this chapter.   Ask them to change the picture
         in some way and tell a story about it.   Tape record
         and play back the story.
     .   Initiate a group writing project on a science
          fiction theme.
     .   Have pupils imagine that they were part of a newspaper
         reporter team doing an investigative story on outer
         space communications (or a new discovery, etc.). Have
         the team plan how they would cover the story, where
          they would go, who they would talk to, questions
         they would ask, pictures they would take, etc.
     .Assign pupils the task of finding a fantastic picture
          (or art work, etc.) and present it to the class with
         -their associations and feelings about it.
     .   Share local (or personal) stories and pictures about
          "haunted houses" and ghosts.
                                     1
                            94
           Ch. 8   DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & AC1IVITIES
1. Why are people attracted to monsters such as
   Frankenstein's monster, Beauty and the Beast,
   etc.?
2. Now might a sick elephant look and act?     What other
   kinds of sick animals might be difficult to weigh?
   Why?    Imagine several different ways that these
   animals might be weighed.
3. Why do people enjoy the Fantasy Island television
   show and the "soap operas"?
4. What makes a "haunted house" scary?     What is the
   most scary thing that you can imagine?
5. When do you tend to fantasize most?
                                    95
                                "Th long as the mind can envision
                                 the fact that you can do something
                                 you can do it!"
                                          -         Schwarzenegger
            L'In7trir P.   IMAGINATIVE SITUATIONS
         :1-;h1m4:er;, artists, writers, and scientists have long
reconni7pd the importance of developing imaginative situations
which can '.7e mentally explored and experimented with.
      Many imaginary situations are playful and non-threatening
and may lead to increased physical control and productivity.
Situational images are usually simple pictorial ones - such
as seeing oneself fishing, skiing, or doing other pleasant
tasks.
      Out it is also possible to imagine more symbolic sit-
uations such as constructing something or dealing with complex
words or objects in novel ways. Almost any academic task or
physical skill can be creatively imagined and refined prior
to actual performance.
       The following activities are suggestive of a variety
of imaoinative situations which may be of some functional
value.   Pupils should be encouraged to use them as medals
for other situational activities which are relevant to their
personal interests or inclinations.
      In all such activities, it is important to imagine
the situation in as much detail as possible and to explore
it verbally and pictorially.   Physical enactment through
dramatic arts, drawings, construction, or by other means
should also be provided whenever possible.
                                    96
How To Use These Activities.
     Begin by explaining that everyone uses their imaginations
when they wish or plan for something to happen.     By picturing
ourselves in different situations we are able to consider
different ways of acting and thinking.     The imaginative
situations presented in this chapter can be used as follows:
     .   Since a common wish or desireable situation is to
         find money, start with the "money in the garbage
         can" activity.   After sharing what might be done with
         the money ask pupils what they would not do with the
         $10,000 (or what they feel would be a "waste" of the
         money). Then list and discuss imaginative and fortunate
         money making situations (contests, lucky gambling,etc.).
     .   Discuss how some wishes and desires actually became
         realized through followup planning and effort. List
         several wishes and discuss which ones might be the most
         feasible &Rd why. Recall past wishes and daydreams that
         proved highly unrealistic and disappointing.
     .   Share some "scary" imaginative situations.     Explain how
         "pictures in our minds" and anticipations actually
         create favorable or unfavorable situations (such as
         fear of trying something new or different, etc.).
    .    Exchange partial ides.    For instance, on the "helpful
         advice cartoon" have one pupil write in the doctor's
         words and another pupil   complete the patient's words.
    .    Encourage pupils to project themselves into a variety
         of situations and to anticipate how they might behave.
                                    1 u,
                97
               l
                     /
Imagine what you would do if you
opened your garbage can and found
a bag with $10,000. in it.
                98
Imagine what right happen if you had    I
 to spend a night in a haunted house.
                                   99
HELPFUL ADVICE?
Objective: To use humor in expressing and understanding feelings
Procedure: Study the cartoon above and think of some humorous advice that the dr).7trt
  might be giving his patient.
Activities
1. Write in the doctor's words.
2. Write in the patient's words.
                     100
FISHING
      Make up a tiny story about this cartoon.
        Now tell me anot or way it might end.
               101
This boy is peeking into a strange room.
  What do you think he sees?
                     102
ALLnumn:
              thF2t you could set your
 nun        lounc.     How much would
 It h   7     ou often- would you be
            it': How would you USE.)   itr(
                             103
                        PLAYBACK
Ns Steve watched the playback film of the last basketball
game, he couldn't believe his eyes. Was it actually him
making all of those mistakes? After all, he was the first
string forware with an outstanding record. And, although
his team had lost the game by only 3 points, he tried hard
to win.
     The last quarter was unbelievable.    As he saw himself
make foul after foul, he recalled the coach's words to "get
hold of   himself.   And then he sew himself denying his fifth
foul and swearing that the officials had made a mistake. But
there he was on the film, holding his men tightly with his
own two arms.    Why couldn't he even remember that he had
actually done it?
          Why do you think Steve could not remember
          committing his fifth foul?   What might Steve
          learn from watching the playback film?
                            1
Pretend you had all the money you wanted
and you went to a Super Store sale where
you could buy anythin n. What would you ouy?
Why?
                            105
  BASKETOALL
Close your eyes and relax.   Imagine that you want
to play basketball and that you are walking onto a
court w7;ere you are going to practice.  You recognize
the court   describe it to me.
    1. Imagine you are walking up and down the court
       bouncing the ball with a steady rhythm.  Keep
       your oyes closed, extend your hand and imagine
       bouncing the ball.
    2. Now you are walking to the free throw line. Imagine
       centering yourself before the basket, holding the
       ball in both hands, focusing on the backboard target.
       You take a breath, bend your knees and shoot.   Imagine
       the ball going through the air, striking the board,
       and falling back through the basket.
    3. Now imagineuelking over and picking up the ball and
       returning to the free throw line. Again you relax,
       center yourself, focus and get ready to shoot. Show
       me how you are holding the ball. Now imagine you
       shoot and make the basket.
    4. Keep practicing in your mind by shooting five more
       baskets. With each shot you are becoming more accurate
       and feeling more confident. Did you make all of the
       baskets? Describe your shots to me.
    S. Now imagine that you are planning to rt.In up to the
       basket and shoot. Look and see where you are going
       to go and what you plan to do. Now you are moving
       and shooting the basket. Describe to me what you
       imagined and how you might have improved your shooting.
                106
ies                     41111=111.0,
                                       alaseOlmft
                                           'aro
      imaime you wcre taking e 1077.
      vacation on this cruise ship.
      Where would you go and what do
      you think might happen?
              107
Imabine uhot this picture is about
  an  u`-it is acing to happen.
                                    108
Fo1lou up Suggestions.
     .   Have pupils imagine an environmental situation
         that might eventually change their own behavior
         or way of living (such d3 pollution, disaster, etc.).
         Then brainstorm some imaginative uays of coping
         with the situation.
     .   Repeat some of the word association activities using
         different kinds of musical background, Discuss how
         different kinds of music helps produce varied mental
         images.
     .   Have pupils imagine themselves in a school talent
         show or skit.   What might they do?
     .   Image some new ways of communicating with persons
         that might exist by the year 5000 (forms of extra
         sensory perception? 3D video telephones? etc.)-
     .
         Involve pupils in exploring some new sport or different
         physical activity through mental imagery.   What kind of
         athlete or "hero" might they wish to become?     Have them
         visualize and practiceintheirminds some of the move
         ments or skills that might be involved (such as shooting
         baskets, skiing down hill, lifting special weights, etc.).
