

Fueling Creativity in Education
Dr. Matthew J. Worwood and Dr. Cyndi Burnett
The Fueling Creativity in Education podcast provides listeners with unique insights into the field of creativity research, including best practices for applying this knowledge to a traditional school environment. Thanks to deep dive interviews with renowned creativity scholars, respected practitioners, and passionate educators, every teacher and administrator will walk away with new strategies that inspire and support student and teacher creativity in and out of the classroom.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 24, 2026 • 23min
No Revolution Required: Creativity Is Already Here
What if the problem in education is not a lack of creativity, but how we prioritize it?
In this reflective debrief episode, Dr. Matthew Worwood and Dr. Cyndi Burnett revisit three powerful conversations from Season 12, exploring creativity through the lenses of AI, constructive dialogue, and educational research. Rather than calling for a complete overhaul of the system, they challenge a common narrative and suggest something more nuanced: creativity is already present in our classrooms, but it may not always be given the space or attention it deserves.
The discussion dives into the difference between productivity and creativity in the age of AI, and how educators can use emerging tools to reclaim time without sacrificing deep thinking. The hosts also unpack the role of constructive dialogue as a foundation for creative problem solving, emphasizing the importance of curiosity, relationships, and shared understanding in the classroom.
Finally, they reflect on research around whether schools truly hinder creativity, offering a more balanced perspective. Instead of revolution, they propose evolution, supported by mindset shifts, better use of tools, and a renewed commitment to student creative agency.
If you have ever wondered how to navigate creativity, AI, and meaningful learning without burning everything down, this episode offers a thoughtful and practical perspective.
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Visit FuelingCreativityPodcast.com for more information or email us at questions@fuelingcreativitypodcast.com.

Mar 17, 2026 • 38min
Growing Creative Agency: What Helps, What Hinders, and What AI Changes with Dr. Maciej Karwowski
What helps students believe they can shape the world with their ideas? And what might quietly discourage them from trying?
In this episode of the Fueling Creativity in Education Podcast, Dr. Matthew Worwood and Dr. Cyndi Burnett speak with creativity researcher Dr. Maciej Karwowski, Professor of Psychology at the University of Warsaw and Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Creative Behavior.
Together, they explore creative agency and why students need more than creative ability to turn ideas into action.
In this episode, we discuss:
What a creative agency is and why it matters for student creativity
The four key elements of creative agency: confidence, creative identity, risk-taking, and self-regulation
Why many teachers and students underestimate their own creativity
How beliefs about creativity influence whether students act on their ideas
Whether schools actually suppress creativity or help it develop
The role of knowledge in supporting creative thinking and learning
How students’ creative confidence can shift as they gain expertise
The opportunities and concerns surrounding AI and creativity in education
How AI might support creativity through feedback rather than idea generation
About Our Guest
Dr. Maciej Karwowski is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Warsaw and Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Creative Behavior. His research focuses on the educational psychology of creativity, particularly creative agency and how classroom environments influence students’ creative development.
This episode invites educators to reconsider how creativity develops in schools and how teachers can nurture the confidence, identity, and motivation students need to act on their ideas.
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Visit FuelingCreativityPodcast.com for more information or email us at questions@fuelingcreativitypodcast.com.

