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Divergent Thinking

Divergent Thinking

Divergent thinking involves thinking in unexpected ways rather than hunting the one right answer.

Some classrooms reward convergence: linear, step-by-step, one right way. Divergent thinking does the opposite. It rewards unusual paths, playful exploration, and answers that don’t fit neatly in boxes.

Example:
List as many ways to cross a river as possible. Boats are boring. Encourage the unexpected.

Why it matters:
Gifted students often get boxed into being “fast and accurate.” Divergent thinking reminds them they’re allowed to be original, messy, and experimental.

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