English is not merely the medium of our thought, it is the very stuff and process of it... It connotes the discovery of the world by the first and most direct way open to us, and the discovery of ourselves (Newbolt, 1921: 20)
Introduction: the place of creativityThe publication of a new national curriculum (sic) in England (DfE, 2014) has had an impact on secondary English classrooms on a number of levels. Although it technically does not apply to the two-thirds (http://www.thegovernor.org.uk/academies.shtml) of secondary schools that have converted to state-funded academies, nor to independent schools, the national curriculum is significant because it provides the basis of examination rubrics. The revision of the GCSE specifications in response to the new curriculum (purportedly to make them more rigorous (www.gov.uk/government/news)) caused many schools to make large-scale adjustments to their English provision. This is welcomed by some for 'reinvigorating' practice (Bullen, 2017) but decried by others because an examination-centric approach circumscribes students' wider understanding and access to culture (Yandell and Brady, 2016;Yandell, 2017; Bomford, 2018).Less well-publicised, but arguably of equal import, is the disappearance of the term 'creativity' from the English orders. While the previous national curriculum for English included creativity as one of its four central pillars (QCA/DCSF, 2007), the current curriculum contains not one reference to the term (nor any word with the 'create' root), perhaps because creativity runs counter to other powerful discourses in education, including the importance of examination results as the measure of a student's merit (Moules et al, 2011). Yet, historically, creativity has long been central to teaching. Creative, studentcentred pedagogy can be traced back to the writings of Pestalozzi in the late eighteenth century; Elizabeth Mayo, who established the progressive Home and Colonial [Teacher] Training College in 1836 (Gillard, 2018)
was inspired byPestalozzi's belief that learning happens through the 'head, hand and heart' (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Heinrich_Pestalozzi). The adjective 'creative' is first specifically applied to English pedagogy when Sharwood Smith of the English Association defined one of the four essentials for the development of the 'true' child as '[t]he encouragement of a creative spirit' (1919: 30) 1 . By the late 1960s, there is wide-spread use of the noun 'creativity' in English circles as evidenced by publications from the Dartmouth Conference (e.g. Dixon, 1967); 'creativity' appears for the first time in a policy document on English education a few year later (Bullock, 1975) and is present in the first five iterations of the national curriculum for English 1989-2007(Smith, 2018. Throughout, creativity is associated not only with valuing and creating the aesthetic, but with becoming, or personal growth, as if the creation of a 'whole' adult depends upon it; creativity is attendant upon 'possibility thinking' through imaginat...