Mar 10, 2026 • 34min
Emotion, Polarization, and the Skills of Constructive Dialogue with Caroline Mehl
In a time marked by strong emotion and deep polarization, how do we help students stay in conversation rather than shut down or attack?
In this episode, Dr. Matthew Worwood and Dr. Cyndi Burnett welcome Caroline Mehl, co founder and executive director of the Constructive Dialogue Institute.
Caroline explains that constructive dialogue is not about changing minds or abandoning beliefs. It is about fostering mutual understanding across differences. She shares how mindset and skillset work together, highlighting the importance of curiosity, open mindedness, and intellectual humility.
Together, they discuss:
– The difference between debate and dialogue
– How emotions influence polarized conversations
– Why classroom trust and shared norms must come first
– Practical strategies such as storytelling, role play, and structured turn taking
– How the “illusion of explanatory depth” reveals gaps in our own understanding
This episode offers practical guidance for educators who want to create classrooms where difficult conversations are handled with care, clarity, and courage.
About the Guest
Caroline Mehl is the co founder and executive director of the Constructive Dialogue Institute, a nonpartisan nonprofit that partners with colleges and universities to build cultures of inquiry and dialogue. Since 2017, CDI has worked with more than 150 campuses across the United States.
Caroline’s writing has appeared in The Chronicle of Higher Education, Inside Higher Ed, Time, and Harvard Business Review. She serves on advisory boards focused on strengthening civic culture and helping communities disagree better.
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Visit FuelingCreativityPodcast.com for more information or email us at questions@fuelingcreativitypodcast.com.

Mar 3, 2026 • 30min
AI on the Front Lines: Creativity, Industry, and the Classroom with James Taylor
How is AI changing creative work right now? And what does that mean for the way we teach and assess students?
In this episode, Dr. Matthew Worwood and Dr. Cyndi Burnett talk with James Taylor about what he is seeing on the front lines of business and innovation.
James shares his idea of “super creativity,” which is simply the idea that humans and machines can work together to create better ideas than either could alone. He offers real examples from industry and then helps us think through what those changes mean for schools.
Together, they discuss:
– The difference between using AI to automate work and using it to support thinking
– Whether students should use AI in the early stages of idea development
– What original work means when AI tools are widely available
– Why critical thinking may matter more than ever
– The role of persuasion and communication in bringing ideas to life
– The ethical questions educators cannot ignore
The conversation also explores an important tension. In business, the focus is often on the final product. In education, the focus must remain on the learning process. As AI becomes more common, teachers may need to rethink what they assess and how they assess it.
If you are trying to make sense of AI without swinging to either extreme, this episode offers a thoughtful and balanced perspective.
About the Guest
James Taylor is an award-winning keynote speaker and internationally recognized expert on creativity, innovation, and artificial intelligence. He has interviewed more than 750 leading creative thinkers on his Super Creativity Podcast and works with global organizations to help them unlock innovation through human and machine collaboration.
His latest book, Super Creativity: Accelerating Innovation in the Age of AI, explores how individuals and organizations can thrive in a rapidly changing technological landscape.
Be sure to subscribe to your favorite platform and sign up for our Extra Fuel newsletter for more resources and inspiration.
Visit FuelingCreativityPodcast.com for more information or email us at questions@fuelingcreativitypodcast.com.

Feb 24, 2026 • 25min
Creativity and the Lessons Hidden in Sports and Handwriting
What happens when we lose handwriting as a form of creative expression? What do we miss when we limit creativity to the sports field? And what would change if schools clearly identified their non-negotiables and truly lived by them?
In this first debrief of Season 12, Dr. Matthew Worwood and Dr. Cyndi Burnett reflect on insights from recent conversations with Carlos Moreno of Big Picture Learning, handwriting specialist Holly Britton, and sports researcher Dr. Daniel Memmert.
Together, they explore:
– Why schools should be designed around students, not systems
– The importance of identifying a few clear non-negotiables that reflect core values
– What may be lost as handwriting disappears from classrooms
– How tactical creativity, defined as unexpected and appropriate action, applies beyond sports
– Why language matters, especially when we replace “you must” with more open phrasing
This reflective episode invites educators to consider what might be unintentionally fading from practice and how we can better protect the conditions that support creativity.
Dr. Matthew and Dr. Cyndi also invite listeners to share ideas as the podcast approaches its five-year anniversary and begins planning future professional learning opportunities.
Be sure to subscribe to your favorite platform and sign up for our Extra Fuel newsletter for more resources and inspiration.
Visit FuelingCreativityPodcast.com for more information or email us at questions@fuelingcreativitypodcast.com.