                             109
      Ch. 9   DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & ACTIVITIES
1.   Why do mystery and Letective stories appeal
     to so many people ?':
2.   What kinds of magic tricks would you like to
     be able to perform if you were a great magician?
3,   How do newspaper and television reporters attempt
     to capture the at'cention of their readers and
     viewers?
4.   What might be some of the problems involved in
     attempting to improve athletic performance through
     the use of mental imagery?
5.   What kind of adventurous situation is most
     appealing to your imagination?
                               110
                             "Thoughts are free and are subject
                              to no rule     and give birth to
                              creative force"
                                                  Paracelsus
         Chapter 10.   CREATIVE THINKING
     Our everyday world presents us with numerous practical
problems requiring careful thought and action.       Most of
these problems can be approached and solved in several
different ways.
     However, many persons have been conditioned to think
in narrowly restrictive modes.       And some individue:Is even
believe that there is only one "right" way to deal with
issues end concerns.
     Children need to      taught to reflect on alternative
approaches to problem solving.       Free thought does give
birth to the creative forces within-us.       But these forces
must be nurtured in an open and permissive environment
which actually encourages divergent thinking and explor
ation.
     In this chapter a variety of realistic problems are
presented for thought and consideration.       The first few
are relatively simple. Those that follow require more
thought and are presented with supplemental writing and
discussion activities.    All of these problems are merely
illustrative of the many different kinds of material
now beinc used to foster creative problem solving.
                                111
Hcw To Use These Activities.
     Begin by explaining to.pupils that most problems can be
solved in several different ways and that the first proposed
solution may not be the best or most appropriate ono..Then
discuss the following points:
     .   All persons are capable of alternativedivergent
         thinking and creative problem solving. 1-he first step
         is to believe in one's own potentialities and to open
         one's self to new ideas and suggestions.
     .   It is essential to take   the time necessary to play with
         problems in order for novel thoughts and associations
         to begin to emerge. Emphasize that the first possible
         solution is usually followed by others with time and
         reflection.
     .   Many alternative ideas emerge when the person takes
         a different perspective on the problem.    For instance,
         have pupils experiment with restating the problem, turn- -
         it around, working backwards with available information,
         or imagining themselves as one of the persons or objects
         involved and trying to see things from that point of view.
     .
         Suggest that most people actually create many of their
         own personal or social problems.    These kinds of problems
         can also be solved through imaginative thinking such as
         mental roleplaying of alternative ways of behaving.
     .   There are many books, programs, and courses available on
         creative prohlam solving.    Some of these are available
         through library and other educa:ional resources which
         pupils may wish to investigate and report on.
                   112
Pretend yourfriend had some beautiful
playful kittens and you wanted one but
your mother says you are not old enough
to care for it.  How do you think you
might convince her to let you have one?
                                         N.)
          that it was raining hard
   side   and that you wanted to oet
to your   friends house but that you
did not   have an umbrella.  Now mioht
you get   there without getting wet?
                 19
                  114
Mary has just missed her school bus.
Her parents have already gone to work.
What should she do?
                 115
Imagine that you got lost in
a big forest.  How would you
go about getting out?
                    116
Tnis man was on a long hike and came
to a wide river without a bridge.
Imagine several ways that he might
get across.
               117
What are some ways that We might
reduce the number of peoplc killed
by handguns each year?
                   118
Imagine you were stranded on an island
with two other oersons,  who would you
CF1005f_2?
               119
Imagine that a young man had a
motorcycle accident late at night
on a lonely read in the country.
What do you think he might do?
              120
Imagine that you uere going to
visit mars.what would you take
with you? Why?
                          121
                                           eLs   h ;. Och"
S   n FA.,,ctseo
                   Inagine how many different ways
                   you could send a message from
                    an Francisco to Washington, D.C.
                                  122
Followup Suggestions.
     Most of the activities presented in this chapter can
be followed up by pupils designing similar problems for
further consideration. Some of these might include the
following:
     .   Collecting and sharing varied solutions to innovative
         games and puzzles (such as Rubic's cube, etc.).
     .   Try some imaginative approaches to problems presented
         in cr,,ative problemsolving courses such as Edward
         De8ono's Five Day Course in Thinking.
     .   List several recent inventions and discuss the situation
         that prompted their consideration.   In what way might
         these inventions be extensions, improvements, or trans
         formations of existing products.
     .   Have pupils list a personal problem (health, family, etc.)
         and attempt to draw pictures of different ways of dealing
         with it.
     .   Involve the class in developing a list of major national
         problems (unemployment, crime, peace, etc.). Poll them
         to establish current priority problems. Brainstorm
         divergent and imaginative approaches to the problems.
         Develop a class project and special bulletin board
         for posting ways and suggestions for cuping with the
         problem of most concern to the group.
                            123
  Ch.10   DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & ACTIVITJES
1. What are some of the things that might prevent
  people from using creative or imaginative problem
  solving methods or techniques?
2. Think of the most creative or innovative person
   that you know.   What makes him or her distinctive?
3. Discuss something that you have created or a problem
  situation that you solved imaginatively.      Explain
   the process that you experienced in dealing with
   the situation.
4. What are the attributes of a creative teacher?     Haw
  might these skills be acquired?
E. Where might you go to learn to develop your own
   creative problemsolving abilities?    Why?
                               124
                                     Imaginative play and make-belreve
                                     facilitate language development
                                  and the ability to categorize and
                                     think.
                                                  - Jerome Singer
            Chapter 11.   LINGUISTIC STRATEGIES
     Ail Educators are concerned with improving the language
and communication skills of their pupils. Many persons have
great difficulty using words, phrases, and other language units
in meaningful ways. A primary concern of linguistics is the
atudy of "meaning" in varied forms of language.  Through the
use of special learning strategies, pupils can be taught lin-
guistic skills which contribute to he development of their
thinking and problem eolving abilities.
     Considerable evidence exists which supports the value of
using fantasy lessons, make-believe, and "pretend" techniques
with both children and adults.  Constructive fantasy produc-
tion correlates significantly with the development of higher
order language skills and makes learning more joyful and pro-
ductive.  Reading, writing, spelling, and oral vocabulary can
all be greatly improved through the use of imaginative multi-
sensory teaching methods which help to integrate left and
right brain hemispheric processes with the "total person".
     Some of these strategies are presented in this chapter.
All of them emphasize the importance of thinking imaginatively.
Some of them, such as the lesson on "spelling imagery" are
almost totally dependent upon the use of mental imagery if
success is to be achieved.  Of course, these lesson strategies
are merely suggestive and should be extended with other rele-
vant exercises and materials.
     One highly recommended supplemental activity is to have
the pupil create additional learning tasks using these exer-
cises as models.  The learner should also be encouraged to
draw or write his or her responses.  Whenever possible,
dramatic enactment and movement activities should also be
used.
                                  125
How To Use These Activities.
     Explain that oral and written language is one of the
distingui3hing characteristics of human            Sings. Point out
that the activities in this. chapter are primarily concerned
with develouino novel linguistic concepts.            Traditional
convergent thinking activities are presented in ways that
reQuire some imaginative or divergent response.
     Begin by introducing the first activity outlined
urder "Developing Linguistic Images and Concepts!'           Select
a well knot.n story (such as The Three Billy Goats Gruff)
which is fun and easy to imaginatively associate to. Have
pupils play with the story ideas and concepts and finally
create their own innovative version.            Then use the My Creative
Thinking Guide to review what they have done.            Proceed
to the following more convergent activities only after
ample introductory wordplay and novel thinking.
