ABSTRACT

Creative teaching is an art form – aesthetic, intuitive and expressive. The proliferation of new educational policies in the early 1990s and the related increase in tensions and dilemmas facing schools, combined with the growing demand for a wider range of skills and knowledge among children meant that there was an even greater need for creative teaching than before the National Curriculum.

Originally published in 1996, this book addresses this need by: exploring the features of creative teaching with a focus on the day to day practice of primary teachers; showing how teachers used emotion, created atmosphere and stimulated imagination to enhance their teaching; examining the ways in which teachers managed the National Curriculum and developed a new professional discourse in response to government pressures at the time.

This book is a sequel to Creative Teachers in Primary Schools and builds upon this work providing new insights into the art of teaching.

chapter 1|13 pages

Creative Teaching and Its Significance

chapter 2|18 pages

Creative Teachers

chapter 5|15 pages

Creating Atmosphere and Tone

chapter 6|28 pages

Stimulating the Imagination through Story

chapter 7|28 pages

Managing the Curriculum