Fostering Imagination in Higher Education

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A01=Joy Whitton
Australian Research Intensive University
Author_Joy Whitton
Category=JN
Category=JNA
Category=JNM
Category=JNT
Complexity
Creativity
Deposits Module
Domain Relevant Skills
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Extended cognition
Extended Mind
Extended Mind Theory
Imagination
Innovation
Mathematical Expression
Pharmaceutical Science
PP
PP Model
Predictive Processing Theory
Productive Imagination
Quantised Radiation Field
Reproductive Imagination
Ricoeur's Notion
Ricoeur's Terms
Ricoeur's Theory
Ricoeur’s Notion
Ricoeur’s Terms
Ricoeur’s Theory
Scientific Inquiry Process
Semantic Innovation
Simulation Pedagogy
Sine Wave Speech
Student Common Room
Tool mediated learning
Trading Session
Twenty-first century learners
Vincent Van Gogh
Wim Blockmans
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367591045
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Imagination and creative teaching approaches are increasingly important across all higher education disciplines, not just the arts. Investigating the role of imagination in teaching and learning in non-arts disciplines, this book argues that a lack of clarity about what imagination looks like in higher education impedes teachers in fostering their students’ creativity.

Fostering Imagination in Higher Education tells four ethnographic stories from physics, history, finance and pharmaceutical science courses, analytically observing the strategies educators use to encourage their students’ imagination, and detailing how students experience learning when it is focussed on engaging their imagination. The highly original study is framed by Ricoeur’s work on different forms of imagination (reproductive and productive or generative). It links imaginative thinking to cognitive science and philosophy, in particular the work of Clark, Dennett and Polanyi, and to the mediating role of disciplinary concepts and social-cultural practices.

The author’s discussion of models, graphs, strategies and artefacts as tools for taking learners’ thinking forward has much to offer understandings of pedagogy in higher education. Students in these case studies learned to create themselves as knowledge producers and professionals. It positioned them to experience actively the constructed nature of the knowledge and processes they were learning to use – and the continuing potential of knowledge to be remade in the future. This is what makes imaginative thinking elemental to the goals of higher education.

Joy Whitton is an academic developer at Monash University in Australia. Her research interests include imagination, cognition and their interplay with tools/artefacts and practices, and professional learning.

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