Lincoln Center Institute’s Capacities for Imaginative Learning

Image by Nancy Bareis

A growing number of blog visitors have been seeking information about Lincoln Center Institute‘s Capacities for Imaginative Learning.

LCI has created the Capacities for Imaginative Learning as a framework for student learning, applicable to the Common Core Standards across the curriculum. The Capacities operate as both strategies for, and outcomes of, study according to LCI’s practice.

The Capacities for Imaginative Learning are:

Noticing Deeply to identify and articulate layers of detail in a work of art or other object of study through continuous interaction with it over time.

Embodying to experience a work of art or other object of study through your senses, as well as emotionally, and also to physically represent that experience.

Questioning to ask questions throughout your explorations that further your own learning; to ask the question, “What if?”

Making Connections to connect what you notice and the patterns you see to your prior knowledge and experiences, to others’ knowledge and experiences, and to text and multimedia resources.

Identifying Patterns to find relationships among the details that you notice, group them, and recognize patterns.

Exhibiting Empathy to respect the diverse perspectives of others in the community; to understand the experiences of others emotionally, as well as intellectually.

Living with Ambiguity to understand that issues have more than one interpretation, that not all problems have immediate or clear-cut solutions, and to be patient while a resolution becomes clear.

Creating Meaning to create your own interpretations based on the previous capacities, see these in the light of others in the community, create a synthesis, and express it in your own voice.

Taking Action to try out new ideas, behaviors or situations in ways that are neither too easy nor too dangerous or difficult, based on the synthesis of what you have learned in your explorations.

Reflecting/Assessing to look back on your learning, continually assess what you have learned, assess/identify what challenges remain, and assess/identify what further learning needs to happen. This occurs not only at the end of a learning experience, but is part of what happens throughout that experience. It is also not the end of your learning; it is part of beginning to learn something else.

Click here to download a copy of LCI’s Capacities for Imaginative Learning (pdf)

6 Responses

  1. […] aesthetic experience, and about active collaboration.  They’ve codified the principles into 9 capacities for imaginative learning, a much more thought-through examination of the relationship between the arts, sciences, and […]

  2. […] I am not the only one who espouses the benefits of asking What if?  The Lincoln Center Institute is a champion of imaginative thinking […]

  3. […] to design academic programs using an understanding of art as a way to teach other subjects.” The Capacities for Imaginative Learning, LCI’s educational framework, are discussed in this context, as is our ongoing charter-school […]

  4. […] in K-12 education–but the sources most influential to my current version of the list are: Lincoln Center Institute’s “Capacities for Imaginative Learning,” Hetland et al’s Studio Thinking (which uses the term “Habits of Mind”), Donald […]

  5. […] collaborative partnership at Lehman College with the Lincoln Center, I have come to appreciate The Capacities for Imaginative Learning and recommend using them in your high school […]

  6. […] Shtillim Chumash curriculum.  Staff recently explored the topic of critical thinking, using the Lincoln Center Capacities for Imaginative Learning, which informs this approach, as a basis for their learning.  And finally, staff who accompanied […]

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