Chat with us, powered by LiveChat Overview: As weve seen in this course, researchers have found a strong connection between new and unusual experiences and c - EssayAbode

Overview: As weve seen in this course, researchers have found a strong connection between new and unusual experiences and c

  

Overview: As we’ve seen in this course, researchers have found a strong connection between new and unusual experiences and creativity. Further, Creative Problem Solving methodologies require open-mindedness, the ability to defer judgment, and the ability to view ideas from different vantages The Creativity Assignment challenges you to pursue a new experience and reflect on the experience in order to nurture a creative personality and develop the abilities required to engage successfully with Creative Problem Solving methodologies.

1. New Experience. Choose an experience, song, movie, or food that you've never experienced before and try it for the first time. You can choose something you know nothing about or something that you have negatively judged without actually experiencing it for yourself. Whatever you choose, give it a try. In your entry name your chosen new experience, explain why you chose it, and describe the experience. Of course, please be responsible, safe, and make a choice that honours your own well-being and others around you. This section should be the equivalent of two pages double spaced 12 point text (equivalent for those considering a video submission).

2. Reflect Upon Your Experience. In your entry reflect upon the experience by considering a couple of the following questions: How did it make you feel? Did you change your mind about the experience? Did you learn anything valuable? Do you normally try new things or do you find it difficult? How might you work towards opening yourself up to new experiences in the future? How might trying new experiences enhance your creativity? Did you feel that this experience helped you think differently? How do you think this experience will translate toward your ability to be an effective Creative Problem Solver? Be sure to focus not only on the specifics of the experience, but dive into the more meta aspects of how this singular experience might impact your thinking and Creative Problem Solving ability more broadly. This section should be the equivalent of two pages double spaced 12 point text (equivalent for those considering a video submission).

use the following 

DEPTH OF INSIGHT: Did the entries strive for depth and include enough detail to facilitate personal learning? Did the entries connect to course themes and material? Did the entries draw upon personal experience or other relevant material to illustrate the observations and to make the responses individualized? Did the student complete every section? Is the Assignment of an appropriate length and effort?

ORIGINALITY: Did the entries strive for forms of novelty that are appropriate for the assignment and educational environment? Did the entries take full advantage of the medium? Did the entries exhibit the use of creative thinking skills? Are the entries unique to the individual? Was the diversifying experience novel?

STYLE: Was the entry polished, organized and appropriately presented? 

CPS Week 4: Creative confidence

What is creativity, anyway?

“Creativity is the ability to produce work that is both novel and appropriate”

~ Sternberg & Lubart

What is creative confidence?

Rauth et al. (2010): “a development of trust in one’s own creative skills”

Kelly Bros. (2013): “Creative confidence is the ability to come up with breakthrough ideas comcombined with the courage to act on them”…

Kelly Bros. (2012): “Confidence doesn’t simply mean believing your ideas are good. It means having the humility to let go of ideas that aren’t working and to accept good ideas from other people”

Do most people have creative confidence?

Poll by Adobe Systems, “80 percent of people see unlocking creative potential as key to economic growth. Yet only 25% of these individuals feel that they’re living up to their creative potential” (T. Kelley and D. Kelley 2013a, 4).

Creativity anxiety

“We first created a new measure, the Creativity Anxiety Scale (CAS), demonstrating validity, internal reliability, and specificity. Applying the CAS revealed that creativity-specific anxiety predicted individual differences in creative achievement and attitudes toward creativity over and above effects of general anxiety. Moreover, across diverse content domains, from science to arts, anxiety was greater for situations that required creativity than similar situations that did not. Notably, this effect was especially pronounced in women. These findings suggest that creativity anxiety may have wide-reaching impacts and distinguish creativity anxiety from anxiety about noncreative aspects of performance.”

Daker, R. J., Cortes, R. A., Lyons, I. M., & Green, A. E. (2019). Creativity anxiety: Evidence for anxiety that is specific to creative thinking, from STEM to the arts. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.

What is holding us back?

“In an interview with Inc., the Kelleys (2013b) claimed, “The big fear holding people back from creative confidence is the fear of being judged” (92),

In the Harvard Business Review they note three other similar restraints: “fear of the messy unknown,” “fear of the first step,” and “fear of losing control”

Building your creative confidence

“Choose creativity”

To be more creative, the Kelleys argue, “the first step is to decide you want to make it happen”

Be-Creative Effect: just being told to ‘be creative’ before a divergent thinking task makes the responses more creative”

Building your creative confidence

“Be empathetic”

“Daniel Pink says that as we move into the Conceptual Age, one attribute that will be necessary is what he calls high touch, “the ability to empathize with others, to understand the subtleties of human interaction, to find joy in one’s self and to elicit it in others, and to stretch beyond the quotidian in pursuit of purpose and meaning””

Building your creative confidence

“Set a creative goal”

“The Kelleys suggest keeping a journal and shooting for at least one new idea a day.”

