Watching Ken Robinson, author of "Out of Our Minds: Learning to be Creative", talking to the National Governors Association on C-Span. Take a look, if you can, at his writings such as
http://www.ecs.org/html/projectsPartners/chair2005/docs/Sir_Ken_Robinson_Speech.pdfToo much focus on content, too much focus on assessments gets in the way of teaching creativity. China got the message. They are engaged on a major educational reform which goes exactly contrary to the content-centric, assessment-centric model that is stifling education in some Western countries. Innovation is what made America great. Ironically, it seems that the emphasis on "basics" content and standardized testing will stop what made American success possible. Robinson believes that creativity can be developed systematically. Creativity is applied imagination. Innovation is putting the ideas into practice.
Which brings one back to Seymour Papert's sardonic article about the "3 R's"
http://www.papert.org/articles/ObsoleteSkillSet.html.
Ironic, isn't it, that I've developed such an expertise in technology standards such as SCORM when they are mostly used for traditional content-centric, teach then test trite content that hinders rather than fosters creativity and innovation? Those are only tools though. The great education comes not from teacher-proof or trainer-proof curriculum and tools -- the question becomes, how can great teachers, trainers, coaches and mentors make this stuff work for them? Not as the only tool, not as the only hammer, but as a useful part of the toolkit that any innovator can use to help foster whole person learning, and along with that the creativity and innovation that lead to true performance. "The problem in education is not that we aim too high and fail, but that we aim too low and succeed."