Abstract

Previous studies that demonstrated the well-known “fourth-grade slump” phenomenon mostly adopted the divergent thinking type of creativity measures. The present study distinguishes between open-versus closed-ended creative potentials and predicts their different developmental trends and different relations to the development of children’s reasoning ability. According to Piaget’s cognitive development theory and the dual-process account of creativity theory, open-ended creativity is hypothesised to mainly rely on intuitive, associative Type 1 processing and could be interrupted by the development of formal operations. Closed-ended creativity, on the other hand, involves both Type 1 and Type 2 analytical, evaluative processing, and could benefit from the development of reasoning abilities. The present empirical examinations—with a longitudinal-sequential design—on the task performances of third, fourth, and fifth graders supported the hypotheses. The open-ended creativity indices (the divergent thinking test) exhibited descending trends across age, while the closed-ended creativity measures (the Chinese Word Associates Test and the insight problem-solving task for children) and reasoning abilities (thematic syllogisms) showed ascending trends. The path analysis results further demonstrated that the development of reasoning ability had a significant impact on closed-ended but not open-ended creative potential. The implications of these results and suggested future investigation issues are discussed.

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