Building your creative confidence

“Embrace a bias toward action”

“Rather than merely stare at the problem or think about it, do something.”

Building your creative confidence

“Build a low-res prototype”

Translation of creative idea into reality is act of innovation; even a quick attempt toward this can help stimulate further ideas and prepare for next steps

Building your creative confidence

“Collaborate”

The best way to work is to work together

Amygdala

Brain region responsive to fear/threat

Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, the present study examined the effects of trait and primed attachment security on amygdala reactivity to threatening stimuli

participants who received attachment-security priming showed attenuated amygdala activation

(pictures depicting people engaging in caregiving behaviours and enjoying close attachment relationships (e.g. hugging loved ones).

Turning off fear

Thinking of social support and human connection can make us fearless

Intentionally remembering the causes and people we care about can drive us to be courageous and achieve more than we ever dreamed possible

What determines whether the ideas we generate are truly creative? Recent research of ours finds that one common factor often gets in the way: we tend to undervalue the benefits of persistence.

Grit

“perseverance and passion for long-term goals”

“working strenuously toward challenges”

“maintaining effort and interest over years despite failure, adversity, and plateaus in progress”

“approaches achievement as a marathon; his or her advantage is stamina”

https://sasupenn.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_06f6QSOS2pZW9qR

Angela Lee Duckworth

20

How to be Gritty

May be determined in part by:

“beliefs about one’s capabilities”

“attributions of positive and negative events”

“beliefs about the relative influence of external causes”

21

,

Principles of Creative Problem Solving

Divergent Thinking

Unit 3

1

Today’s Plan

PART I: Review from Units 1 and 2

What is Creativity

What is CPS

Efficacy of CPS

PART II: Lecture

Defining Divergent Thinking

Measuring Divergent Thinking

Divergent thinking tools

2

Divergent Thinking

TOPICS

Defining Divergent Thinking

Measuring Divergent Thinking

Divergent Thinking Tools

3

WHAT SHOULD I READ?

Chapters 5 & 6

In Creativity Rising (Your Text Book)

Pages 25 -42

Creativity Unbound (Your Textbook)

4

Introduction

Two fundamental thought processes linked to creativity

Generating and evaluating

Generating options = divergent thinking

Quickly generating options and alternatives and not stopping to evaluate

Evaluating and selecting = convergent thinking

Application of judgement to determine which option is the most promising

5

Dynamic Balance

Dynamic Balance

It’s all about Dynamic Balance

Divergence & Convergence

If the balance is off your outcome is less likely to be creative

7

What is Divergent Thinking?

Broad search for many diverse and novel alternatives

It creates choices

It is an essential capacity for creative thinking

8

Principles of Divergent Thinking

Defer Judgment

Go for Quantity

Make Connections

Seek Novelty

You get to the best answers/ solutions/ ideas etc by applying these

9

Principles for Divergent Thinking

1. Defer Judgment

Expands awareness and respect for other possibilities

Replaces “can’t” with “can-do” attitude

Makes someone more open to new ideas

Broadens range of usable choices

Requires (and promotes) a shift in perspective.

Hold on and evaluate later.

10

Principles for Divergent Thinking

2. Go for Quantity

Increases likelihood of a breakthrough idea

Increases original ideas

The more you produce, the more you learn

Prevents the mistake of going with the first (and possibly wrong) idea

To be a fluent thinker generating many ideas options and alternative

11

Principles for Divergent Thinking

3. Make Connections

Increases range of unusual ideas

Promotes flexible thinking

Aids in the elaboration or extension of initial ideas

Provides cross-fertilization of ideas and results

Combine things that had not been combine or draw fro one think when working on another

12

Principles for Divergent Thinking

4. Seek Novelty

Leads to breakthrough ideas

Encourages other ideas that may be useful or advantageous

Promotes originality

Encourages play and a creative spirit in groups

13

How do we measure divergent thinking?

There are many tests

Two popular ones

TTCT- Torrance Test of Creative Thinking

AUT- Alternative Uses Test

14

J.P. Guilford’s Alternative Uses Task (1960)

Divergent task that consists of

Presenting examinees with common objects

Asks them to list other uses for which the object or parts of the object would serve.