     .   Commonalities:    Discuss what is meant by attributes,
           similarities, and analysis.          Ask the class to give
           examples of each term before introducing the activities.
     .   Op2osites: Contrast opposites and differences.             Challenge
           the class to produce at least one divergent response
           to each item.
     .   Absurdities: Define "absurdity" as something that most
           people think is very foolish or nonsensible. Have pupils
           write examples on the chalkboard and draw exaggerated
           pictures of them.
                                        A   _
                                    126
     .   Innovative Forms   :   Explain that most language is
           interpreted and understood within the context of
           a certain cultural experience that is constantly
           changing.   Have the class suggest new words or
           phrases that have recen'cly appeared in song, slang,
           or other popular forms.
     .   rleta2horical Abstractions:      Discuss hoc words may
           represent many different imaginative ideas and are
           not always to be taken literally.       Give examples of
           puns, proverbs, fairy tales and mythological poetic
           language forms which might have varied meanings
           and interpretations.
     Above all, encourage pupils to enjoy playing with words
and language expressions, to continue to experiment with
novel or divergent responses to conventional "single answer"
questions, and to communicate with feeling and imagination.
                                     1
                                        _27
Developing Linguistic Images and Concepts.
       .   Introduce     the words or concepts to be used through
           a model picture or object and ask what pupils know about it.
       .   Present some novel oral rhythmic prose, songs, chants      etc.
           in which the words are used, roReated.1 and memorized.
       .   Show pictureword cards to be organized and sequenced.
           (such as inThe Gingerbread (tan, Old MacDonald Had a Farm,
            Billy Goats Gruff, etc.).
       .   Playfully list varied word associations such as:
                       Topic:"Billy Goats"
Descriptions      --     Actions   --   Place         Results
 big                      run      over the bridge   to get home
 white                    yell     near the water    and fight
 smelly                   kiss       on a fence      then eat grass
       .   Repeat and Rredict varied word sequences.
       .   Illustrate (draw, etc.) pictures of sequential characters,
           objects, and ideas.
       .   Cooy_new words and phrases on card' or strip paper.
           "Read" and sequence with a friend of sTall group.
       .   Review main ideas and the most enjoyable parts and
           rhythms in the material presented.
       .   SuEplement with similarly shared selections from
           favorite children's stories, award winning books, etc.
                                      *
a 4 I I p m I I i A I MI gm 1 m m -
NH?
                                 129
IMAOINARY         LIKENESSES AND DIFFERENCES
                      Close your eyes and listen carefully.
                      I want you to imagine several different ways
                      that these things are alike and different.
   H   0 W ARE YOU                     ISM     raG.Lrt4G BGTTER
            DR, 3EKYLL ?                            -r bikr4K YOU
 1. Tell me how Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are alike and
       how they are different.
 2. Tell me how Mickey Mouse and Donalc Duck are alike and
       how they are different.
3. Tell me how Blondie and Dagwood are alike and how
       they are different.
4. Tell me how Charlie Brown and Lucy are alike and how
       they are different.
S. Tell aie how Snoopy the dog and "The Red Baron" are
       alike and how they are different.
6. Tell me how Pac Man and Dracula are alike and how
       they are different.
7. Tell me how the monster Frankenstein and a mechanical
       robot are alike and how they are different.
B. Tell me how "Superman" and Startrek's Mr. Spock are
       alike and how they are different.
9. Tell me how Robinson Crusoe and Toni Sawyer are alike and
       how they are different.               1'1
10. Tell me how E.T. ("the extrrre_tial") and you are
                                         130
                COMMON ATTRIBUTES
                          Study the attribute forms and anawar the
                          questions.  Then imagine another form with
                          those attributes and draw it in the proper
                         box.
                                 TIPS
                                               Draw a Tip
All of these are Tips:
    C
None of these is a Tip
                          L
Which of these is a Tip'?
     0
What is a Tip'
                                    lC
                           BEEPS               Draw a Beep
All of these are Beeps
None of these      Beep
1,Vhich of these     :=3.7ep''
What is a Beep'
                                          131
REAL        SIMILARITIES AND 0-FFERENCES --
                     Complete the exercises in the boxes.  Then
                     close your eyes and imagine some other kinds
                     of objects or symbols that have some similarities
                     and differences- describe them to me.
      Objective: Identifying similar functions
   1. Put your finger on each object and tell me what it is.
      Explain to me what each object is used for or what it does.
   3. Put your finger on two objects that have identical purposes.
                                                                       What is
   4. Put your finger on two other objects that have similar purposes.
      that purpose.
                                                              Why? Mark it with
   3. Which object above does not belong with the others?
      your pencil.
   6. Tell me another object that
                                    would go with the one that you marked. In
      what way is it similar?
      Objective: Recognizing abstract similarities and differences
   1. Touch each of the figures below and tell me their names.
                                                         and tell me their names.
   Z. Some of these are numerals. Touch the numerals
                                                       tell me the,,
   3. Some of these are letters. Touch the letters and               why they go
   .. Show and tell me the symbols that go together. Tell m
       together.
   5. One symbol does not  belong with the others. Mark it and tell me why it
                                                                 other ki,ids of
      does not belong. What is this symbol called? Tell me some
      ,;vmhols that would go with this one. Draw one on  the hoard.
             5A                97FOM
                                    132
       VERBAL OPPOSITES
             Close your eyes, listen carefully,
             and think what the missing word
             might be. Then tell me the word.
             (The common responses are printed
              upside down on the bottom of
              this page)
 1.     The opposite of in is
 2.     The opposite of North is
 3.     The opposite or black is
 4.     The opposite of smooth is
 5.     The opposite of laugh could be
 6.     The opposite of false could be
 7.     These fruits are stale but those fruits are
 8.     Those pencils are the same but these are
 9.     This knife is dull but that one is
10.     That horse is very wild but this one is
11.     This ladder is safe but the one over there is
12.     most or the water here is very shallow but over there
         it is very
13.     Relatively speaking, automobiles are expensive while
         bicycles are
1/4.    Although he is imprisioned he longs to be
17.     Truth I', almost always better than
                               (puuyesTej qT 4881J     't71-   deeqg c2T
  'leap            'snolabuep 'TT 4awel   .0I 'dleys *6 4qual8jj-IP '8
         ',3n.11   .9 'Aso s         r?   'aqT1411   'Lonos      'qno T)
                                           1A
                                                 133
              ANALBGIES -
                      Think carefully and complete the analogies
                      presented below.
Primary:
                          Bird                   Air                         Fish
                 .   A bird is to the sir as a fish is to the
                 .   Front is to back as top is to
                     Long is to short as skinny is to
                 .   Milkman is to milk as mailman is to
                 .   Racket is to tennis as bat is to
Elementary:      .   Leaves are to rake as dirt is to
                 .   Ears are to sound as eyes are to
                 .   Hammer-Carpenter              :        Paintbrush-
                 .   Fireman-Fireengine                 :   Farmer-
                 .   Purse-Money       :   Suitcase-
Advanced:        .   Earth-Sun     :       Planets-
                 .   Strings-Guitar                    Valves-
                 .   Snake- Reptile          :         Horse-
                 .   Digestion- Stomach                 :        Ideas-
                 .   Reality- Imagination                    :    Fact-.
