|
HOME |
BOOKS |
NONFICTION |
POETRY/ VERSE |
ABOUT WRITING |
SHORT FICTION |
WERD TRIX |
|
|
|
How to Stimulate Your Creativity, Enhance Problem-Solving, and Organize Your Thoughts A Step-by-Step Handbook by William T. Delamar & Gloria T. Delamar Excerpt from Chapter 1: Introduction to Brain-Webbing Overview The brain-webbing process is based upon and draws upon left/right brain techniques to insure that ideas generated include both the logical/technical and the emotional/intuitive. Your own horizons will expand as you begin to understand what brain-webbing can do, and as you interpret the many applications to your own life and work. Terminology Brain-webbing is the preferred terminology of the authors of this book. Several other systems, with somewhat the same purposes but with different applications and techniques, have existed for many years. Clustering also has been called thundering, storming, tornado diagraming, balloon diagraming, concept mapping, and think-linking. Brain-webbing, with different approaches, has ties to idea trees, raying, creative dawning, centered association, fishbone analysis, mindmapping, spider-web diagrams, and decision trees. They all owe a debt to Alan Osborne's brainstorming, a technique first introduced in 1939--a process which produced long lists--based on the important concept of non-censoring free-flow thinking. Free-flow thinking used before imposing judgmental
thinking is the heart and soul of
Clustering and brain-webbing neither look alike nor function in the same way. Step One: Clustering
Step Two: Brain-Webbing
The Web Brain-Webbing helps you to better use your information--to reach for ideas and applications, and to organize them in a useful fashion. The "web" is a dynamic form of outlining that replaces and far surpasses the old I.A.1.a. outline style that most of us learned in school. Where the old outline format covered pages
and pages, the brain-web is a one-page form of "notes" for anything from
speeches to workplace projects to personal arguments. It's ease of use
is like the difference between using a tricycle and using an automobile.
|