Defining and measuring creativity: Are creativity tests worth using? (original) (raw)
Creativity tests measure specific cognitive processes (such as thinking divergently, making associations, constructing and combining broad categories, or working on many ideas simultaneously). They also measure noncognitive aspects of creativity such as motivation (e.g., impulse expression, desire for novelty, risk-taking), and facilitatory personal properties like flexibility, tolerance for independence, or positive attitudes to differentness. Raters can score the various kinds of test with substantial levels of agreement, while scores are internally stable to an acceptable degree. The tests also correlate to a reasonable degree with various criteria of creativity such as teacher ratings, and are useful predictors of adult behavior. Thus, they are useful in both research and education. However, the multidimensional creativity concept they define indicates that assessments should be based on several tests, rather than relying on a single score.