Oth7-_. Forms:
                 .   violence      melancholy
                     IFE1777                                        (cruelty, silence,
                                                                     mood, morning)
                                   clock
                     length        time                            (scales, inch, telescope,
                                                                    ruler)
                   ABSURDITIES
                      Close your eyes and
                  listen carefully to what
                  I say.  Imagine what is
                  happening.   Then explain
                  what is absurd or silly
                  about what you visualized.
            .    The two mice loved to tease and play with the cat.
            .    When it rained Michael folded up his umbrella and went outside.
            .    Larry's ice cream cone froze in the hot gymnasium.
            .    Mary dried herself with the towel and then took a bath.
        .        In the sprino the leaves fall off the trees.
        .        Barber:, always puts her shoes on before her sacks.
        .        Goldilobks invited the wolf to her grandmothers house.
        .       John and Linda watched the Football game on the radio.
    .           A dinosaur was found alive in the fossil museum.
    .           The fire was so hot that Tim put more wood on it.
    .           Aladdin's magic carpet would not fly because it ran out of gas.
                "Look what I have!" said the woman excitedly.      "This is a
                magic wand: You can see it in my hand!    It will dissolve
                anything you touch with it in mere seconds, and it only
                costs five dollars."
                "Tonight's channel 5 television news report features pictures
                of a hugh flood taken directly from Noah's Ark."
.               Imagiru   your own absurdity and write it below:
                                                14.
       WORD ASSOCIATIONS
Lnok at the word "n.:3dow" below and the cssociativ,,,
Uor'-!S (cow,        rilk) ending with "ice cream";
nou close your eyes and create an imcinary picture of
these word associations. Do the same for the words
"di--t" to "astroneult".
       meadow        ir C OW   nrazinn   milk      ice cream
       dirt         4r earth   space     ship      astronault
row write in your own words which imaginatively associate
the followine:
       walk                                        'ost
       nourtin .411.                               superman
       forest        _.                           music
                                                  mystery
       donor:                                     rainbow
       'n LI C   ...pp                            Einderella
            1                                     n,chster
Draw and coinT a nin:tHrn of one of your above word
ass:ciatiens.
                                         136
INCOMPLETE PROVERBS
   Read the incomplete proverb
   aloud and provide the last
   word in the sentence (the most
   common answers are printed up
   side down at the bottom of this
   page).  Then use your imagina
   tion to explain what the proverb
   could mean.
  1.   Haste   makes
  2.   Nc gains without
  3.   A penny saved is a penny
  4:   Alwys let a sleeping dog
  5.   Little strokes fell great
  6.   A rotten apple spoils the
  7.   Well done is better than                         said.
  8.   A bird in the hand is worth                           in the bush.
  9.   Tongue double                    trouble.
 10.   Little rogues     isily hecome                        ones.
 11.   Fish and visitors stink after                            days.
 12.   Carly to bed and early to                        ,   makes a person
        healthy,               and wise.
                                   (   ALI1Tean 'asT1                "aeig; 'TT
       'qeaab or 'sbuTiq      *6        '0111   '8    'TIGn 'C 'Teiaeq 9
         'sa)1eo s     'arT            'peulea        'suTed -z' easen T)
                                                11u
                                    137
MULTI-6ENSORY SPELLING IMAGES
     Select a word you wish to
     spell and following the
     exercises below.
   1. Copy the word correctly as you
      spell it aloud three times:           0
   2. Use the word in a sentence. Write
      the sentence and read it aloud:
   3. Write the word in syllables. Say
      the syllables loudly and clearly
      several times:
   4. Imagine (with your eyes closed) the
      word divided into syllables together with its pictorial
      representation. Say the word and spell it aloud.
           *Imagine the syllables in color. Say the   syllables and
            indicate their color.
           *Imagine that you are underlining the syllable which is
            most important for you to learn what syllable is it
            and what is its color
           *Imagine that you are writing the word in syllables on
            a chalkboard. Now write it in the air with you finger.
      Practice visualizing and writing your word several times
     using different materials (chalkboard, paper, saltbox, pens,
     pencils, crayons, etc.) as you say it aloud.
                                       138
      NONSENSE RHYMES AND CHANTS --
            Close your eyes, listen to the rhyme and visualize
            what is happening. Then repeat the rhyme with me.
            Now say it in rhythm by yourself. Describe the most
            vivid part of your image. Create your own nonsense
            rhymes, chants, and songs.
            .   Roses    re red,       roses are yellow,
Ark                grar4dfather's teeth,           are lost in the jello!
            .   Ashes to ashes and dust to dust
                   show me a cat that a mouse can trust!
            .   Mary had a little lamb it liked to run and play
                   and everytime that Mary lel't it stayed away all days
                Poor old lady, she swallowed a fly
                   I don't know why she swallowed a fly.
                        poor old lady,       I   think she'll die.
            .
                Cinderella, dressed in yella,
                   went upstairs to kiss a fella,
                        made a mistake and kissed a snake,
                              and came downstairs with a bellyache.
            .   My mother was born in England,
                   my father was born in France,
                        and    I   was born in diapers,
                              because I had no pants!
            .
                Monkey wa- a sittin' on a railroad track,
                   pickin' his teeth with a carpet tack,
                        the train came suddenly around the bend
                              and the monkey reached his journeys end!
                               139
      INNOVATIVE FAIRY TALES
         Close ycur eyes and listen to
         what I tell ynu about a famous
         fairy tale.  Then imagine what
         might happen and tell me all about
         it. Wnat would you do if you were:
1. Robinson Crusoe stranded on an island and
   you discovered a live dinosaur there.
2. Cinderella who went to the ball but you
   did not lose your shoe.
3. Hansel or Gretel in the witch's  gingeroread
   house and she invited you to stay to eat
   all you wanted and to become her helper.
4. Jack in the beanstalkand the giant became
   your best friend.
5. Snow Whitt or one of the seven dwarfs and you discovered
   a strange tunnel and noise in your mine shaft.
6. You became E.T.'s (the Extraterrestial) close friend and
   decided to go with him to live on his home planet.
7. The Ugly Duckling who never did discover that he was   a
   beautiful swan.
8. Beauty or the Beast but you did not speak the same language
   and could not talk to each other.
  Now tell me what your favorite fairy tale or story is
  about and if you could change it how you would do so:
                                            140
                                 Through the universe
                       err gone fit ii   nrlii Ct ex.ictly 5 month- Ot course
                    ,p:)t   v.eekr.      lee 11.1 lriri refueling for the lon:;
      Ilidrit               Brad ',ill' th.--i thew vpr. mare children. air,:ady
       iiii     r, thir spare city on Orris After all this was the elohill
               ni,,ko the (Ho t.f.iivcitheiei-.s. h2 felt like a pioneer Tiis he
      looked out ot the windows at the bright stars surrnuncling him in the
      universe Then he saw Osaka coming through Inc, door She re-
      minded hi of Japan and lhr 10 other nations that               had volun-
      teers on tnis flight. Brad felt close to his triers from throughout
      the world as he looked out on the bea-titifril universe He wondered
      what his future life with his universal family would be like.
1   Draw or color a picture of what you think the spaceship may have looked
    like
2 Mtn your class, discuss what you think it might be like to live on a moon
    station for 6 weeks.
3   Try to put yourself in Brad's place and to feel what his present world on
    the spaceship might be like. Describe your feelings to your discussion
    giudp
4   Write a paragraph descricing what Brad's future 'Tie on Venus might be
    like
    All humanity is in 11    ;)rocesS of growing, changing, and becoming new
    rind different Discuss wh;i1 you think Osako might hope to become in a
         iile on Vw1t:S
                is one large        Ity,og on the SnaCeS'i:;) called earth We are
    to of nany forms of lrt wloi,c;th.)ut the universe What other forms of life
        you think may exist in the utiRcrso^
                                 161
Followup Suggestions.
