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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 187 results
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Carmeli, Abraham; Sheaffer, Zachary; Binyamin, Galy; Reiter-Palmon, Roni; Shimoni, Tali – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2014
Previous research has pointed to the importance of transformational leadership in facilitating employees' creative outcomes. However, the mechanism by which transformational leadership cultivates employees' creative problem-solving capacity is not well understood. Drawing on theories of leadership, information processing and creativity,…
Descriptors: Transformational Leadership, Creativity, Problem Solving, Safety
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Cunningham, J. Barton; MacGregor, James N. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2014
Many innovations in organizations result when people discover insightful solutions to problems. Insightful problem-solving was considered by Gestalt psychologists to be associated with productive, as opposed to re-productive, thinking. Productive thinking is characterized by shifts in perspective which allow the problem solver to consider new,…
Descriptors: Productive Thinking, Problem Solving, Spatial Ability, Prediction
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Mecca, Jensen T.; Mumford, Michael D. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2014
Prior studies examining imitation of exemplar solutions have produced a mixed pattern of findings with some studies indicating that exemplar imitation contributes to creative problem-solving and other studies indicating that it may inhibit creative problem-solving. In the present effort, it is argued that the effects of exemplar imitation on…
Descriptors: Imitation, Creativity, Problem Solving, Advertising
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Stokes, Patricia D. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2014
This article presents a problem-solving model to examine the often problematic relationship between expertise and creativity. The model has two premises, each the opposite of a common cliché. The first cliché asserts that creativity requires thinking outside-the-box. The first premise argues that experts can only think and problem solve inside the…
Descriptors: Portraiture, Art Products, Artists, Creativity
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Kim, SugHee; Chung, KwangSik; Yu, HeonChang – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2013
The purpose of this paper is to propose a training program for creative problem solving based on computer programming. The proposed program will encourage students to solve real-life problems through a creative thinking spiral related to cognitive skills with computer programming. With the goal of enhancing digital fluency through this proposed…
Descriptors: Creativity, Problem Solving, Training, Programming
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Robinson-Morral, Erika J.; Reiter-Palmon, Roni; Kaufman, James C. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2013
Over the years, researchers have focused on ways to facilitate creativity in the workplace by looking at individual factors and organizational factors that affect employee creativity (Woodman, Sawyer, & Griffin, [Woodman, R.W., 1993]). In many cases, the factors that affect creativity are examined independently. In other words, it is uncommon…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Work Environment, Creativity, Problem Solving
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Cho, Younsoon; Chung, Hye Young; Choi, Kyoulee; Seo, Choyoung; Baek, Eunjoo – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2013
This research explores the emergence of student creativity in classroom settings, specifically within two content areas: science and social studies. Fourteen classrooms in three elementary schools in Korea were observed, and the teachers and students were interviewed. The three types of student creativity emerging in the teaching and learning…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Foreign Countries, Creativity, Elementary School Students
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Mumford, Michael D.; Medeiros, Kelsey E.; Partlow, Paul J. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2012
Creative achievements are the basis for progress in our world. Although creative achievement is influenced by many variables, the basis for creativity is held to lie in the generation of high-quality, original, and elegant solutions to complex, novel, ill-defined problems. In the present effort, we examine the cognitive capacities that make…
Descriptors: Creativity, Problem Solving, Creative Thinking, Cognitive Ability
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Simonton, Dean Keith – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2012
Too often, psychological debates become polarized into dichotomous positions. Such polarization may have occurred with respect to Campbell's (1960) blind variation and selective retention (BVSR) theory of creativity. To resolve this unnecessary controversy, BVSR was radically reformulated with respect to creative problem solving. The reformulation…
Descriptors: Evolution, Creativity, Probability, Problem Solving
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Treffinger, Donald J.; Solomon, Marianne; Woythal, Deb – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2012
E. Paul Torrance, a pioneer in creative education, and his associates founded the Future Problem Solving Program (now FPSPI, or Future Problem Solving Program International) in the mid-1970s as a competitive, interscholastic program and as a curriculum project integrating creative problem-solving and future studies. Since its founding, the program…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Creativity, Problem Solving, Creative Thinking
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Paulus, Paul B.; Kohn, Nicholas W.; Arditti, Lauren E. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2011
One of the basic presumptions of brainstorming is that a focus on generating a large number of ideas enhances both the number of ideas generated and the number of good ideas (original and useful). Prior research has not clearly demonstrated the utility of such a quantity focus in comparison to a condition in which quantity is not emphasized. There…
Descriptors: Brainstorming, Goal Orientation, Creativity, Group Dynamics
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Walinga, Jennifer; Cunningham, J. Barton; MacGregor, James N. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2011
Recent research has reported successful training interventions that improve insight problem solving. In some ways this is surprising, because the processes involved in insight solutions are often assumed to be unconscious, whereas the training interventions focus on conscious cognitive strategies. We propose one mechanism that may help to explain…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Barriers, Creativity, Intervention
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Coskun, Hamit – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2011
The present experiment examined whether or not the type of associations (close (e.g. apple-pear) and distant (e.g. apple-fish) word associations) and memory instruction (paying attention to the ideas of others) had effects on the idea generation performances in the brainwriting paradigm in which all participants shared their ideas by using paper…
Descriptors: Brainstorming, Associative Learning, Memory, College Students
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Smith, Steven M.; Linsey, Julie – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2011
Earthquakes, lightning, and history-changing ideas are classic examples of powerful, unpredictable forces of nature. These sorts of phenomena have been difficult to explain and predict, an often frustrating fact as humans try to understand and control the significant influences in our lives. Historically, such phenomena have been attributed to…
Descriptors: Design, Problem Solving, Cognitive Processes, Productive Thinking
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Goldschmidt, Gabriela – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2011
Designers try to "enlist" whatever they can to help themselves arrive at high quality, novel and original designs. When stimuli are used for this purpose, usually provided at the onset of the design process, these stimuli, or sources, may have one of two effects: they may enhance the design search and contribute to a high-quality, creative design,…
Descriptors: Design, Stimuli, Creativity, Building Design
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