Creativity and Innovation in Bureaucracies

January 1st, 1987

Stimulation and Facilitating Creative Ideas Upward

The unprecedented acceleration of change and growth in social and technological complexities is demanding a radical change in the ordering and management of institutions. One of the major challenges of business, educational, and political institutions is the need for identifying and developing talents for the productive integration of change into the existing structures of management. Literature in both Education and Business is providing persuasive arguments for the importance of creative and innovative thinking and behavior as a crucial factor in institutional effectiveness and productivity.

This paper reports the theoretical background of creativity and innovation in relation to bureaucratic functioning and speculates on their integration with other current issues closely related to management and leadership. In addition to theoretical considerations, attention is given to specific strategies for the development of creative potential, both individual and collective.

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Gifted Creative Leadership for a Planet at Risk

January 1st, 1987

Radical changes in the world we share are a constant reminder that new ideas, definitions, and interpretations of global affairs are desperately needed. The study of the future places a major focus on the quality of life and the global environment as a recognized concern for all nations. The task of leadership in a rapidly changing, interactive global society requires new insights, new abilities for dealing with complex, dynamic systems, and higher levels of thinking that have the capacity to move from absolutes and polarities to the paradoxes of differences.

The purpose of peace for the global family has a particular relevance to the Seventh World Conference on Gifted and Talented Children. An assembly of representatives from all corners of the earth dedicated to expanding awareness of creative potential has an opportunity to identify with the role of leadership and its development. Definitions of leadership are changing. The world of technology and the communication age are bringing about new opportunities for the integration of global political, environmental, economic, and cultural differences. The emergence of new situations and qualities of leadership has resulted in redefinitions of the role. James McGregor Burns, author of a seminal work on leadership, suggests the trend towards a change from transactional leadership in a hierarchical system of power to transforming leadership, with leadership and followership working together to achieve a common purpose.

Although there are limits to many natural resources, there are no limits to learning and to the potential of leadership qualities in everyone. A participatory society depends on the development of higher level thinking processes along with humanistic talents and understanding to deal effectively with new challenges. These talents for leadership have a place in programs for all children, and especially for those children whose potential is of a higher order.

The question arises: Just what are those talents so critical for effective leadership in a global, futuristic society? A study which investigated that question discovered that the quality considered most important by a composite group of educationists, college students, and
business leaders is Creativity. Other findings suggest that talents perceived to be most crucial for leadership in a global future are not, in many cases, being presently addressed in school practices in the united states.

Research on the question of leadership talents necessary for a changing, futuristic planet, conducted among members of other political and cultural settings would help to better understand the issue in more global terms, and to act on those understandings.

Children whose time in history is bringing them into the role of planetary citizens of tomorrow can be helped to develop their creative potential and other talents that will help thiem to be aware of the realities and their responsibilities “beyond their region and beyond their time.”

Integrating the Mind Field

January 1st, 1986

The call for change in American Education is a famliar and recurring theme in the literature and at conferences. One of the specific recommendations for new approaches to learning has, for a long time, been promoted by the Education Division of the World Future Society. Arguments are made for the deliberate teaching of processes of thinking in addition to the more traditional teaching of content and skills. It is argued that since science and technology had made possible the accumulation of an infinite storebouse of information, it is incumbent on educational services to provide specific understanding of the full range of processes of thinking available to students for maximum positive use of that information in a changing, complex, interrelated global society.

Today the emerging attention to metacognition and a better understanding of one’s individual “mind field” is evidence that a better balance between the teaching of content and the teaching of learning and thinking styles and process is under way in the schooling experience.

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Excerpts from a Paper on Leadership and some Related Propositions

January 1st, 1986

James MacGregor Burns, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award for his book on “LEADERSHIP”, may be among the foremost of authors examining the interaction of political, scientific, educational, and psychological forces that affect our times. His statement makes clear his purpose in its writing: “That people can be lifted into their better selves is the secret of transforming leadership and the moral and practical theme of this work.”

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Creativity: Number One Leadership Talent for Global Futures

January 1st, 1986

A recent study (Bleedorn, 1985) added a persuasive argument for the development of creative potential if leadership is to function effectively in the near and distant future. The study is in the form of a doctoral dissertation for a major in Leadership and Human Behavior from the United States International University in San Diego. An analysis of the survey suggests that creativity is perceived by representative populations of society to be a top priority talent for leadership in the advancing global age.

Purpose of Study

The study was undertaken as the result of a disquieting impression that current global political, environmental, economic, social, and technological complexities call for a new variety of leadership for the earth. Further, there was a growing sense that if schooling is to prepare leadership and followership for future global tasks it is first necessary to predict the talents or qualities that would best accomplish those tasks. Andre Van Dam, editor of Olobal Futures Digest (1983) reminded readers that what is “urgently required leadership that takes us not only beyond our region, but also beyond our time.” Other readings from a variety of perspectives are echoing the same concern, and give an undeniable impetus to the purposes and design of the study.