     Always have pupils modify or design some new item9
modeled after activities presented in this chapter. Then
encourage related activities such as the following.
         Compile a list on the chalkboard of all the responses
         your pupils give to "tell me how the monster Frank
         estein and a mechanical robot are alike and how
         they are different.''
     .   Have a pupil write a verbal analogy in four different
         forms as presented in this chapter.
     .   Teach several spelling words .using the multisensory
         imagery methods and discuss the results.
     .   Have a pupil select a verbal absurdity and draw a
         pictorial representation of it. Make up a story about
         it.
     .   Create your own fairy tale based on some personal
         experience or awareness.
                       142
      Ch.11   DISCUSSION QUESTIONS AND ACTIVITIES
1. What makes a song popular? Give several examples.
2. Create some new words (including funny sounding
   11 nonsense" words) by imaginatively changing or
   adding to existing ones.   Make up your own pro
   nunciation and definitions.
3,. Who is your favorite fairy tale character? Describe
   your feelings and impressions about this character.
4. When are proverbs used?    Share one that you have
   heard your parents or friends use and explain what
   it means to you.
5. What are the varied resources in a library that
   might be used to find other kinds of word games
   and thinking puzzles?
                                   143
                                     "Laughter is the sun that drives
                                         winter from the human face."
                                                    - Victor Hugo
             Chapter 12.   DEVELOPING THE SENSE OF HUMOR
                               AND DIVERGENT THINKING
    It has been said    at man is the only animal who can laugh at
                                                            and
itself.   Thi s is because mankind has learned to recognize
                                                 Most civilizations
express ridiculous behavior in self and others.
                                      identify and laugh at the
have valued the ability to be able to
                                                             and
absurdities of life--and to apply these insights to personal
social improvement and survival.
                                              perceiving, speaking,
    Humor is the distinctly human faculty of
                                                        expressive
and writing what is amusing or funny. The purpose of
                                           and to increase motiva-
humor is to decrease tension and anxiety,
                                          words and ideas which are
tion to attend to the varied meanings of
                                      When we describe humorous
being communicated between persons.
                                             satire, etc., we are
situations through jokes, tall-tales, puns,
                                               of reality   Such
playing with ideas which are representations
                                          of our cres.:,tive
representative thought is truly a figment
                                                   communication, it is
     Because a good sense of humor facilitates
something to be treasured and nurtured.       Most learning disabled
                                               Often, this is due
 children have an undeveloped sense of humor.
                                         associative processes
 to dysfunctions in the psycholinguistic
                                   144
which result in syntactical and semantic problems.      For example,
dyslexics commonly express confusion with word meanings and
sentence stricture.
    Although most persons are born with a potential sense of
humor it must be developed th gugh experience and education.
Special educators should pro\    ie some humorous lessons which stimu-
late the child to express      ferences and creative ideas.   Good
humor provokes the imaginatio and can be used to help us learn
more effectively.     A wise saying is that "a good laugh everyday
helps to keep the doctor away."     In this chapter we will consider
various forms of humor and some ways it may be used to stimulate
creative imagination and problem solving.
The Humor Survey.
    For educational purposes, it is best to start with a "humor
.-;rvey" of what the child thinks is amusing.    What "tickles the
funny bone" of one person may appear unintelligible, crude, or
even repulsive to another.    As with all human faculties and abili-
ties, the sense of humor is gradually refined through progressive
stages of development.    Any survey should take these developmental
levels into consideration.    These stages can be characterized as:
    Z.     The Early Childhood "giggling prankster" Stage.
    II.    The Middle Childhood "foolish comic" Stage.
    III.   The Late Childhood "puzzling riddler" Stage.
    IV.    The Early Adolescence "punning wit" Stage.
    V.     The Adolescent-Adult "satirical critic" Stage.
    Each of these stages is defined below with representativ,-
examples of humor.    The major thinking processes and basic learning
                                 145
                                 for each stage.   It must be
experiences are also identified
                                     not a test but an inquiry
emphasized that the Humor Survey is
                                 creative humorous thinking which
into the kinds of divergent and
                                   at the time. The evaluating
seems to characterize that person
                                   humorous items on the stage
teacher usually begins with those
                                              age, saying:
 immediately below the child's chronological
                                         and riddles.  Listen
    Here are some funny jokes, stories,
                                          why or what is funny
    carefully and then tell me in detail
                                this is so.
    or foolish about it and why
                                  the person's verbal response
    It is essential to write down
                                        it is necessary for the
and their explanation. In most cases,
                                        dialogue with the person
teacher to carry on a brief inquiry or
                                     actually thinking. Although
in order to determine what they are
                                      the following rating system
there is no formal scoring of items,
                                           planning:
may be helpful for later follow-up lesson
                                         and gave verbal explana-
       = Demonstrated good understanding
         tion of the humor involved.
                                            and very limited verbal
     ? = Demonstrated partial understanding
         explanation.
                                            with poor or no verbal
     0 = Demonstrated lack of understanding
         explanation.
                                                         STAGE. -
         - I.   THE EARLY CHILDHOOD "GIGGLING PRANKSTER"
                                            the Menace" type
     This stage is characterized by "Dennis
                                                        doing
 personalities who exhibit spasmotic laughter and enjoy
                                                 This largely occurs
 mischievous tricks and "being tickled pi!lc."
                                    146
during the preschool years from one to approximately five years
of age.   The basic thinking experiences are sensory motor adapta-
tions, discovery, and invention.       Some typical humorous items at
this stacre are:
    1.    Daddy tickled and tickled the baby and they both laughted.
    2.    When Suzie opened the box a big paper snake jumped out
          and hit her on the nose.
    3.    Billy put so much ice cream on his cone that some fell off
          and wet his pants.
    4.    Dennis the Menace put some worms on hisiricher's house
          plants.
    S.    The little dog bit the ghost on the seat of his pants.
    6.    Activity:     Make a "funny face" for me.
            II.     THE MIDDLE CHILDHOOD "FOOLISH COMIC" STAGE.
    This stage is characterized by the "Goofy/Donald Duck" type
personalities who frequently do silly and nonsensical things and
enjoy "playing around."       Most often, this occurs during the primary
school years, ages six through nine.       The basic thinking experi-
ences are those involved in establishing concrete (physical) rela-
tionships and classifications.       Some humorous items are:
    1.    Mary had a little dog, its fleece was white as snow.
    2.    The clown put his head in the lion's mouth.
    3.    Dagwood was late for work, ran out of his house and
          knocked over the mailman as he hurried to catch the bus.
                                    147
    4.    What comes after "G"?     (Whiz)
          What comes after "O"?     (Yeah)
    5.    When the people sew the boys with pies in their hands
          running at each other, they started to laugh.
    6.    What's white on the outside, green on the inside and hops?
          (a frog sandwich)
    7.    When Goofy found that he was putting his shirt on backwards
          he turned around the other way and pulled it on over his
          hea,d.
    b.    Knock knock:   Who's there?     Arthur.
                         Arthur Who?      Arthur any more jokes.
    9.    Girl to boy:    "The only time you have something on your
                          mind is when you wear a hat."
   10.    Daniel Boone was born in a log cabin that he built himself.
   11.    Activity:    Look at this page from the Sunday comics and
                       tell me something that you think is funny.