Feb 17, 2026 • 30min
Coaching for Creativity: What Sport Teaches Us About Thinking with Dr. Memmert
Is creativity only about coming up with lots of ideas? Or does it also involve choosing the right idea in the right moment? What can sport teach us about thinking under pressure?
In this episode of the Fueling Creativity in Education Podcast, Dr. Matthew Worwood and Dr. Cyndi Burnett welcome sports psychologist Dr. Daniel Memmert to explore how creativity shows up on the field.
Listen in as the conversation explores tactical creativity, which combines generating many possible plays with selecting the most effective one. Daniel explains why creativity in sport is not about being flashy, but about making decisions that are both unexpected and appropriate.
In this thoughtful conversation, they explore:
– The difference between generating options and choosing the best one
– Why young athletes need freedom to experiment
– How fear of mistakes can shut down creativity
– Why coaches should be mindful of when and how they give feedback
– How early training should focus more on exploration than rigid systems
Daniel also shares research showing that at elite levels, physical skills often level out. What makes the difference is how players think, notice patterns, and respond in the moment.
If you are a coach, educator, or parent involved in youth sports, this episode offers practical insights on nurturing creative thinking while still supporting strong performance.
About the Guest
Dr. Daniel Memmert is a professor at the German Sport University Cologne. He has published more than 300 research articles and over 40 books on creativity, attention, and performance in sport. He also holds coaching licenses in several sports, bringing both research and real world experience to his work.
Be sure to subscribe to your favorite platform and sign up for our Extra Fuel newsletter for more resources and inspiration.
Visit FuelingCreativityPodcast.com for more information or email us at questions@fuelingcreativitypodcast.com.

Feb 10, 2026 • 35min
Why Handwriting Still Matters for Creative Thinking
Is handwriting still relevant in a world of screens, tablets, and AI? What role does writing by hand play in creativity, learning, and thinking?
In this episode of the Fueling Creativity in Education Podcast, Dr. Matthew Worwood and Dr. Cindy Burnett welcome handwriting instruction specialist Holly Britton, M.Ed to explore why handwriting still matters — especially for developing minds.
Holly brings over 26 years of experience in education, from classroom teacher to curriculum director, kindergarten coach, and founder of Squiggle Squad Handwriting. Her work focuses on helping children, teachers, and parents understand handwriting not as “pretty penmanship,” but as a meaningful tool for learning and self-expression.
Listen in as the conversation explores how handwriting supports thinking, language development, and creativity — particularly in young learners. Holly shares why writing by hand helps children make sense of letters, sounds, and ideas, and what can happen when students are expected to write without ever being properly taught how.
Together, the trio discusses:
How handwriting has slowly faded from classrooms
Why writing by hand supports learning in ways typing cannot fully replace
The connection between movement, memory, and understanding
Why handwriting should be seen as a tool, not just a finished product
How teachers can support handwriting without adding pressure or stress
Holly also offers practical insights for educators who feel overwhelmed by packed curriculums but still want to honor handwriting as part of meaningful learning.
If you’ve ever wondered whether handwriting still has a place in today’s digital classrooms — or worried about what students might be losing as screens take over — this episode will give you plenty to think about.
About the Guest
Holly Britton, M.Ed is a handwriting instruction specialist with more than 26 years of experience in education. She has worked as a classroom teacher, curriculum director, and kindergarten coach, and is the founder of Squiggle Squad Handwriting, a unique approach to teaching letter and number formation for early writers.
Holly works with diverse learners who experience a wide range of learning challenges and speaks nationally about handwriting as a kinesthetic connection to language — one that supports creativity, learning, and self-expression.
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Visit FuelingCreativityPodcast.com for more information or email us at questions@fuelingcreativitypodcast.com.

