Abstract :
The following is a qualitative portrait of a creative teacher and
her teaching process. Over a period of six months, five interviews
were conducted with the teacher before, during, and
following a university course in teacher education on instructing
diverse learners. Additional interviews were conducted with
six students at the beginning and end of the course and with
the teacher’s husband following the course. Additional data
sets include classroom observations revealed in field notes,
personal memos, and course materials. The overarching
themes represented constructs involving intense and thorough
course preparation, teacher-student connections, and reflective
teaching. Sub-themes guiding the process of creative teaching
emerged including constraints placed on preparation and
reflective teaching, an awareness of self and students within
the process of preparation and connection, feedback from colleagues
and students guiding the connection and reflective
teaching, and the values and goals formed from personal
history and philosophy of life shaping all three major themes.
This case study of creative teaching possesses characteristics
resembling creative acts in other domains (e.g., art, literature,
physics, economics) and presents a model for the education
of future teachers.