         - III.    THE LATE CHILDHOOD "PUZZLING RIDDLER" STAGE.
    This stage is characterized by the "Lucy/Charlie Brown"
personalities who struggle with perplexing questions and problems
and come forth with ingenious answers.        This is the "fun and games"
stage in elementary school between nine and twelve years of age.
The basic thinking processes are engaged in comprehending beginning
abstractions and analogies.       Some humorous problems are:
    1.    Why do birds fly South?      (because it's too far to walk)
    2.   What's the difference between heze and there?       (the letter T)
                                       148
    3.   What has 18 legs and catches flies?            (a baseball team)
    4.   What falls often but never gets hurt?              (rain)
    5.   Tim:     What did dinosaurs eat?
         Slim: Judging by the one in the museum, they didn't eat
                  anything.
    6.   Ann:     What does a burglar feel when he climbs in a window
                  and is greeted by a fierce Great Dane dog?
         Dan:     Burglar Alarm!
    7.   When does 11    4-   2 equal 1?     (on a watch)
    8.   Belle:     Who is the strongest man in the citl?
         Mel:      A traffic cop.      He can stop a speeding truck with
                    one hand.
    9.   What did one eye say to the other eye?
         (there's something between us that smells)
   10.   Where can you always find money?           (in the eictionary)
   11.   What can't you name without breaking it?              (silence)
   12.   Harry:    Why are you running?           Larry:    To stop a fight!
         Harry:    Who's fighting?                Larry:    Me and another fellow.
   13.   What is it that can be broken without being dropped?
         (a promise)
   14.   Activity:     Look at this joke _Dok with funny pictures, read
                       one of the jokes and explain it to me.
          - IV.    THE ELRLY ADOLESCENT "PUNNING WIT" STAGE. -
    This stage is characterized by the "Cathy" type cartoon person-
ality who perceives and implies the varied meanings between words
and ideas.      On the intermediate school level, between twelve and
                                              153
149
                                       150
fifteen years of age, "playing with words" is popular.         Proposi-
tional logic is established.         Try these puns:
    1.   The frog is the weakest animal of all--he will croak
         if you touch him.
    2.   Teacher:     Do you know why you make such poor grades,
         George?
         Pupil:       I can't think!
         Teacher:     That's right.
    3.   Joe:     Why did you hit the dentist?
         Moe:     He got on my nerves.
    4.   My boy friend put two and two together and got my number.
    5    Teacher:     What is the definition of ignorance?
         Pupil:       I don't know.
    6.   Doctor, you told me to give my husband enough rope; so he
         skipped!
    7.   On mules we find two legs behind and two we find before,
         Wt. stand behind before we find what the two behind before!
    8.   Cy:    Do you like my new bathing suit?       I got it for a
                 ridiculous figure.
         Vi:    Y u certainly did.
    9.   What do you call it when your teacher phones your parents
         to tell `.}'em you're doing poorly in school?       (a bad
         connection)
         There was      young lady from Niger
         Who smiled as she rode on a tiger
                They came back fro     the ride
                With the lady inside         1. b
         And a smile on the face of the tiger.
                                         151
   11.    Make up a pun for me using the words bare and bear.
         - V.     THE ADOLESCENT- -ADULT "SATIRICAL CRITIC" STAGE. -
    This stage is characterized by "Doonesberry" and Herblock,
political cartoo,lists who use humor and ridicule to expose folly and
to laugh at one's own mistakes.          This form of humor develops
during and after the secondary school years involving hypothetical-
deductive reasoning and                    It is typified by "tongue -in-
cheek" biting forms of 1
    1.    Mom:     Did you            .a1-7 first day in that new school,
                   mom:
          Tom:     No, but the teacher sure did!
    2.    A man of words and rot of deeds is like a garden full of
          weeds.     (ancient proverb)
    3.    Clem:     I hear that fish is good brain food.
          Lem:      Yep,   I eat it all the time.
          Clem:     Another theory disproved.
    4.    Beware of the young doctor and the old barber.          (Ben Franklin)
    5.    An optimist is a guy who thinks his wife has quit smoking
          cigarettes when he finds cigar butts around the house.
    6.    All men are worms, but I do think that I am a glowworm.
          (Winston Churchill)
    7.    The report of my death is greatly exaggerated.          (Mark Twain)
    8.    Activity:        Look at this political cartoon and tell me
          what is funny about it.
                                               16
                                152
Educational Implications
    "Sense of humor" in the cognitive and intellectual development
of the child has been widely recognized as important and encouraged
by psychologists.    This is apparent from the use of humorous items
on individual intelligence tests.     For instance, the Stanford-Binet
test consists of a developmental scale of tasks and problems which
include "foolish saying" and "funny pictures" at several different
levels of sophistication.    Similarly, Jean Piaget has stressed the
importance'of providing the young child with numerous opporturOties
for playful discovery and invention.       Another psychologist, J. P.
Guilford, has written extensively about the importance of develop-
ing creative potentialities and divergent thinking sh-.11s in both
children and adults.
   Numerous books, programs, and materials are available to help
teachers ,   , parents develop imaginative, humorous and creative
divergent thinking skills in children.       The most commonly used
ones are jokes, riddle and puzzle books with colorful pictures
and attractive print.    These books are available in all children's
libraries and bookstores.    Many classroom strategies for using
jokes and humor in the development of creative imaginative abili-
ties have been outlined by Ruth FitzSimons and others.       A summary
of these educational possibilities include having children:
    .   Repeat a joke after the teacher.
    .   Tell and discuss jokes and humorous events.
        Act out funny incidents and stories.
    .   Write and illustrate joke books.
    .   Collect and discuss comics and cartoons.
                                       1
n may feel threatened and the child may be viewed as having learning or
for problems requiring special treatment to enable him or her to con-
    Under such circumstances         can be difficult for many children to main-
their self-esteem and vital interest in learning.
However, where self-esteem is ma'        :wined and the vital creative spirit
song, most persons conti              learn in spite of formal school restii:-
    9nd limitations.    Self          on has always been a major form
inal development.      Some variu,a examples of divergent thinkers             sir
ive products are worth considering.
.    Thomas Edison was a bother to his teachers and an ur         ppy pupil.     He
      felt most of his real learning was experienced through his novel
     experiments which he conducted at home and later in his laboratories.
      Edison left school at an early age and went his own way.        A sample
     of his terrible grammar can be found in       is letters; for instance,
     at 19 years       age he wrote a friend:    "Hows all   the folk did you
      receive a Book of Books from Memphis that he promised to send them."
     But Edison's belief in himself and his creative energy gave him
     perseverance to conduct exhaustive investigations which finally
     resulted in numerous practical inventic s--including the electric
     light bulb and the phonograph.
.    Helen Keller was a deaf-mute who did not talk until she was ten but
     then went on to finish college and become a successful lecturer and
     author.    She developed her    inique abilities through the use of
     finger-spelling, an in      itive teacher, and strong personal deter-
     mination to communicate.
     AlherL Einstein was notaLly slow and "oackward" in school and had to
     be tutored    in mathematics.    In school, a teacher's report described
     him as "adrift forever in foolish dreams"       However, Einstein developed
               ilirod a good irlagin,ition which enabled him to visualize his
                                     154
       .   Write imaginatively different words and sentences to exist-
           ing carLJon frames.
       .   Tape record jokes and funny stories.
       .
           Share humc,:ous poems, songs, and chants.
       .   Put on a vaudeville show and videc_ape it.
       .   Imagine and write funny divergent endings to fairy tales
           and selected stories.