15

Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking – “TTCT” (1966)

Based on earlier divergent thinking work by Guilford.

Measures creativity across domains: Verbal and Figural.

Verbal: ask-and-guess, product improvement, unusual uses, unusual questions, just suppose.

Figural: picture construction, picture completion, repeated figures of lines or circles.

16

Kaufman, 2006

17

Both Tests

Both tests evaluate creativity using:

Originality (subjective evaluation of creativity)

Fluency (total number)

Flexibility (different categories of uses)

Elaboration (amount of details in a given use)

18

Divergent Thinking Tools

19

First Start with the Challenge

How to word your challenge with statement starters

20

Tools for Divergent thinking

Why What’s Stopping You?

Word Dance

Stickem up Brainstorming

Brain writing

Forced Connections

SCAMPER

Excursions

Idea Box

Generating ideas

Understanding the Problem

21

For Next Class

Read Pages 57-66 in creativity Rising

Read pages 43-57 in Creativity Unbound

Read through CPS tool assignment instructions

Read through Annotated bibliography instructions

22

,

Principles of Creative Problem Solving

Important Course Structure and Expectations

&

Week 1

1

Today’s Plan

PART I: Overview of the Course

Getting to know each other

Course structure and expectations

Part II: Lecture

Defining creativity

Demystifying creativity

Importance of studying creativity

2

Creative Thinking: Theory and Practice Part I

TOPICS

Getting to know each other

Course structure and expectations

3

Textbooks (no need to purchase)

Title: Creativity Rising

Authors: Gerard Puccio, Marie Mance, Laura Barbero Switalkski and Paul Reali

Cost: <$20 New

Title: Creativity Unbound

Authors: Blair Miller, Jonathan Vehar, Roger Firestien, Sarah Thurber and Dorte Nielsen

Cost: $34.25

4

About the Class

Creativity Assignment (20% of final grade)

Assignment instructions are posted on SLATE

3. Final FourSight Team Project (30% of final grade)

– Assignment instructions are posted on SLATE

Test 1 (25% of final grade)

GRADING

Test 2 (25% of final grade)

5

About this Class

Show up

Be on time

Participate

Read ahead of time

Check Slate

Print notes & Activities

TAKE NOTES!

STUDY!

EXPECTATIONS

Why should you come to class?

I explain things better than the book and I talk about things that are NOT in your book

We have class activities that help you master important tools and concepts.

6

Principles of Creative Problem Solving Part II

TOPICS

Defining Creativity

Demystifying creativity

Importance of studying creative thinking

7

WHAT SHOULD I READ?

Chapters 1 to 4

In Creativity Rising (Your Text Book)

Pages 8 – 20

Creativity Unbound (Your Text Book)

8

Psychological Conceptualizations of Creativity

The scientific study of creativity is fairly new

1950s in psychology

Hay Day of Behaviourism and Psychoanalysis

Exceptional creativity a by product of high intelligence

The talk that changed it all

Sept 5, 1950- J. P. Guilford APA Conference

9

What is Creativity?

10

There is no standard definition of creativity.

There are many definitions.

Creativity is notoriously difficult to define and measure.

This is because it is complex, has various forms of express and it has many potential influences.

It is not necessarily the same thing as intelligence or giftedness,

Just as predicting weather is not an exact science understanding creativity and coming up with a good definition for it can be just as elusive.

The is “No one thing that is truly creativity, but rather multiple things are”

In fact some people believe creativity is something that cannot be defined.

Creativity can be defined on a spectrum.

It is unfixed its dynamic. The minute we define it we kill it. There is a certain dynamic nature to it.

But because of how it is we need to pin it down.

11

Popular Western Views of Creativity

The essence of creativity is the moment of insight- the aha moment.

Creative ideas emerge mysteriously from the unconscious

Creativity is more likely to occur when you reject convention- creative people often go against the grain

Creative contributions are more likely to come from an outsider rather than an expert

People are more creative when they are alone

Creative ideas are ahead of their time

Creativity is a personality trait

Creativity is based in the right brain

Creativity and mental illness are connected (Creative people are more likely to be mentally ill and it allows an outlet for the illness)

Creativity is a healing life affirming activity

12

One Definition

“The ability to modify self-imposed constraints”

Ackoff & Vergara (1988)

13

Some Other Definitions

“The tendency to generate or recognize ideas, alternatives, or possibilities that may be useful in solving problems, communicating with others, and entertaining ourselves and others” (Franken)

