George Lucas Educational Foundation
Creativity

Creativity: A Choice, a Gift, and a Mission

Creativity can rejuvenate your teaching practice by giving you the experience of escape, the foundation of community, and the magical abundance that lets you thrive.

May 2, 2016
Photo credit: ©GableDenims / 500px

When we define and embrace our own creativity, we thrive. And when their teachers thrive, students will learn to thrive as well. We can take responsibility for thriving by giving ourselves the powerful gift of being creative.

Revisiting the Beginner's Mind

This week I went to a mixed media paint party with my sister and a couple of other friends. When we arrived, we met up with another eight students who were ready to learn from a local artist. The energy was a mix of "I barely made it" to "I can't wait for this indulgence of time and creativity."

As we got settled, the artist announced the surprise assignment: "We are painting abstract self-portraits." That put some of us on edge. It wasn't a landscape or a cherry blossom -- it was the human face! Didn't DaVinci work on the Mona Lisa for quite awhile (some say as long as 14 years)?

Well, I'm not a visual artist of any sort. Even scrapbooking is beyond me. So this was a stretch.

As I wove in and out of frustration and progress over the next three hours, doing everything from finger-painting to spray-painting, I exulted in the process. The flow of creating was a distraction from my work at school, a shared experience with friends old and new, and a reminder of the joy in the young-at-heart experience of the beginner's mind. It focused my attention in a refreshing and purposeful way. I think this must be some of the reason that adult coloring books line the shelves of our bookstores and airports.

Pleasures and Benefits of Creativity

Why is being creative an important gift for educators to give themselves? How does embracing ourselves as creative beings cultivate a vibrant professional life?

My paint party taught me three principles about giving myself the gift of creativity:

1. Creating gives the experience of escape.

Whether we create in an art studio, garden, or garage, we gather visceral experiences through the process of creating. We learn how our body feels in the moments of frustration, how to move through them, and how to continue looking for breakthroughs. We realize the power of flow, and we recognize the goodness of that timeless experience of focus. We become makers, and in doing so, we find ways of teaching our students to become makers.

In her book Big Magic, Elizabeth Gilbert describes it this way:

2. Being creative builds community.

Whether they're art journaling at the side table in their bedrooms or playing second-chair violin in the local orchestra, creatives find each other and build community. Consider the communities, either virtual or in your neighborhood, all built around creative endeavors. Relationships of common interest and common process are powerful and refreshing forces of attraction. Building a community of creativity is encouraging and offers a sense of belonging to something bigger than ourselves. That's a great gift for a teacher who spends all day in a classroom with children.

Community, a sense of belonging, an experience of "we're all in this together" -- these things are completely transferable to our classrooms. The template for building community is the same everywhere. We create safety, bind it with encouragement, wrap it in common interest, and we have community.

3. Being creative is life-giving.

Gilbert again gives words and wisdom to this principle:

When we create, we touch the part of us that's committed to thriving. Call it spiritual, divine, or magic. Whatever the words you use, it's a good gift to engage our creativity outside of the classroom.

Creative Success

When you feel worn out or lackluster, please consider giving yourself the gift of being creative. It will take some intentionality, but remember that you're a teacher -- a master at intentionality.

Journal Questions

  • How have you successfully been creative this year?
  • How will you celebrate your success?
  • What is a creative risk that you can take this month?

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Filed Under

  • Creativity
  • Arts Integration
  • Mindfulness
  • Professional Learning
  • Teacher Wellness

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