Silent Sunday

Ben Lomond

Ben Lomond” flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

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Creative Pedagogy

Creativity

Creativity” flickr photo by Melissa W Edwards shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC) license

What do people mean when they talk about creative pedagogies? Are they talking about pedagogies that support creativity, and produce creative learners, or are they talking about creative (i.e. novel) types of pedagogy?

According to Wikipedia, creative pedagogy was founded by Dr. Andrei Aleinikov, and this is how he defines it:

 In its essence, creative pedagogy teaches learners how to learn creatively and become creators of themselves and creators of their future.

That’s what I would have expected it to mean, and that’s what I assumed was meant when I signed up for a collaborative experience about creative pedagogies last year. But it turned out that the facilitators had a different understanding of the term. What they were interested in talking about were:

inspir[ing] faculty towards creative/innovative ways of being in classrooms

So anything that’s not just a didactic lecture, probably? At any rate, the emphasis was on what people might do in the classroom, rather than on the theoretical underpinnings to these practices (pedagogy needs to be both, in my opinion).

Would I have signed up for the collaboration if I’d realised this? Probably not. Is it my fault for misunderstanding? Probably.

But once I did realise what was meant, I started to wonder about the whole initiative. If a particular pedagogy is just an approach to teaching and learning that is innovative, does it stop being a innovative pedagogy when it becomes commonplace? Presumably it does. So actually the ‘innovative’ in the description is not really helpful – because what is new to you might be usual practice for someone else. It’s probably better, in my opinion, to talk about alternative ways of teaching and types of assessment.

Of course, your creative (novel) pedagogy might actually be to encourage learners to be creative in another sense of the word – by getting STEM students to use poetry, or humanities students to use LEGO, by setting up assessments that students can be creative about – and submit a piece of knitting or embroidery that answers the question (and kudos for those who create rubrics to assess this type of submission). This is great, but I do think that there needs to be some thought about why these might be of benefit to student learning, rather than just being something novel (innovative) to do.

Personally I prefer something like Aleinikov’s definition. The aim of a creative pedagogy should be to create learners that can think for themselves, and have the confidence to think of interesting ways of answering questions, and to think of interesting questions to ask. And, for philosophy, to help future philosophers to create concepts that are immune from capitalist manipulation.

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13 years of the Daily Create

Today marks the 13th anniversary of the Daily Create I’ve been participating in this since around 2016, often uploading my responses to a Flickr album. Here they are as a slideshow. Here’s to the next 13 years!  You can participate as well – just visit the web page at 5am UTC or follow the @creating on Mastodon.

DS106

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Silent Sunday

Frozen Sage

Frozen Sage” flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

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Photo a day 2024

In 2024 I chose one of the photos I had taken every day and uploaded it to a Flickr album. Here they all are as a slideshow.

Photo a Day 2024

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Collaborative Art

calendar collage

One thing that continues to give me joy each year is the collaborative calendar that some of us contribute to. This year’s calendar was put together by Kevin, and it is a thing of beauty. You can download a copy and print it off if you like.

My contribution is in memory of mum, who loved ducks. I took this on the way home from her funeral.

Mallard at Tebay

Mallard at Tebay” flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

 

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Silent Sunday

360 Xmas Tree Decorations

360 Xmas Tree Decorations” flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

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Silent Sunday

The view from Tir na nOg

The view from Tir na nOg” flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

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Silent Sunday

Christmas Lights

Christmas Lights” flickr photo by NomadWarMachine shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license

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Collaborative Creativity

During the month of November we (Alka, Deb, Mary and Sarah) asked ourselves four questions:

  • Where do I come from?
  • Where am I going?
  • Why am I here?
  • Who am I?

First of all, each of us took some time to free write about these questions and add our answers to a shared Google Doc. When we met up over Zoom to talk about what we had written we were amazed to find so many similarities, as well as our many differences.

After we had all written something about ourselves in answer to the questions, Sarah spent some time looking over the whole document and seeing which words jumped out at her. She created a found poem from these collaborative words and used an online app called Lumen 5 to create a video.

As well as this collaborative video, Sarah and Deb also created their own individual answers to the questions

Deb’s video: https://lumen5.com/user/djacoby/the-me-im-becoming-6psnp/

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