The Power of Imagination: Constructing Innovative Classrooms Through a Cultural-Historical Approach to Creative Education

Authors

  • M. Cathrene Connery Ithaca College
  • Vera John-Steiner University of New Mexico

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36510/learnland.v6i1.579

Keywords:

cultural-historical approach to creative education (CHACE), K-5, critical inquiry, Vygotskian theory, elementary, bilingual, literacy, affect, cognitive pluralism, creativity

Abstract

All children have a need for and a right to educational programs that foster their creative ingenuity. This article presents a cultural-historical approach to creative education (CHACE) to cultivate K-5 students’ higher order thinking, critical inquiries, and imaginative proficiencies. The text illustrates the application of Vygotskian theory in elementary, bilingual classrooms where interdisciplinary, collaborative, and apprentice initiatives in the arts, humanities, and sciences facilitate the acquisition of literacy, numeracy, and content knowledge. Relationship, affect, and cognitive pluralism are discussed as theoretical cornerstones in a system of activities to nurture children’s novel interpretations, enhanced understandings, imaginative problem solving, critical innovations, and artistic creations within a supportive teaching-learning community

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Published

2012-06-01

How to Cite

The Power of Imagination: Constructing Innovative Classrooms Through a Cultural-Historical Approach to Creative Education. (2012). LEARNing Landscapes, 6(1), 129-154. https://doi.org/10.36510/learnland.v6i1.579