Acknowledgments
About the Editors
About the Contributors
1. Nurturing Creativity, Wisdom, and Trusteeship in Education: A
Collective Debate - Anna Craft, Howard Gardner, Guy Claxton
Part One: Stimulus Chapters on Creativity, Wisdom, and
Trusteeship
2. Tensions in Creativity and Education: Enter Wisdom and
Trusteeship? - Anna Craft
3. Wisdom: Advanced Creativity? - Guy Claxton
4. Creativity, Wisdom, and Trusteeship - Howard Gardner
Part Two: Response Chapters on Creativity, Wisdom, and
Trusteeship
5. Creative Wisdom: Similarities, Contrasts, Integration, and
Application - Dean Keith Simonton
6. Creativity and Wisdom: Are They Incompatible? - David Henry
Feldman
7. How Are We Disposed to Be Creative? - Jonathan Rowson
8. Good Thinking: The Creative and Competent Mind - Helen Haste
9. Creativity, Wisdom, and Trusteeship: Niches of Cultural
Production - Patrick Dillon
10. Wise Creativity and Creative Wisdom - Hans Henrik Knoop
11. Creativity and Wisdom - Christopher Bannerman
12. Leadership as a Basis for the Education of Our Children -
Robert J. Sternberg
13. Liberating the Wise Educator: Cultivating Professional Judgment
in Educational Practice - Dave Trotman
Part Three: Synthesizing Creativity, Wisdom, and Trusteeship
14. Concluding Thoughts: Good Thinking — Education for Wise
Creativity - Guy Claxton, Anna Craft, Howard Gardner
Index
Anna Craft is Professor of Education at the University of Exeter,
England, where she leads the CREATE research cluster. She is also
Reader at The Open University, England, and Director of The Open
Creativity Centre. She is founding Co-Editor Thinking Skills and
Creativity (Elsevier) and founding Co-Convenor of the British
Educational Research Association Special Interest Group, Creativity
in Education. She holds a Visiting appointment at Harvard
University and has held visiting appointments at Hong Kong
Institute of Education. Her most recent books include Creative
Learning 3-11 and how we document it (Trentham Books, 2007),
Creativity in Schools: Tensions and Dilemmas (Routledge, 2005),
Creativity and Early Years Education (Continuum, 2002), Creativity
Across the Primary Curriculum (RoutledgeFalmer, 2000). Her
empirical work, informed by constructivist and socio-cultural views
of learning, seeks to impact practice, policy and theory.
Howard Gardner is the Hobbs Professor of Cognition and Education at
the Harvard Graduate School of Education. He is a leading thinker
about education and human development; he has studied and written
extensively about intelligence, creativity, leadership, and
professional ethics. Gardner’s most recent books include Good Work,
Changing Minds, The Development and Education of the Mind and
Multiple Intelligences: New Horizons. His latest book Five Minds
for the Future was published in April 2007.
Guy Claxton is Professor of the Learning Sciences at the University
of Bristol Graduate School of Education, where he directs the
research initiative on Culture, Learning, Identity and
Organisations (CLIO). His books include The Wayward Mind: An
Intimate History of the Unconscious (2005), Learning for Life in
the 21st Century: Sociocultural Perspectives on the Future of
Education (2002, co-edited with Gordon Wells), Wise Up: Learning to
Live the Learning Life (1999) and the best-selling Hare Brain,
Tortoise Mind: Why Intelligence Increases When You Think Less
(1997). His current work focuses on the development of infused
approaches to the cultivation of positive lifelong learning
dispositions in schools. The resulting ′Building Learning Power′
approach has influenced practice in schools throughout the UK,
Australia and New Zealand.
"The contributors′ thoughts about the importance of a disciplinary
framework as a necessary foundation for building greater
creative and intuitive insight are so true. Their examples of the
artist’s performance as being an ′interplay between the intuitive
and the conscious′ are wonderful. I also appreciated the
discussions on the importance of collegial work and empathy."
*Lynn Erickson, Educational Consultant*
"The book is rich in ideas and scholarship. Its diversity of
perspectives is also a strength."
*Jack Miller, Professor*
"Especially in today′s ′teach-to-the-test′ climate, do we ever need
a book on the subject of wisdom and creativity! This is a
relatively rare and essential title. Our focus as educators (and
citizens) would be enriched by such a book."
*Robert Di Giulio, Professor*
"The book focuses on very significant issues of our time. It
teaches us lessons about ourselves as a society and a culture that
we need to heed. The ideas presented are well corroborated by work
in widely different fields of scholarship, giving them solid
credibility."
*Ruth Thomas, Professor*
"The book reveals some superb thinking about complex ideas. It
offers the valuable tension of differing perspectives, and its
contributions successfully and elegantly bridge the chasm between
theory and practice."
*Geoffrey Caine, Educational Consultant*
"An important topic. A book like this provides fodder for dialogue
and articulation that is much needed in higher education."
*Marilee Sprenger, Educational Consultant*
"Rich, varied, and highly stimulating. This book breaks new ground
by identifying the opportunities and conflicts in our desire to
encourage multiple virtues through education. It will nourish
educational practice and encourage fresh public debate."
*Tom Bentley, Executive Director of Policy and Strategy*
"Creativity, wisdom, and trusteeship may each sound good enough in
itself, but the multiple contributors to this volume make a
compelling case for how much they need one another. Wise creativity
is one of the aspirations, a quality distinctly at odds with the
culture-free and economically aggressive conceptions of creativity
that figure in educational and corporate agendas these days."
*David Perkins, Professor*
“Creativity, that marvelous catch-all phrase with which we are now
all imbued, is a concept that is both complex and simple...a vital
life force. This book is important because its fundamental
proposition is that creativity and being are one and the same. Read
it.”
*Tim Smit, Chief Executive*
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