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Entrepreneurial Creative Thinking and Problem Soliving

January 1st, 1985

An Interdisciplinary Venture?

“How is an iceberg like a new idea?” I presented this question – a thinking exercise – to students in my Entrepreneurial Creative Thinking and Problem Solving class, and I could have received an unlimited assortment of imaginative responses:

  • “One sees only the tip of the iceberg just as one sees only a small part of an idea with a lot of potential”
  • “Constantly changing shape”
  • “As pieces break away, so do great ideas from larger ones”
  • “If not used, they’re easily forgotten”
  • They both change form when they heat up”
  • “They’re cool”

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The Eye of the Paradox: International Communication?

January 1st, 1985

The study of International Communications features reviews, reruns, and replays of a familiar theme. It is the theme of the conflict of opposites. The question addressed in this discussion centers around the proposition quoted here from an unidentified source: “Conflicting beliefs divide us within and without. If we could see through them to the level of paradox, we would understand more and fight less.”

It is the purpose of this paper to:

  1. Examine a number of polarities attendant on the increasingly vital question of Mass Media’s role in an advancing global society with an uncertain future
  2. Explore the possibility of “bridging the gap” between the challenging state in which technological developments in communication have placed human society and the level of consciousness required for meeting the challenge.

The effort is an experiment in force-fitting the current realities of International Communication as presented in a cross-section of the literature with current expectations in the study of individual and social evolutionary change.

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Learning to Think for the Future

January 1st, 1984

Future studies become an academic discipline with mind-opening methods

In spite of the importance of the future as the place where we will all be spending the rest of our lives, education and society have traditionally paid a little deliberat attention.

Now rapid and radical advances in perceptions of the condition of “Spaceship Earth” and its human family are bringing a sense of urgency to the need for developing abilities to image, predict, and influence the future.

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Ideas and Intellectual Leadership

January 1st, 1984

The Not Quite Comprehensible Human Genius of Albert Einstein

Fascination with the genius of Albert Einstein has produced great quantities of literature–biographical, scientific, and analytical–all given to the particular qualities of his mind and manner. Isaac Asimov wonders about the analysis of genius. (Lerner, 1973:Foreword) “Certainly, it would seem that in many fields genius is a law unto itself and cannot be restrained and confined by any limits drawn by words or logic… The final test of genius in a scientist is how deeply and powerfully he peers into the laws governing the universe as decided, not by ourselves and our feelings, or by a few experts and their feelings, but by the universe itself.”

Thus, the final test of genius in Einstein-the-scientist is better left to the universe to judge. Rather, this paper will be concerned with Einstein-tne-human-thinker, and will speculate, on the basis of evidence in the literature, regarding the factors and forces that combined themselves into the creative person, the creative process, and the creative genius of Albert Einstein.

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Iqbal and the Intimate Immensities

January 1st, 1984

New Introduction, April 2, 2003

I decided to add the following article on “Iqbal and the Intimate Immensities” from my 1998 book, The Creativity Force. The article is offered as a contribution to the public task of understanding today’s desperate need for peace in a world where East and West are so radically and fatally polarized.

The reading and interpretation ofIqbal’s “Javid-Nama” was a course requirement in a doctoral program at United States International University in San Diego in 1984. Now in 2003 the war with Iraq has caused me to revisit the work of this major Islamic poet and philosopher. Iqbal’s vision is a reminder of the universal commonalities of human diversity and the creative powers that may well be the most unifying forces in the global family.

Introduction

Throughout the reading ofIqbal’s “Javid-Nama”, I experienced an intense personal identity with the poetics of self and space that distinguish his writing, and I knew I was finding that quintessence of a thought long familiar and much treasured— The “Intimate Immensities.” Its discovery has given a sense of reality to the otherwise incomprehensible vastness of the heavens. To find so emotional a response to the first piece of Eastern writing I have seriously undertaken, and to link a new poetic experience so absolutely, so immediately, and so intuitively to what has become a personal paradigm has the feeling of something mystical. It is almost as if the system of universal energies caused a synchronistic connection, and brought the East with its organismic, holistic thought into partnership with the more familiar search for universal understanding of the West. A line from the writing is relevant here: For Westerners intelligence is the stuff oflife: for Easterners love is the mystery of all being. I may flatter myself that I understand the thought which Iqbal’s words suggest. That, at least, is my momentary “truth.” Always assumed, of course, is the accompanying principle of uncertainty. In that somewhat amorphous state, the discussion of Javid Nama is approached more as a synthesis of the “intimate immensities” than as an analysis of literature, and somewhere between authority and apology.

Read the original article as a PDF here.