14 June 2015

Teaching for creativity: from sage to guide to meddler

Reference: Erica McWilliam (2009) Teaching for creativity: from sage to guide to meddler,Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 29:3, 281-293

Abstract: This paper serves three purposes. First, it makes a case for seeing creativity as a keylearning outcome in our times, and thus the core business of education. It then goes on
to examine the nexus of creativity and pedagogy, showing the conceptual work done to
demonstrate creativity as a learnable set of dispositions and capabilities. Finally and
most importantly, the paper argues the value of a pedagogical approach the author calls
“Meddling-in-the-Middle”, in augmenting and enhancing the repertoires of “Sage-onthe-Stage” and “Guide-on-the-Side” in order to build students’ creative capacity.
Examples are given of what these meta-approaches might look like in relation to the
teaching of Shakespeare. The author concludes by arguing the important connection
between Meddling pedagogy and creative capacity building.

Notes: A culture of teaching that values obedient attentiveness or busy work for its own sake,rather than the attention and busy-ness that speaks of productive engagement, is death to
proactive, self-managing learning. Fortunately, active engagement, rather than listening
and regurgitating, reflects the learning preferences of the present generation of learners,
who are more likely in informal environments to try things out rather than follow
instructions “from above”. If teachers can understand the value of being “usefully
ignorant” about learning options and possibilities, at the same time as they are expert in
their disciplinary field and their pedagogical practice, who are active and inventive in the
classroom, who challenge and support, who do not make things too easy, and who are not
the only source of authority, who use processes of discovery, critique, argument and
counter-argument effectively, who enjoy learning themselves and who do not rush to
rescue their students from complexity – such teachers will contribute immeasurably to the
creative capacity of their students now and in the future.

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