TY - JOUR
T1 - Creativity in business education
T2 - A review of creative self-belief theories and arts-based methods
AU - Homayoun, Sogol
AU - Henriksen, Danah
N1 - Funding Information:
We acknowledge with appreciation the support of Thunderbird School of Global Management at Arizona State University, which provided the context and opportunity to actualize this work, and the intervention described in this paper. In addition, Ray Buss of Arizona State University deserves thanks for supporting this ongoing work as Dissertation Chair and advisor. Finally, we offer a special thanks to the guest editors of this special issue, Beibei Song, Claus Springborg, and Piero Formica, for all of their efforts to bring forward more work around arts-based learning in business. We also thank the reviewers, including Claus Springborg, who provided thoughtful comments toward the revision and strengthening of this article. This research received no external funding.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 by the authors.
PY - 2018/11/20
Y1 - 2018/11/20
N2 - Creativity has become one of the most sought-after skills from graduates across business and industry. It is therefore imperative to infuse creativity training within business programs of study and professional development experiences, to remind people of their eternally curious and creative nature. The objective of this paper is to explore the literature around theories of creative potential and performance-including creative identity, creative mindset, and creative self-efficacy. We consider perspectives that reveal that creativity is a mindset predicated on beliefs and ways of thinking. Educational psychology literature and theories of creative self-belief illustrate how creative identity, mindset, and self-efficacy form the core of an individual's belief system to think, act, and develop creatively in the world. This connects to the potential of arts-based methods as a means to infuse creative learning into business education. We illustrate how our findings can be put into practice by sharing an example of an art-based intervention that is currently in progress to develop creative capacity among students in an internationally known business program. We conclude with the idea that its incumbent upon business education, professional development, and training to incorporate methodologies that enhance creative capacity by initially eliminating or minimizing self-perceived limitations in people, such as fear, negative personal judgement, and chattering of the mind-and theories of creative self-belief provide a foundation that can undergird arts-based methods toward this goal.
AB - Creativity has become one of the most sought-after skills from graduates across business and industry. It is therefore imperative to infuse creativity training within business programs of study and professional development experiences, to remind people of their eternally curious and creative nature. The objective of this paper is to explore the literature around theories of creative potential and performance-including creative identity, creative mindset, and creative self-efficacy. We consider perspectives that reveal that creativity is a mindset predicated on beliefs and ways of thinking. Educational psychology literature and theories of creative self-belief illustrate how creative identity, mindset, and self-efficacy form the core of an individual's belief system to think, act, and develop creatively in the world. This connects to the potential of arts-based methods as a means to infuse creative learning into business education. We illustrate how our findings can be put into practice by sharing an example of an art-based intervention that is currently in progress to develop creative capacity among students in an internationally known business program. We conclude with the idea that its incumbent upon business education, professional development, and training to incorporate methodologies that enhance creative capacity by initially eliminating or minimizing self-perceived limitations in people, such as fear, negative personal judgement, and chattering of the mind-and theories of creative self-belief provide a foundation that can undergird arts-based methods toward this goal.
KW - Arts
KW - Arts-based methods
KW - Business
KW - Creative thinking
KW - Creativity
KW - Education
KW - Innovation
KW - Professional development
KW - Theories
KW - Training
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U2 - 10.3390/joitmc4040055
DO - 10.3390/joitmc4040055
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85058276866
SN - 2199-8531
VL - 4
JO - Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity
JF - Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity
IS - 4
M1 - 55
ER -