Imaginative Disposition: Student-Centered Learning

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Student-Centered Learning

Homework Helps and Study Tips

If you have an Imaginative Disposition you might learn best when you can THINK and CREATE. Here are some tips that might help you learn:

  • Draw or doodle while studying.
  • Find a place for quiet, alone time.
  • Draw pictures to help you understand a lesson.
  • Make up a poem or song to help you understand and remember information.
  • Learn to do picture Information Mapping to help you study, organize information, and write reports.

Link to interactive PREZI: Imaginative Disposition Study Tips

Best Activities Might Be:

  • doing some form of art whenever you can
  • imagining what you want to create before you start
  • giving yourself plenty of time to think and wonder about things

Choices for Assignments

When you have a choice about what to do, here are some ideas for people with an Imaginative Disposition:

  • Make up riddles.
  • Make a timeline or do a research project.
  • Write a poem or song.
  • Write a journal or memoir.
  • Make a mural or mosaic.
  • Do puzzles or brain teasers.
  • Make a scale model or drawing.
  • Make a diorama or shadow box.
  • Make up a myth, parable, or fable.
  • Make a painting, drawing, or sculpture.

Positive Contributions

The Imaginative Disposition person is likely to appreciate being noticed for:

  • creativity
  • love of beauty
  • ability to have vision
  • sense of openness and wonder
  • ability to create worlds of your own
  • ideas that are different from others
  • ability to design things
  • ability to make things interesting or beautiful

Link to interactive PREZI: Imaginative Disposition Family/Group Contributions

Learn More

If you have taken the Self-Portrait™ power traits assessment use the https://powertraitsforlife.com website to help you understand and use your Power Traits for Life™.

Use the top navigation bar to find pages that correspond to your top Dispositions, Talents, Modalities, Interests and preferred Environment. You can also use the “search” field at the top right of the screen to learn more about how to leverage your strengths.

Support Student-Centered Learning

To learn more about how to use the Self-Portrait™ power traits assessment as a fundraising tool for your organization, click here.