Abstract

A longitudinal study was conducted to examine the developmental trend of creative potential in Chinese junior high school students and the within-person and between-person effects of student–student support and need for cognition. Two hundred and fourteen Chinese junior high school students participated in the present study (mean age = 13.29 years, SD = 0.49 years, 116 boys). Student–student support, need for cognition, and creative potential were measured once per year for 3 years. Longitudinal multilevel models indicated that (1) Chinese junior high school students’ creative potential showed a downward trend from grades 7 to 9; (2) at the within-person level, time-varying student–student support positively predicted time-varying creative potential; (3) at the within-person level, time-varying need for cognition moderated the positive link between time-varying student–student support and time-varying creative potential; and (4) at the between-person level, no support was found for the links between student–student support, need for cognition, and creative potential. Specifically, average levels of student–student support neither significantly predicted initial levels and developmental rates of creative potential nor moderated the links between average levels of student–student and initial levels and developmental rates of creative potential. The findings highlight that at the within-person and between-person levels, student–student support and need for cognition have differential influences on Chinese junior school students’ creative potential.

Highlights

  • In the 21st-century knowledge society, information bases rapidly change and grow

  • Regarding the effect of student–student support on Chinese junior high school students’ creative potential, we found a dynamic relationship between student–student support and creative potential at the within-person level

  • At the between-person level, we found a different conclusion that the average level of student–student support did not significantly predict the initial level and the developmental rate of creative potential

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Summary

Introduction

In the 21st-century knowledge society, information bases rapidly change and grow. it has never been more important to develop creativity to face unknown challenges of the future (Amabile, 1996; Kleibeuker et al, 2016). Adolescents who demonstrate creativity can win competitions and resolve conflicts (Lassig, 2012), address mounting social and ecological issues in our global society (Craft, 2011), and obtain good career opportunities (Milgram and Hong, 1993). For these reasons, creativity has been regarded as a central ability needed by adolescents to survive and achieve success in competitive and global surroundings (Florida, 2002). The present study focused especially on the developmental trend of creative potential and its influencing factors in junior high school students

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