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  1. Think outside the box. English Idiom. Meaning: To approach a problem or situation in a creative or unconventional way. It involves thinking beyond the usual patterns and considering innovative solutions. Origin: The phrase 'think outside the box' originated from a creativity exercise in the 1960s and 1970s, which involved connecting nine dots ...

  2. Dec 8, 2022 · If you’re told to “think outside the box,” but you’re not really sure how you’ve been thinking inside it, you’re not alone. The metaphor encourages creative thinking, and we show you what it looks like.

    • admin@yourdictionary.com
    • Linguistics & Brand Editor
    • Fascination with English
    • Significant People and/or Critical Experiences
    • Changes
    • Challenges
    • Mediating Factors

    The first guided question of our narrative profile dealt with the participants’ description of their fascination with English. The answers showed very different approaches to the English language as well as to the decision to becoming an English teacher. Rose, for example, stated that: For her, beauty and English were inherently linked and this nat...

    For many people, a significant person or a critical experience shape their attitude towards life, and sometimes these have a life-changing impact. The same is true for some of our participants, as a special person or a crucial event set them on a different path than the one they initially intended for themselves. Rose’s relationship to English was ...

    The two main issues that the participants brought up related to continuing professional development and the role of teaching materials. In that respect, all of our participants claimed that globalization had an overwhelmingly positive impact on their professional lives. Rose, for instance, believed that “globalisation and also digitalisation have c...

    One of the challenges some of our participants had encountered in the last couple of years was diversity on various levels. Several participants commented on changing demographics and changing attitudes among people. Kate, for example, reported on a politically motivated project called SALIS (Salzburg International School), which is an internationa...

    When coding the data, several mediating factors surfaced in our six ELT teachers’ narrative profiles which sometimes had a considerable impact on their style of teaching (see Table 1). These factors appear to correspond to the contextual influences in Dörnyei and Ryan’s (2015), rather than the identity narratives, but are nevertheless important in ...

    • Alia Moser, Petra Kletzenbauer
    • 2019
  3. Meaning: If you think outside the box, you think in an imaginative and creative way. Country: International English | Subject Area: General | Usage Type: Both or All Words Used. Contributor: Richard Flynn. All idioms have been editorially reviewed, and submitted idioms may have been edited for correctness and completeness.

  4. Thinking outside the box. Thinking outside the box (also thinking out of the box[1][2] or thinking beyond the box and, especially in Australia, thinking outside the square[3]) is an idiom that means to think differently, unconventionally, or from a new perspective. The phrase also often refers to novel or creative thinking.

  5. Apr 28, 2021 · Of American-English origin, the phrase outside the box means outside or beyond the realm of normal practice or conventional thinking. It is chiefly used in to think outside the box, meaning to think creatively or in an unconventional manner. In Among the New Words, published in Vol. 70, No. 4 (Winter, 1995), of American Speech (Durham, North ...

  6. The phrase “think outside the box” is said to have originated from Aviation Week & Space Technology, in its publication of July 1995 it goes thus; “We must step back and see if the solutions to our problems lie outside the box.”. Since then, it has been used by various authors in almost the same sense but in different words and forms.

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