Feb 3, 2026 • 37min
Building Schools Around What We Value with Carlos Moreno
As we kick off Season 12 of the Fueling Creativity in Education Podcast, we explore a question that sits at the heart of education reform. What does it actually look like to design a school around preparing young people for the real world?
In this episode, we welcome Carlos Moreno, educator, author, and Executive Director of Big Picture Learning. Carlos brings a systems-level perspective shaped by his work as a teacher, principal, district leader, and national education executive.
Be sure to subscribe on your favorite platform and sign up for our Extra Fuel newsletter for more resources and inspiration.
Visit FuelingCreativityPodcast.com for more information or email us at Finding Your Leadership Soul. This conversation challenges us to rethink control, trust educators and students, and design schools that help young people discover purpose, agency, and voice.
Guest Bio
Carlos Moreno is an educator, author, and national education leader who currently serves as Executive Director of Big Picture Learning. He has worked as a teacher, principal, and district leader, and co-founded the Deeper Learning Equity Fellowship. Carlos is the author of Finding Your Leadership Soul and is widely recognized for his work supporting equity-centered, relationship-driven school design.

Jan 27, 2026 • 20min
Season 12 Preview: Creativity, Dialogue, and the Future of Education
A season preview highlights creativity under pressure in sports and how athletes make bold decisions. An unconventional model of public education centered on student agency and real-world learning gets explored. Conversations will probe creative self-belief, identity, and motivation for learners. The role of constructive dialogue in classrooms for creativity and empathy is also showcased.

Jan 20, 2026 • 14min
Practical Approaches to Unlocking Success Through Creativity in 2e Learners
Recorded live at the National Association for Gifted and Talented (NAGC) Conference in Pittsburgh, this final episode of the Winter 2026 Listen & Learn series brings together Dr. Matthew Worwood and Dr. Cyndi Burnett with emerging scholar Jimmy Wilson and researcher Dr. Julie Delgado.
Together, they explore how creativity can become a powerful pathway for twice-exceptional (2e) learners—particularly students with autism spectrum disorder—by centering passion, projects, peers, and play.
This conversation bridges research and practice, drawing from Project 2EASD and the Lifelong Kindergarten Lab’s Four P’s Framework (Passion, Play, Projects, Peers) to reimagine how schools and universities can support neurodiverse learners.
Episode Highlights
What twice-exceptional (2e) really means—and why creativity matters
How Project 2EASD reshapes professional learning for teachers
The Four P’s of creative learning: Passion, Play, Projects, and Peers
Why interest-based peers matter more than same-age peers
The role of extracurriculars, clubs, and mentorship in student growth
Moving beyond deficit-based views of neurodiversity
How passion fuels perseverance—and when it’s okay to pivot
“Hard fun” as a catalyst for leadership, confidence, and real-world skills
From launching clubs to hosting dorm-room tea parties, the stories shared highlight how creative environments empower students to thrive—academically, socially, and personally.
About the Guests
Jimmy Wilson
Jimmy Wilson is an emerging scholar and resident expert in gifted education, specializing in twice-exceptional (2e) learners. His research focuses on supporting neurodiverse students—particularly those on the autism spectrum—through creative learning experiences, mentorship, and interest-based peer connections. Jimmy brings both scholarly insight and practical strategies for implementing programs that help 2e learners thrive academically, socially, and personally.
Julie Delgado, Ph.D.
Julie Delgado is a tenure-track researcher in gifted education, having recently completed her dissertation on Project 2EASD (Twice-Exceptional Autism Spectrum Disorder). Her work centers on professional development for teachers, integrating creativity into learning, and helping educators cultivate meaningful experiences for neurodiverse students. Julie’s research emphasizes passion-driven projects, mentorship, and leveraging extracurricular activities to promote leadership, collaboration, and real-world skill development.
Be sure to subscribe on your favorite platform and sign up for our Extra Fuel newsletter for more resources and inspiration.
Visit FuelingCreativityPodcast.com for more information or email us at questions@fuelingcreativitypodcast.com.