       Perhaps the most important tool for developing the st___e of
creative humor         children is the teacher's (or parent's) person-
ality.       The willingness to accept divergct thoughts and to play
with       ords and ideas is essential.    Teachers should be open,
accessible, and ap zeciative of humor and its possibilities for
helpir_ their pupils to develop creative          magination and to learn
more effectively.
                                 155
      Ch. 12      DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & ACTIVITIES
1. Tell youtfavori.3 joke.
2. Share a humorous greeting card that you have
      changed or modified.
3. What is your favorite cartoon character? Why?
4. Read a funny article or short        LJLJ to your class
      and then have them suggest sor.3 cha-,7;es to it.
(;.   Have a "Laurel and Hardy" film paily and enjoy your
      :aughter.     Share and discuss some of the most funny
      scenes.
                                     156
                                                        "How many never t'ink
                                                         who think they du
                                                                 - Jane Taylor
                               THE CREATIVE SPIRIT
     Creative thinking can be taught.        The first step is to teach children
that they possess unique creative potentialities which              developed
through willful reso.ution and im3g;native effort.        Then, the teacher and
educational syste-.1 rmJ-t pr(;,ide an open, and sti,Alating, learning environ-
ment where ,.uriosit:,, FAJeculation, and experimentation is rewarded.       True
                         comprehension and exploration of the relationships
betwee. tnos, Nords, and ideas -arid not in the dull mechanical repetition
 f reguryitd facts or exercises.
     Few schools emphasize thinking skills or provide sufficient opportunity
for creative imacination and problerk solving.       For example, most reading
progr::-Is stress basic vocabulary and decoding skills but fail to spend
e-ough tine on helping pupils to imaginatively        relate and integrate words,
sentences, and key ideas.
     In many situations,       e natural curiosity of children and their er.        ,I-
siastic spirit for learning may even by destroyed by dull and dreary educa-
tional routines.    George Bernard Shaw frequently stated that he felt his
real education was actually interrupted        n             rnmdy was that schools
should be made as   "   ttractive as sin."    Schools should teach children to
believe in themselves Ind to nurture their own creative spirits.
Divergent Thiers
     Wifortunately, imaginative and divergent thinkers are seldom encouraged
in school.   Oftentimes they are even perceived as being noncooperative and
disruptive of the regular routine.      Consequently, the teacher and the entire
                                             160
                                             157
system may feel threatened and the child may be viewed as having learning or
behavior problems requiring special treatment to enable him or her to con-
form.        Under such circumstances       can be difficult for many children to main-
tain their self-esteem and vital interest in learning.
        However, where self-esteem is ma'          :wined and the vital creative spirit
is strong, most persons conti                learn in spite of formal school restii:-
t           9nd limitations.    Self         on has always been a major form
personal development.          Some var,u,i examples of divergent thinkers              sir
creative products are worth considering.
              Thomas Edison was a bother to his teachers and an ur         ppy pupil.     He
              felt most of his real learning was experienced through his novel
             experiments which he conducted at home and later in his laboratories.
              Edison left school at an early age and went his own way.         A sample
             of his terrible grammar can be found in         is letters; for instance,
              at 19 years ,)f age he wrote a friend:      "Hows all   the folk did you
              receive a Book of Books from Memphis that he promised to send them."
              But Edison's belief in himself and his creative energy gave him
              perseverance to conduct exhaustive investigations which finally
              resulted in numerous practical inventic s--including the electric
               ight bulb and the phonograph.
        .    Helen Keller was a deaf-mute who did not talk until she was ten but
             then went on to finish college and hecome a successful lecturer and
             author.   She developed her .inigue abilities through the use of
              finger-spelling, an in     itive tcacher, and strong personal deter-
             mination to communicate.
             Albert_ Einstein was notahiy slow and "oackward" in school and had to
             be tutored   in mathematics.    In school, a   teacher's report described
              him as "adrift forever in foolish dreams"       However, Einstein developed
             and       arnd a good imagin,it ion which enabled hirl to visualize his
                                      158
        ideas which he later analyzed and verified.
        President Wood-ow Wilson did not learn to      ,ad until he was 11   years
        old.     Even as president of Princeton University he had language
        problems.     However, his vivid imagination and drive helped create
        the League of Nations which became the forerunner of the United
        Ntions.
        Nelson Rockefeller was formally diagnosed as dyslexic with a signifi-
        cant reading disability.     But this did not keep him from becoming
        an outstanding civic leader and Vice-President--although he had to
        repeatedly practice his speeches usir.j large cue cards with worck
        Draken dowo into syllables.
     Many other notable persons had severe learning problems but        -came
them with resolution and compensation.      For instance, Abraham Lir        rote
that when -e became of age he did not know much in that he could "ree,
write, and cipher to the rule of three but that was all."      Lincoln believe'
that it was his ideas and determination which enabled him to succeed.        The
famous brain surgeon, Harvey Cushng, wa, always a poor ioeller ("wright"
for right, "offel" for awful, etc.) but learned to compensate quite well.
General George Patton did not learn to read until he was twelve and con-
tinued to have difficulty in West Point but he developed a strong visual
memory which helped him becoe a great military strategist.       Ernest Hemingway
was also acknowledged as an atrocious speller and poor grammarian, but his
creative imagination made him into one of the world's great novelists.
     Children commonly display their natura' tendencies toward divergent
and novel thinking in the early school years.      This is usually demonstrated
tJa-oildh `heir spontdncc,w-, assoion!, to questios asked by teachers.
Some imaginativi, and    imorous examples are as follows:
         What,   is a diamond?
                         frien.
                                            159
     Q:    Why is it, Johnnie, that when everyone         in class offers you the
           choice of taking either a nickel or a dime you          always take the
           nickel?     Don't you know a dime is more valuable?
     A:    Oh,   I   know that, but then they would stop offering me         the choice
           and   I wouldn't even get the nickel.
     Q:    Mother:      I   hope you didn't cry durinq your first day at school?
     A:    Child:       No, but the teacher sure did!
Productive l-antasy
     The creative human spirit is also expressed through fantasy and day-
dreams.    Fantasy is imaginative speculation about something of concern.
It begins with the free association and exaggeration of facts and information.
Productive fantasy occurs when a valued product finally emerges =:om this
creative process.
     The great myths and fairy tales are excellent examples of productive
fantasy.    Everyone dreams of escape and transformation.           Cinderella, Hansel
and Gretel, Snow White and numerous other tales provide a means whereby
children and adults alike can explore their feelings and imaginations.
Walt Disney films, Saturday morning cartoons, puppet-umuppet" shows, and
Dr. Seuss books are common examples of the appeal cf fantasy in our d.ily
lives.
     Teachers can use dreams and fantasy as part of language arts involving
com:lunicaing, drawing, and writing e,leriences.            Some imaginative responses
of   Hfli pupils wh-,h         aye educational implications are:
            illy, what are you thinking about?
     A:     'm daydremng abort going to the moon but at night            I    dream about
           Ubv are you holding your wrist like th,lt, Joan?
           ;'v(' go     hicmps     li   wri,;t (from   five-vedr-old    iscov ring her
           pulsebeat).                             16")
                                          160
       Q:    What     your funny dream last night?
       A:    A big elephant swallowed me but it        alright.    He L:red and     I
             jumped out and ran home!
Since most fantastic thoughts, dreams, ,A associations            (such as those above)
have        on   personal and emotional connotations, they are usually highly
interestng and mot; v tiny to the person who has experienced them.            Therefore,
they clr-    be used educationally and psychologically in influencing and changing
human behavior.
