The relationship of birth order and socioeconomic status to the creativity of preschool children

The creativity of 68 middle- and lower-class Caucasian preschool children attending a nursery school, kindergarten, or day-care center in Southwestern Virginia was measured by an object-identification originality test developed by Elizabeth K. Starkweather at the Oklahoma State University. Each chil...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lichtenwalner, Joanne Sally
Other Authors: Child Development
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70524
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-705242021-05-05T05:40:44Z The relationship of birth order and socioeconomic status to the creativity of preschool children Lichtenwalner, Joanne Sally Child Development LD5655.V855 1968.L48 The creativity of 68 middle- and lower-class Caucasian preschool children attending a nursery school, kindergarten, or day-care center in Southwestern Virginia was measured by an object-identification originality test developed by Elizabeth K. Starkweather at the Oklahoma State University. Each child was tested individually by the investigator in an isolated room or special testing room. The Mann-Whitney U Test was employed to analyze differences, with a confidence level of .05. First born and only children were significantly more creative than later-born children. Middle-class children were significantly more creative than lower-class children. It was concluded that enrollment in a preschool program alone is not sufficient to increase the creativity of lower-class children to the level of their middle-class peers. It was also pointed out that some lower-class children were exceptionally creative and that further research into the home environments of these preschoolers might provide the answer to this puzzle. Experimental programs designed to increase creativity are needed to determine whether or not divergent thinking can be taught. Master of Science 2016-04-21T15:35:05Z 2016-04-21T15:35:05Z 1968 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70524 en OCLC# 38366935 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ vi, 65 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
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topic LD5655.V855 1968.L48
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1968.L48
Lichtenwalner, Joanne Sally
The relationship of birth order and socioeconomic status to the creativity of preschool children
description The creativity of 68 middle- and lower-class Caucasian preschool children attending a nursery school, kindergarten, or day-care center in Southwestern Virginia was measured by an object-identification originality test developed by Elizabeth K. Starkweather at the Oklahoma State University. Each child was tested individually by the investigator in an isolated room or special testing room. The Mann-Whitney U Test was employed to analyze differences, with a confidence level of .05. First born and only children were significantly more creative than later-born children. Middle-class children were significantly more creative than lower-class children. It was concluded that enrollment in a preschool program alone is not sufficient to increase the creativity of lower-class children to the level of their middle-class peers. It was also pointed out that some lower-class children were exceptionally creative and that further research into the home environments of these preschoolers might provide the answer to this puzzle. Experimental programs designed to increase creativity are needed to determine whether or not divergent thinking can be taught. === Master of Science
author2 Child Development
author_facet Child Development
Lichtenwalner, Joanne Sally
author Lichtenwalner, Joanne Sally
author_sort Lichtenwalner, Joanne Sally
title The relationship of birth order and socioeconomic status to the creativity of preschool children
title_short The relationship of birth order and socioeconomic status to the creativity of preschool children
title_full The relationship of birth order and socioeconomic status to the creativity of preschool children
title_fullStr The relationship of birth order and socioeconomic status to the creativity of preschool children
title_full_unstemmed The relationship of birth order and socioeconomic status to the creativity of preschool children
title_sort relationship of birth order and socioeconomic status to the creativity of preschool children
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70524
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