In this book, award-winning educator Kieran Egan shows how we can transform the experience of K-12 students and help them become more knowledgeable and more creative in their thinking. At the core of this transformative process is imagination which can become the heart of effective learning if it is tied to education's central tasks. An Imaginative Approach to Teaching is a groundbreaking book that offers an understanding of how students' imaginations work in learning and shows how the acquisition of cognitive tools drives students' educational development. This approach is unique in that it engages both the imagination and emotions. The author clearly demonstrates how knowledge comes to life in students' minds if it is introduced in the context of human hopes, fears, and passions. To facilitate this new educational approach, the book includes a wide variety of effective teaching tools - such as story, rhythm, play, opposition, agency, and meta-narrative understanding - that value and build upon the way children understand their experiences. Most important, Egan provides frameworks for lesson planning and more than a dozen sample lessons to show how teachers can use these tools to awaken intelligence and imagination in the classroom.
I skimmed much of this, but I expect its techniques will be helpful to me as a teacher in bridging the difference between my own ideas of what education is for and the industrial model I have to work within.
I didn't pull many quotations for this, and I do agree it could have been shorter, but I love Egan's emphasis on the connections of emotions to learning.
Excellent guide for those educators interested in implementing imaginative education (IE) practices into their teaching.
This book introduces the theory behind IE while giving specific examples and structures essential for unit-planning and lesson-planning in the framework of the imaginative education curriculum driver ascribed by the IE Research Group out of Simon Fraser University, BC.
Feel free to ask questions, or learn more at www.ierg.net (from an educator, not a sales promotor, firmly believing the viability and success of these ideas!)
I should say that this isn't a book I gave up on so much as I just realized it wasn't what I was looking for, so I stopped reading. It's actually very good and interesting, but I was hoping for more narrative and less theory, and since I'm not a teacher, I didn't feel the need to read past chapter one and a half.