101 Activities For Teaching Creativity And Problem Solving

(Joyce) #1

Ticklers: Related and Unrelated Stimuli 79


101 Activities for Teaching Creativity and Problem Solving.Copyright © 2005 by John Wiley &
Sons, Inc. Reproduced by permission of Pfeiffer, an Imprint of Wiley. http://www.pfeiffer.com

13. Excerpt Excitation


Background
I quote others only the better to express myself.
—Montaigne

Writers frequently use quotations to emphasize important points or to provide different
perspectives on a topic. This ability to provoke new perspectives gives quotations the
potential to tickle your brain and generate new ideas. As William Thackeray once said,
“The two most engaging powers of an author are to make new things familiar, familiar
things new.”
Excerpt Excitation uses quotations to help think of ways to make familiar things new.
That’s an essential ingredient of creative thinking—taking what appears to be known and
applying some unique twist to it. Quotations do this by forcing us to consider angles we
might otherwise have overlooked.

Objectives



  • To help participants generate as many creative ideas as possible

  • To help participants learn how to use the activities to generate ideas


Participants
Small groups of four to seven people each

Materials, Supplies, and Equipment



  • For each group: markers, two flip charts, and masking tape for posting flip-chart
    sheets

  • 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

  • One or more book of quotations or Internet quote websites, such as http://www.quotation-
    spage.com or http://www.quoteland.com


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