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Creativity and Divergent Thinking - A Task-Specific Approach (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,867
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Creativity and Divergent Thinking - A Task-Specific Approach (Hardcover)
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Do general-purpose creative-thinking skills -- skills like
divergent thinking, which is touted as an important component of
creative thinking no matter what the task domain -- actually make
much of a contribution to creative performance? Although much
recent research argues against such domain-transcending skills --
including several new studies reported in this book -- the appeal
of such general skills remains strong, probably because of the
theoretical economy and power such skills would provide. Divergent
thinking, in particular, has had an incredible staying power.
Despite its many flaws, divergent thinking remains the most
frequently used indicator of creativity in both creativity research
and educational practice, and divergent thinking theory has a
strong hold on everyday conceptions of what it means to be
creative. Reviewing the available research on divergent thinking,
this book presents a framework for understanding other major
theories of creativity, including Mednick's associative theory and
a possible connectionist approach of creativity. It reports a
series of studies (including the study that won APA's 1992 Berlyne
Prize) that demonstrate the absence of effects of general
creative-thinking skills across a range of creativity-relevant
tasks, but indicate that training in divergent thinking does in
fact improve creative performance across diverse task domains. The
book then ties these findings together with a multi-level theory,
in which a task-specific approach to creativity is strengthened by
recasting some divergent-thinking concepts into domain- and
task-specific forms. This book fills the gap between
divergent-thinking theory and more recent, modular conceptions of
creativity. Rather than advocate that we simply discard divergent
thinking -- an approach that hasn't worked, or at least hasn't
happened, because of many attacks on its validity and usefulness --
this book shows how to separate what is useful in
divergent-thinking theory and practice from what is not. It shows
that divergent-thinking training can be valuable, although often
not for the reasons trainers think it works. And it offers specific
suggestions about the kinds of creativity research most needed
today.
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