Dear Colleagues:
With apologies for cross-posting we ae delighted to invite you to pre-register for the following PDW,(see below for registration information). Speaker presentations will be followed by an interactive session of activities.
| Submission: 16723 | Sponsor(s): (ODC, OB, ENT, IM) Scheduled: Friday, Aug 5 2016 12:00PM - 3:00PM at Anaheim Marriott in Grand Ballroom Salon H | Creativities – Making Creativity Meaningful by Learning from Cultural Differences Creativities | | | | | |
| Organizer: dt ogilvie; Rochester Institute of Technology; Organizer: Stephen Cummings; Victoria U. of Wellington; Organizer: Chris Bilton; Warwick U.; Chair: dt ogilvie; Rochester Institute of Technology; Presenter: Chris Bilton; Warwick U.; Presenter: Stephen Cummings; Victoria U. of Wellington; Presenter: Onome Ighoavodha; Rutgers Business School; Presenter: Hao Jiao; Beijing Normal U.; Presenter: Denise Luethge; U. of Michigan, Flint / Doshisha Business School; Presenter: Vincent O. Ogutu; STRATHMORE BUSINESS SCHOOL; Presenter: Asha Rao; California State U., East Bay; Presenter: Feichin Ted Tschang; Singapore Management U.; There is an assumption that creative processes in the West are superior to those, if they exist, in 'less developed' parts of the world. The view is that best practice in creativity is obviously that used in the West (Ng 2001). In fact, the belief is that Westerners are the innately 'creative types' and that the rest of the world just copies or steals the West's creativity. Some view the West as being on top of a creative maturity scale. If there were a one best way and a maturity scale, then it should simply be a matter of plotting the other cultures on the scale. However, closer observation would suggest that multiple different approaches to creativity work, and that they cannot not be explained as different stages of creative maturity on the same singular life cycle. (Bilton, Cummings & ogilvie 2015). There are different approaches, approaches shaped by different cultural contexts and relationships of the different cultures (Morris and Leung 2010; Lim and Oyama 2014). The basic premises of this PDW is that rather than the West informing the way other culture's creativity should progress, each culture can learn from the other cultures and that while other cultures' creativity may be different, different does not me lesser, it just means different. This 3rd workshop in a series of ODC workshops on Creativities continues to explore multiple creativities, consolidating a network of AOM creativity scholars. Pre-registration is required for this workshop. To register online, please visit https://secure.aom.org/PDWReg. The deadline to register online is August 06, 2016. The registration code is: none | Search Terms: | Creativities , Creativity , Cultural Differences | |
Dr. dt ogilvie
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Dr. dt ogilvie
Distinguished Professor of Urban Entrepreneurship and Former Dean
Founder, Center for Urban Entrepreneurship (CUE)
Saunders College of Business
Rochester Institute of Technology
107 Lomb Memorial Drive
Rochester, NY 14623
IC² Global Fellow
Fellow, The Center for Urban Entrepreneurship & Economic Development (CUEED)
Top 1% viewed LinkedIn Profile
dt@saunders.rit.edu | saunders.rit.edu
Cummings, S., Bilton, C., & ogilvie, d. 2015. Toward a New Understanding of Creative Dynamics: From One-Size-Fits-All Models to Multiple and Dynamic Forms of Creativity. Technology Innovation Management Review, 5(7): 14–24. http://timreview.ca/article/910
Kirkman, D. & ogilvie, d. 2014. An Examination of Entrepreneurial Orientation in Dedicated Biotechnology Firms: Context Matters, Organization Management Journal, 11:2, 84-100. http://tinyurl.com/jd6s263