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Karakowsky, Len; Kotlyar, Igor; Good, Jessica – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2021
According to much of the extant research, the conferral of high-status serves as an invaluable muse for creativity. That is, the research has suggested that high-status affords individuals the confidence, freedom, and leeway necessary to bolster creative performance. However, this assertion is premised on the view that status hierarchies are…
Descriptors: Social Status, Creativity, Recognition (Achievement), Social Mobility
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Lorenzi, Francesca; White, Irene – Pastoral Care in Education, 2019
The dominant results-driven/performance-oriented culture and the pressures of performativity in education have meant that the promotion of creativity has been narrow in scope and the translation into practice less apparent than the rhetoric would suggest. Creativity can survive even in times of standardisation, but it is more likely to be confined…
Descriptors: Creativity, Critical Theory, Teacher Student Relationship, Social Structure
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Witkin, Stanley L. – Journal of Social Work Education, 2014
In recent years, the concept of transformation has become more prevalent in the social work literature; however, its use is quite varied. In this article, I attempt to disentangle some of these uses. I then propose a conceptualization of transformation and discuss its relevance for social work education. In this conceptualization, transformation…
Descriptors: Social Work, Educational Change, Relevance (Education), Fundamental Concepts
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West, Richard E. – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2009
The twenty-first century economy often requires the innovative production of conceptual and physical artifacts. These innovations frequently are developed collaboratively within communities of workers. Previous theories about the nature of work and learning within communities have emphasized shared meaning or shared practice, but now shared…
Descriptors: Socialization, Innovation, Social Structure, Creativity