Abstract
The future of work is forcing the world to adjust to a new paradigm of working. New skills will be required to create and adopt new technology and working methods. Additionally, cognitive skills, particularly creative problem-solving, will be highly sought after. The future of work paradigm has threatened many occupations but bolstered others such as engineering. Engineers must keep up to date with the technological and cognitive demands brought on by the future of work. Using an exploratory mixed-methods approach, our study sought to make sense of how engineers understand and use creative problem solving. We found significant associations between engineers’ implicit knowledge of creativity, exemplified creative problem solving, and the perceived value of creativity. We considered that the work environment is a potential facilitator of creative problem-solving. We used an innovative exceptional cases analysis and found that the highest functioning engineers in terms of knowledge, skills, and perceived value of creativity, also reported working in places that facilitate psychosocially safe environments to support creativity. We propose a new theoretical framework for a creative environment by integrating the Four Ps (Person, Process, Product, and Press) and psychosocial safety climate theory that management could apply to facilitate creative problem solving. Through the acquisition of knowledge to engage in creative problem solving as individuals or a team, a perception of value must be present to enforce the benefit of creativity to the engineering role. The future of work paradigm requires that organisations provide an environment, a psychosocially safe climate, for engineers to grow and hone their sought-after skills that artificial technologies cannot currently replace.
Highlights
The future of work is characterised by the integration of humans and automation, artificial intelligence, and cyberphysical systems and is forcing the world to adjust to a new paradigm of working (Schwartz et al, 2019)
As a result of this study, we identify a theoretical framework to illustrate the engineer best prepared for the future of work through an environment where management facilitates creative problem solving
The study’s strengths include the explicit exploration into the engineering workforce, if, as the future of work literature espouses, the discipline of engineering is protected in digital transformations
Summary
The future of work is characterised by the integration of humans and automation, artificial intelligence, and cyberphysical systems and is forcing the world to adjust to a new paradigm of working (Schwartz et al, 2019). The kinds of tasks that digital systems can perform are limited by the inability of artificial intelligence to exhibit consciousness and original thought (Sheridan, 2019). While the list of core skills in demand is long, a reoccurring point of interest is that of creativity and problem solving; Corazza (2019) reflects on human life in the cyber-physical society, reporting that psychosocial wellbeing in this new paradigm will depend on the development of human traits and abilities, those related to creativity. While the WEF and other organisations are focused on employees and the future of work, many other researchers and educators are heeding these predictions and changing student curricula to include inherently human skills such as creativity and complex problem solving (see Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development[OECD], 2018, 2019; Cropley, 2020; Koshanova et al, 2021)
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