“Any act, idea, or product that changes an existing domain, or that transforms an existing domain into a new one” (Csikszentmihalyi)

The process of bringing something new into existence (Rollo May)

Turning new and imaginative ideas into reality. It involves two processes: thinking, then producing (Linda Naiman)

Seeing what everyone else has seen, and thinking what no one else has thought. (Einstein)

14

Defining Creativity

Most Popular Modern Psychological Definition

“Creativity is the ability to produce work that is both novel and appropriate”

~ Sternberg & Lubart

It is an ability

It is an attitude

It is a process

Ken Robinson https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BfjqIJiOlHI

Ability implies…

All people are creative

People vary in regard to their creative ability

Whatever your level of creative ability it can be enhanced

It is an attitude: A willingness to accept change and newness to play with ideas and possibilities. A flexibility of outlook

It is a process: Creative people work hard and continually to improve ideas and solutions. Contrary to the mythology surrounding creativity, very few creative works of excellence are produced with a single stroke of brilliance or in a frenzy of rapid activity. Creative people may understand and conscious utilize the stages of the creative process.

15

Commonalities Across the Definitions

1.

Creativity produces something

2.

Creativity leads to change

3.

Creativity involves originality

NOTE:

None of these things by itself is sufficient to be called Creativity.

4.

Creativity has value

6.

Creativity is complex

5.

Creativity

Is useful/ adaptive/functional

Source: Everyone has creative potential – Mark Runco

Creativity produces something- it may be tangible and tactile or it may be a thought or an idea. It may be useful or it may not be.

It changes with world the person the environment

It involves originality – Original things are uncommon, they might be unique- sometimes originality is used interchangeably with novelty,

NOT common: having value, useful

16

Little C and Big C

Little c – Creativity

Day-to-day processing, decision making, problem solving

Automatic

Essential for daily functioning

Big C- Creativity

Genius or expert-level achievement

Far-reaching social/cultural impact

Day-to-day processing, decision making, problem solving

Automatic, unselfconscious

Essential for daily functioning

Relevant at the personal level

Examples…

Writing a letter

Playing a musical instrument or drawing (not professionally)

Deciding what to wear or make for dinner

What we would associate with genius or expert-level achievement.

Far-reaching social/cultural impact with their creativity

Examples:

Nobel Prize winners

Innovators in the arts and sciences

17

Types of Creativity

Personal Creativity

Your life as art

Artistic Creativity

Expressive Style

Creative Problem Solving

18

“The genuinely creative accomplishment is almost never the result of a sudden insight, a light bulb flashing on in the dark, but comes after years of hard work.”

From Creativity, by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

19

What is Creative Thinking?

Why is it important ?

Personally? Professionally? Institutionally? Nationally? Globally?

20

Creative Thinking

This century is marked my rapid change

Change is essential and inevitable

BUT….

Change makes us uncomfortable

Creativity helps us be prepared for change and respond better to change

Welcome to the 21st Century!

21

Creative Thinking

Jobs and Job Market

Where are we seeing the most changes?

Affluence of developed nations and automation + Out sourcing of jobs

Rise of the “creative class”

Frequent changes in jobs.

Jobs becoming obsolete

Asia automation abundance- Pink

Florida’s creative class

22

Creative Thinking

Goods and Services

Where are we seeing the most changes?

Shorter product life cycles

More technology in smaller sizes

Consumer has a voice

We can make our own videos, publish our own books. Things are not are controlled as they used to be.

The bottoms line is in the face of change we have a few options

We can ignore it

We can grow with it

Or drive it.

To live a health and productive life in the 21century you have to have an attitude and skills et that opens you up to change.

The 21century is a call to action. It calls for us to participate.

23

Creative Thinking

Problems can be sorted into two categories

Algorithmic problems

Heuristic problems

We can approach these problems in two ways

Proactive

Reactive

What’s Your Problem?

Algorithmic: “Problems with a known solution, or an established process that leads to a single right answer.”

Heuristic: “Problems without a known solution.”

Examples?

Algorithmic and heuristic problems can be approached in two ways…

Proactive: before a problem arises

Reactive: after a problem arises

24

Creative Thinking

Predicament

What’s Your Problem?