       Fantasy is powerfully expressed in artistic and musical productions
such as The Wizard of Oz, E.T., Star Wars, Pinocchio, and other adventures
which the viewer can identify with.        Millions of records and tapes are sold
as a result of the magic-like drawing power         f exotic cover art, primitive
rhythms, and imaginative lyrics.         Business and industry successfully hawk
their products through advertisements which capitalize on personal daydreams
such as sex, fantasy, and escape.        Modern artists such as Salvador Bali,
Andy Warhol, Picasso and others have found their strange designs and iii3gina-
tive works incrcsindly ac epted and used in          umerous ways.     Videogames
such as Galaxy, Pac-Man, Frogger, etc., combie fantasy adventures with
physical involvement and have become a major new business.            And   of course,
the paperback romance novels and daily television soap operas are ever-
present reminders of the compelling hold that fantasy plays in our lives.
Transformational Images
       iho creative spir    !
                                is strikingly portrayed in products which have
transformed Our wiy of life.         Great music, soaring cathedrals, poetry, and
innovative ideaf-, and inventions all mark the progress of human imagination
and civilization it'=o,lf.       Trmsrormational works result from the uninhibited
play and association of speculative ideas which are finally integrated into
  now productiv:2 form
                                                 .161
      For example, Benjamin Franklin was apprenticed as a printer's helper
at a young age and was largely self-educated.                  But Franklin was forever
curious and constantly tinkering with things and how they might be changed
or used in new and different ways.               While flying his kite and a key in a
storm, the idea of the lightening            roc was born.       In a similar fashion came
the Franklin iron stove and a           host of other useful products.
       le are surrounded by the results of transformational thoughts of all
kinds.        Thomas Jefferson transformed revolutionary ideals and philosophy
into the Declaration of Independence.                   Theodore Roosevelt speculated on the
meaning of his wilderness experiences and created the National Park system.
H.   G. Wells envisioned the dangers of atomic energy in his early book, the
World Set Free, which later initiated the nuclear control movement.                   Carl
Jung studied dreams and cultural            symbols of transformation which led to the
development of humanistic psychology.                   Thoreau, Gandhi, and Martin Luther
Line developed innovative useds c~ non-violence to advance civil rights and
justice.        And all modern scientific research and development laboratories are
constantly searching for ways to improve and better their products.
       In the early school years transformational                ideas usually appear in the
play with words.          If children are encouraged to freely associate their thoughts
,,rd attempt, to express them in new forms they frequently experiment with new
word-, and often r,         se them.     What is important at this         .go, however, is
       ,,e proper use of a word but the creative effort and willingness to
 itonot to comunicate           .)   new ways.      Sol    examples of such attempts are
ct,yiou-,     in the following expressions made by you              children:
       (.):    How did your reading class help you?
               It   helped me read faster and lily apprehension improved, too!
               'y:hat are you learning in English?
                    re leJrninu words of four cylinders now.
                                            iJ e_
     Q:    What did you buy at the store?
     A:    I   got a grief case for school.
     One of the most imaginative portrayals of childlike attempts to communi-
cate transformational ideas is presented in the hit film, "E.T.--the Extra-
terrestrial."      E.T.'s simple utterance of "home.           .   .   home.   .    ." was a culmina-
tion of associative experience including the use of a children's reading-
reldiness television program, the comic page, and an electronic learning aid
which teaches children how        'spell.     John Dewey's adage that every great
advance in science has issued from a new audacity of imagination was aptly
demonstrated when E.T. ingeniously integrated all of his newly acquired
information and creased a unique device for communication with his home
planet.    By combining the electronic apparatus of Speak-and-Spell with a
Kent fork, an umbrella, a saw blade, and other makeshift household items,
he produced a new system which allowed him to make contact with his fellow
heings--and finally to return ho e.         This science fiction fantasy quickly
cdv.uced the hearts and minds of people everywhere because it appealed to
their own basic transformational needs and emotions.
     We all have the need to communicate our thoughts, feelings,                         nd
aspirations more effectively.      And humans continuously struggle to create
and transform themselves and the world               which They live.              In childhood
this process is initiated by playful interactions and tinkering with the
imlediate environment.      As children grow and learn, their words, ideas,
dnd problem solving strategies are shaped and refined.                    This is desireable,
of course, unless Their thoughts and spirit are stilted or destroyed in the
process of unduly restrictive education.
     flivergent thinking, fantasy, transformational experiments and expres-
sions should all     be expected and encouraged without undue concern for the
          ro,.puw,0 or             He               eftotion           one that stimulates
                                                    1 (;-:
                                              153
the mind and fans the creative spirit to continue to actualize its own
potentialities.
Summary.
         This book has presented ideas and activities For
                                 vnd
developing creative imagination and
                                a    thinking skills. These
may be briefly summarized as follows.
    1. We must learn to understand and value creative
         imagination.
    2.   It is important to appreciate the diversity of
         mental functions and to nuture wholestic development.
    3. Creative imagination is expressed in varied lays at
         each stage of life.
    A. The educational process requires time and encourage
         ment for the preparation, incubation, illuminatim
          realization, and regeneration of creative potentialities
          to occur.
    7. [Mod instructional models for developing creative
           m.   Lnation and thinking skills should contain
          f--un=ton,' and measurable educational objectives.
                  3: instructional materials and strategiet;
                  3^j .7.nallenqing active learning              tasks   .
                                s_ion is derenrieht on the .-JeeloEment
                        den5gry imr,ressions.
                    :an he      ,3   very useCul and productive endeavnr.
                      :he   Jr.tt.   r with         .w   jflLi   ;oted
                                     Dractidifg them in advance,
                        rocin solvihq renuires divergent and
                                                         e
                                    164
11. Lannual-     coocepts and comprehension can be facilitated
    L.,   imaginative verbal play and exploration.
12. Humor is a unique saving-grace chick stimulates
    imaginative thinking and reduces anxiety.
                                                 to have
13. For continued growth and development we need
    faith in the powers of our own creative spirit.
            am the creative self that dwells in the heart
                      of every mortal creature:
           i am the beginning, the lifespan,
                      und the end of all -
           whatever in this world is powerful,
                      beautiful sr glorious that you may Vow,
            has come forth from o fraction
                      of m, poN,,er and glory.
                            zlih3gr.:adgita
                                  1.65
   Ch.   1 .7).   DISCUSSION QUESTIONS & ACTIVITIES
1. Discuss a person that you know of who has experienced
   significant learning problems but who has also demon
   strated a creative spirit.
2. Share some highly divergent and imaginative comments
   made by children you have known.
3. W)at is your favorite myth or fairy tale. Why? How
   migilt you change or modify it?
4. What might possibly be done to tray          rm your f.ichr.-
   into a more effective learning center.
S. What might you do to transform yourself into a more
   imaginative and creative person?
                                166
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             ABOUJ THE AU
 abe:'. E. Valett is a professor       4-`--.e   School
of Education and Human Development, California
State University, Fresno, Ca. 93-0. He is
also e licensed and consulting psychologist
vho hz3 prese;ited many workshops throughout
tne United States and abroad.  Among his num-
erous pioneering puhlications are The Remediation
of Learning Disabilities, '-'umanistic Education,
and Dyslexia:.   Dr. Valett iE                   5.nvolved
in   .-le development of self-::c:.ualization and
soe7ia3 education training oroorams. He invites
his readers to make ir;u,,ries and suggestions
reperd'-lo the practical application of his work.