Title of article :
Creativity, Originality, and Appropriateness: What do Explicit Instructions Tell Us About Their Relationships?
Author/Authors :
MARK A. RUNCO، نويسنده , , JODY J. ILLIES and RUSSELL EISENMAN، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Originality is a necessary part of creativity, but creative things
are more than just original. They also solve a problem, or more
generally are somehow fitting or appropriate. Yet previous
research found an inverse relationship between ratings of originality
and ratings of appropriateness. The present investigation
employed a different methodology — it focused on the
generation of ideas instead of judgments about them — to reexamine
the relationships between originality, appropriateness,
and creativity. Undergraduate students (N = 170) from two large
universities received either realistic or unrealistic divergent
thinking tasks. These were given with one of four types of instructions.
These asked them to give (a) as many ideas as
possible (which is the standard type of instruction for these
kinds of tests), (b) only original ideas, (c) only appropriate
ideas, or (d) only creative ideas. Brief definitions of originality,
appropriateness, or creativity were also provided. Comparisons
of the four groups indicated that there were significant differences
between the different kinds of tasks, with the realistic
set eliciting more appropriate ideas than the unrealistic, but
the unrealistic tasks eliciting more original and varied (flexible)
ideas. There was an interaction indicating that the magnitude
of the impact of the instructions varied across tasks. Correlational
analyses indicated that the correlation between the originality
and appropriateness scores was the lowest among all
possible inter-index relationships (only 7% shared variance).
Future research and practical implications are explored.
Journal title :
JOURNAL OF CREATIVE BEHAVIOR
Journal title :
JOURNAL OF CREATIVE BEHAVIOR