Opportunity

Formulaic

Maintenance

Approach to the Problem

Reactive

Proactive

Nature of the Problem

Heuristic

(open ended)

Algorithmic

(close- ended)

All creative thinking efforts start as a response to a situation

Two of these can be resolved with known solutions and therefore might be seen as straight forward. While two are more complex and therefore require creative thinking and creative problem solving

Formulaic problems (Algorithmic, Reactive): Has a known solution we simply implement it. No need to think creatively. No need to invent something new when the current solution works perfectly well

Maintenance issues (Algorithmic, Proactive): The solution is known and we need only to implement it. We anticipate the appropriate time to implement known procedures that have proven effective in the past….e.g. oil changes

Predicaments (Heuristic, Reactive): Sometimes change happens and we don’t have a ready answer. The solutions we have don’t seem to fit. The newness of the situation render old approaches useless. You need to apply creative thinking here which helps you creative a new solution path.

Opportunities (Heuristic, Proactive)Change comes with opportunity. It is not always about a problem…post it notes. Some opportunities are forthcoming. Others are not. You might need to seek out opportunities

When facing a predicament or an opportunity it is an awareness of the situation that serves as a catalyst to creative thinking.

25

Finally the Definition!

Creative Problem Solving (CPS)

The stages people go through when they attempt to solve a problem for which they do not have the solution

It is an intentional form of creativity

26

Why is Creative Thinking Important?

27

Creativity as a 21st Century Skill

Need for change and adaptability

Response to technology

A tolerance for ambiguity and complexity

Active citizenry

Working with others

The ability to shift perspective (think outside the box)

Generate novel and useful ideas

Creative and critical thinking

Problem solving

28

Other Job Related Research

Conference Board of Canada Innovation Skills

http://www.conferenceboard.ca/cbi/innovationskills.aspx

IBM CEO Study

World Economic Forum

29

Innovation skills Profile from Conference Board of Canada

30

Creativity: Fact vs. Fiction?

A. “Creativity is the result of innate talent”

OR

B. “Creativity is the result of hard work”

A. “Creativity is mainly associated with arts”

OR

B. “Creativity cuts across all areas of life”

A. “Children are more creative than adults”

OR

B. “True creative achievement requires years of life experience”

A. “Creativity is the same thing as originality”

OR

B. “Creativity is the intersection of novelty and usefulness”

A. “Creativity cannot be taught”

OR

B. “Creativity can be enhanced through teaching or training”

Source Chapter 3. Creativity Rising by Gerrard Puccio

Yes innate talent plays a role but the dedication to one’s craft is needed to develop that talent. Think about it. How many of us can sing well? Why aren’t we singers?

Green: Answer. creativity has played a role in many of our technological advances, the design of buildings etc. Its not just in the arts

Purple: Sure children colour and many of us saw things differently they might even show creative tendencies. But research shows that life experiences play an inmportant role in our being creative. In fact, Ruth Noller says that creativie is a function of attitude that is applied to knowledge, imagination and evaluation– creativity only emerges when these things interact and these things are complex mental process that come as we get older and have more experiences

Knowldege is necessary for understanding but it is limited. So you need imagination to produce new ideas…with out it we get stuck at our current level of knowledge. But you also need to be able evaluate which ideas have the best promise. Attitude is what drives it all!- Its your motivation, its your vision its your choice a deliberate practice to use creative strategies.

BLACK: the belief is that orginiality must be accompanied by usefulness

Why do we need to explain creativity?

Partly because what the world says in common sense ways does not necessarily match with what the research in human behaviour says. So we need to take a step back and objectively assess what we know and how it works.

31

There are MANY Models

There are some consistent themes

It’s a balance

It takes effort

It’s a process (Conscious and/or unconscious)

Creative Thinking

Models of Creative Thinking

32

Models of Creative Thinking

1926- Wallas Social psychologist one of first models of creative process.

Preparation (definition of issue, observation, and study)

Incubation (laying the issue aside for a time)

Illumination (the moment when a new idea finally emerges)

Verification (checking it out)

33

Alex Osborn: Father of brainstorming

Guidelines for brainstorming

Defer Judgment

Go for quantity

Encourage wild ideas

Build on ideas

Models of Creative Thinking

34

Sidney Parnes

Worked with Osborn

Developed CPS

Has been refined over the years

Models of Creative Thinking

35

J.P. Guilford

Distinguish between divergent and convergent thinking

Divergent Thinking

Spontaneous, free flowing, generation of many ideas

Convergent Thinking

Analyzing and synthesizing ideas to find the best ideas

Models of Creative Thinking

36

Vertical Thinking

Looks for the RIGHT Approach

Is sequential

Excludes the Irrelevant

Lateral Thinking

Looks for as many approaches as possible

Richness

Makes jumps

Doesn‘t have to be correct

Welcomes intrusions

Models of Creative Thinking

Edward de Bono’s Vertical and Lateral

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