ABSTRACT
This arts-based research explores the place of creativity in the lives of a focus group of teachers of English in an English secondary school who work within an increasingly performative educational system. As well as interrogating the place of creativity in their lives, the study explores how found poetry can be used as a research method to collate, analyse and then represent data. The poems are produced from semi-structured individual interviews. The participants were able to scrutinise and reflect upon the poems before returning for a second interview. This process helped strengthen the findings and gave a deeper understanding of their experiences regarding creativity. The findings suggest that the participants have limited space to be creative, or to think differently in their teaching practice. The limited space to be creative comes from normalising practices of a performance culture, but the restrictions are extrinsic and internally imposed by the participants.
Acknowledgments
Dr Sally Bamber and Dr Luke Jones of the University of Chester who supervised the thesis that this paper stems from. The participants in the study for giving their time to be interviewed and allowing their voices to be shared.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Correction Statement
This article has been corrected with minor changes. These changes do not impact the academic content of the article.