Last updated: 1/10/02
Link back to course Welcome
Agenda for Creativity Class
Meeting on January 10
- Personal introductions and pictures for the course web site.
- My name is David Bowen. My contact information, and the course web
site, is listed on the syllabus.
- Having your picture on the course web site is NOT a requirement of this course. Your
picture will be publicly available, but no other information will be made publicly
available because your picture is. My motivation here is to help create a community -- if
you want to know who made that comment on the computer conference, go back and look them
up in the photo gallery.
- What is creativity -- words that are similar or related -- here are some
thought-starters
- Imagination
- New ideas
- Something new that solves a problem or meets a need
- My goals for the course
- Theoretical
- Understanding of Creativity and its relatives, how the modern study of Creativity
started, and how it has changed
- Knowledge about specific creative individuals
- Individual focus on an aspect of Creativity -- fourth text and term paper
- Having an opportunity (but not a requirement) to try something new
- Applications (depend on individual interests)
- How to be (more) creative in our individual lives
- at work -- being an entrepreneur or an intrapreneur
- outside of work
- How to manage or supervise for Creativity (innovation)
- How to encourage Creativity in our children
- Beginning of modern approach to Creativity
- Began in World War II with bomber crews (in case they were captured)
and "behind the lines" operatives - how to enable them to
survive and return
- Some theoretical questions about Creativity
- What about Creativity is studied?
- The creative product or thing - a piece of music, a painting (artifact)
- The creative person who created the artifact
- Characteristics
- Childhood and background
- Motivation
- The creative process that the person used to create the artifact
- The surrounding society and/or the colleagues of the Creative individual
- Is Creativity a yes/no thing, or are some products less creative and others more so -
is there, say, a scale of 1 to 10?
- Are there measurable characteristics that are shared by all creative people, for example
intelligence or being able to conceive of many ways to answer a question? If such
characteristics exist, can people be trained in them, and does this increase their
creativity? Do the most creative people score the highest in these characteristics?
- (Gardner, Chpt 2)
- Can Creativity exist in all fields of endeavor, or are some areas not Creative? Is
Creativity the same in all fields in which it exists, or does it differ? Are there
personal differences? (analytic Vs generative)
- Has Creativity occurred at the same rate throughout history, or has it waxed and waned?
- Is there a dark side to Creativity? Is disease or disability associated with Creativity?
- ADHD or ADD
- Addiction
- Deformity
- Isolation
- Can anybody be Creative?
- Can Creativity exist in everyday life?
- Cooking or cuisine
- Crafts such as quilting
- Dealing with poverty
- Is there a strong or wide consensus about who is or is not Creative, or is it all just
individual opinions? Can we make objective judgments about whether or not someone is/was
creative? (in practice, people disagree, and also no one person has the background to make
judgments across the full range of human endeavor)
- Does all Creativity work like Poincare's experience, or are there other modes?
- Here is a working hypothesis about creativity. Do not treat this as authoritative.
- Creativity involves someone who freely chooses to focus on a situation or discipline.
They continue working, dividing and subdividing the situation, analyzing it, building
detail upon detail. Those around this person are likely to think him/her obsessive.
- This person follows through on his/her interest and is active in the area, interested in
talking and comparing notes with others in that area. They innovate, although their work
may be innovative only within a restricted circle. The more involved they are, the larger
the circle of people for whom their work must be new.
- Childhood interests and "near" role models played an important part. From my
readings, it seems to be important that the child have the experience that if s/he has an
interest they take it seriously, pursue it in more detail, especially as a subject of
imagining, that they elaborate on it, and that the have an accessible role model. Activity
and work in the are of the interest need to be pursued.
- I think you will find that Creativity is not a well-defined field with a strong
consensus. In such a situation, I think the goal of the course must be for you to become
aware of the range of thought, to recognize where a given opinion fits within the range.
Also, there are many different types of studies, and you should try to understand their
strengths and weaknesses.
- Taking an online course (or at least this one)
- Software
- World Wide Web access for the course web site and computer conferencing/chat. Either
Netscape Navigator (version 2.0 or higher), Netscape Communicator (any version) or
Microsoft Internet Explorer (version 3.0 or higher) will do. These are all examples of Web
Browsers. During this class meeting we will use Netscape Navigator, but all Web Browsers
basically work alike, especially inside the Browser window.
- Email. Email programs are not installed on campus because of security concerns.
Consequently, it is difficult to use University laboratory computers for email
attachments, so we will not be going over that during this class meeting. Also, the
different email programs are too different for a lab session to be useful. Both Netscape 3
and Netscape 4 have an "Attach" button in the email composition window, when you
are typing out an email message. What email programs are you using? This can also be
handled one-to-one.
- To find out what program you are using, in Windows:
- Click on the "Help" menu item up near the top of the screen. A menu or list of
sub-choices will drop down.
- On the list of sub-choices, click on the "About ..." item at or near the
bottom of the list. A box appears listing the name and version number of the software.
- Tour of course web site at http://www.cll.wayne.edu/isp/drbowen/crtvyw00
- Syllabi for ISP 5660 three- and four-credit versions, and assignment schedules.
- Course information form -- please fill this out by next week
- Weekly course reports
- Class signins
- Registering for the course computer conference
- You are going to first create an account on the computer conferencing
system - assign yourself a User Name and Password. You can make these up
- they can be the same as, or different than, those for any other
computer system.
- Go to the course web site at http://www.cll.wayne.edu/isp/drbowen/crtvyw02
- you should bookmark this (Netscape) or create a favorite (Internet
Explorer)
- Click on "Link to computer conference"
- Type in the User Name and Password that you have chosen for yourself,
then click OK or tap the "Enter" key
- Choose to enter as a new user (but if you ever see this dialog again,
shut down your browser and start over
- Re-enter your User Name and Password, and give your email address, and
a signature down at the bottom, then click the button
- You do not need the User Number on the confirmation page
- Break
- You fill out the Course Information form and the Signin on the course
web site
- I will add you to the course computer conference and send an opening
message
- Close down your web browser
- Using the course computer conference
- Start your web browser and go the computer conferencing system and
sign in
- Opening screen - list of new messages, list of all messages
- Getting a message, from new messages or from all messages, onto
the right panel
- Posting a new message or reply/quote for an old one
- Provide context for reader
- Change the title for a reply
- Use Reply/Quote and edit the original
- Problem if Internet connection goes down - just reconnect
- The scope of Creativity
- Affects how long the effects will last, and the number of people it
will affect
- Range of scope
- Personal
- Family
- Regional/National
- International
- Civilization (the culture)
- Assignments