Conference Papers
How should undergraduate students perceive knowledge as a product of human creation? Insights from a study on epistemic beliefs, intellectual risk-taking, and creativity
- How should undergraduate students perceive knowledge as a product of human creation? Insights from a study on epistemic beliefs, intellectual risk-taking, and creativity
- The International Conference on Learning and Teaching 2020 (ICLT2020) (2020: Hong Kong)
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Post-Secondary Education
- Creativity and epistemic beliefs are important topics in both psychological and educational research. Despite the long history of research on each of these intrinsically related topics, little work has been done to connect the theories about them. Inspired by the 4C theory of creativity, this study investigated the effects of epistemic beliefs on creativity and the mediation of intellectual risk-taking. The subjects were 659 undergraduates in a university in Hong Kong. The findings revealed that (i) intellectual risk-taking was a strong and positive predictor of creativity; (ii) the certainty dimension of epistemic beliefs was a negative and significant predictor of both intellectual risk-taking and creativity, whereas the complexity dimension was a positive and significant predictor of both; (iii) the source dimension had an indirect positive impact on creativity mediated by intellectual risk-taking; and (iv) the justification dimension had a direct positive impact on creativity. By synthesising the conclusions from this study and the theory of epistemic development, a two-way model was generated to illustrate the undergraduates’ epistemic beliefs and their relationships with creativity. The findings of this study indicated that a dialectical belief of knowledge as human creation might be the most beneficial for undergraduates to develop their creativity. Copyright © 2020 International Conference on Learning and Teaching.
- Paper presented at The International Conference on Learning and Teaching 2020 (ICLT2020), Hong Kong, China.
-
- English
- Conference Papers
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/bibs/8423c477
- 2022-01-05
Recent Conference Papers
Autonomy and relatedness: Motivating Hong Kong kindergarten teachers in an online professional development courseConference Papers
Young children’s math competence in Hong Kong: The influence of working memory, self-regulation, and family socioeconomic statusConference Papers
Exploring the domain-specific relations between Chinese language abilities and Mathematical skills in Hong Kong kindergarten childrenConference Papers
Preservice teachers’ experiential learning: Production of digital stories to nurture children’s positive valuesConference Papers
繼往開來:語文教育與歷史教育的相互作用Conference Papers
小學文言文閱讀教學尋趣Conference Papers
Using the robot-assisted Attention-Engagement-Error-Feedback-Reflection (AEER) pedagogical design to develop machine learning concepts and facilitate reflection on learning-to-learn skills: Evaluation of an empirical study in Hong Kong primary schoolsConference Papers
What is the language goal in EMI? An analysis of vocabulary demand in a high-stakes assessment in Hong KongConference Papers