101 Activities For Teaching Creativity And Problem Solving

(Joyce) #1

  • For each participant: one sheet each of three different colors of sticking dots
    (^1 ⁄ 2 ′′diameter) and one pad of 4 x 6 Post-it®Notes.


Handout



  • Brain Splitter Handout


Time
45 minutes

Related Activities



  • Get Crazy [5]

  • Blender [58]

  • Force-Fit Game [74]


Procedure



  1. Tell the participants that this will be an exercise based on the metaphor of brain
    hemispheric dominance. Briefly explain the differences between right- and left-
    brained thinking as described in the Background section.

  2. Divide the participants into smaller groups of four to seven people based on their
    professed right- or left-brain dominance. That is, ask them to decide which type of
    thinking best would characterize them in general. (If necessary, you may have to
    assign people arbitrarily to one of the two categories to equalize the size of the
    groups.) Try to create an equal number of left- and right-brained groups. (If you
    want to be more precise in dividing the participants, you could have them com-
    plete the Hermann Brain Dominance Questionnaire, available at: http://www.hbdi.com.))

  3. Distribute the Brain Splitter Handout, review it with the participants, and answer
    any questions they may have.

  4. Instruct the left-brain group members to generate as many practical, conventional,
    and logical ideas as they can in 20 minutes.

  5. Tell the right-brainers to generate as many far-out, unconventional, and illogical
    ideas as they can in 20 minutes.

  6. After they have verbalized their ideas, have all participants write them down on
    sheets of flip-chart paper.

  7. Ask the members of each group to count off by twos. Have all of the left-brain
    “ones” move to a group with right-brained “ones” and the left-brained “twos”
    with the right-brained “twos.” There now should be at least two groups com-
    posed of one-half left-brain thinkers and one-half right-brained thinkers. These
    groups represent symbolically the “corpus collosum” function of the human
    brain.


Brainstorming with Unrelated Stimuli 303


10 VG 295-328 10/6/04 1:05 PM Page 303

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