The Creative Teaching/Creative Schools series is aimed at classroom practitioners at Key Stages 2 and 3 who are interested in developing creative learning and teaching in their schools. Each book is supported by Creative Partnerships and offers suggestions, models of practice and stimulus material for CPD sessions. The emphasis is on practical, accessible studies from classrooms framed within jargon-free understandings of key issues and principles found in more academic studies. Studies are complemented by accounts from learners, capturing pupil voice and making clear the benefits and values of changing approaches to learning.
Edited
By Edward Sellman
October 04, 2011
Introducing creativity to the classroom is a concern for teachers, governments and future employers around the world, and there has been a drive to make experiences at school more exciting, relevant, challenging and dynamic for all young people, ensuring they leave education able to contribute to ...
Edited
By Helen Manchester
August 19, 2011
Introducing creativity to the classroom is a concern for teachers, governments and future employers around the world, and there has been a drive to make experiences at school more exciting, relevant, challenging and dynamic for all young people, ensuring they leave education able to contribute to ...
Edited
By Nick Owen
October 10, 2011
Placing Students at the Heart of Creative Learning shows teachers of key stages 2 and 3 how to introduce creativity into what is often seen as a prescriptive and stifling curriculum, and addresses the tensions that can exist between the requirement to follow the curriculum and the desire to employ ...
Edited
By Rob Elkington
August 19, 2011
Turning Pupils on to Learning documents and makes visible how creative learning approaches can engage and motivate children in their learning. The book features six case studies of creative learning projects that cover the early years through to Key Stage 3 which are written by the teachers and ...
Edited
By Ethel Sanders
June 27, 2011
Introducing creativity to the classroom is a concern for teachers, governments and future employers around the world, and there has been a drive to make experiences at school more exciting, relevant, challenging and dynamic for all young people, ensuring they leave education able to contribute to ...