Learning

This is where you will find meaningful professional learning materials to enable you to unleash your own creative thinking and lead others.    

To get the most from engaging with the activities, it may help if you think of yourselves as facilitators of your own and others' learning and development.  

Throughout the activities you'll see reflection questions. We encourage you to make notes to connect and capture your learning as you progress through. 

collage illustration of hands and paper objects
ACTIVITIES

Leader for Creative Thinking - Person Specification

This activity helps you to consider the qualities of a creative leader in order to reflect on your own confidence and ability, and recognise which areas you might need to develop.  Whilst also supporting you to recognise who else in your school may already inhabit these qualities or how you can develop potential creative leaders. It can be completed individually or as a team with colleagues.

ACTIVITIES

Noticing Creative Thinking

Creative thinking is rarely something wholly new that needs to be introduced into schools, in many settings it already exists, albeit in pockets and within some practices. Through an appreciative inquiry approach this activity helps you to notice creative thinking across your school and identify how it is being developed, as well as where it can be nurtured further. This can enable leaders to strengthen, deepen and expand creativity across their school.

ACTIVITIES

Creative Leadership – Being Brave

Creative leadership requires the capacity to lead with courage. Courage to bust assumptions and myths around creativity and courage to explore your own creativity, and bring others with you on the learning journey. This activity invites you to consider others’ experiences as a way of reflecting on your own potential to lead for creative thinking, and to do so bravely!

ACTIVITIES

Creativity and Science

Creativity is often associated with the arts to the extent that some people assume that it does not have a place in other school subjects. An important task for anyone in a leadership role is to challenge staff to rethink practices and to create opportunities for them to try new things. This activity invites you to reflect on how scientists think, consider the overlap with the five Creative Habits and design professional learning that will encourage those teaching science or running afterschool science or engineering clubs to embed creativity in their work.

a book with a title of creative thinking in schools

Creative Thinking in Schools: A leadership playbook

Creative Thinking in Schools: A leadership playbook has been devised by an internationally renowned team of thought-leaders, researchers and facilitators. The playbook is a practical guide drawing together a deep understanding about school and system change with experience of cultivating creative thinking and promoting creative learning habits in schools.