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Divergent Thinking and Giftedness in Children

Posted on:2016-11-07Degree:Psy.DType:Dissertation
University:The Chicago School of Professional PsychologyCandidate:Sachdev, Shagun SheenaFull Text:PDF
GTID:1477390017978183Subject:Education
Abstract/Summary:
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship of creativity and intelligence. The current study was interested in testing gifted children's divergent thinking. For the purposes of this study, creativity was defined as the cognitive process of divergent thinking, the ability to generate as many possible solutions to a problem. Thirty-four children (ages 11 to 13) were tested in an afterschool program on the Alternative Uses Test (AUT), which asks the child to think of all of the uses for common, ordinary objects. The children were deemed gifted according to their California Standards Test (CST) scores in English and Math (350 or higher). The results of this study found that that gifted children had higher scores on the AUT, than their nongifted peers, thereby rejecting the threshold theory. Although there was a relationship between giftedness and divergent thinking, future research should focus on IQ testing and creativity test batteries.
Keywords/Search Tags:Divergent thinking, Gifted, Creativity, Children
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