After this class, I should say I have learned many creative thinking skills and changed my thinking habits, which I also write in both of my class sessions archives and my synthesis. But here, I want to specify more on it.
What I have learned:
From the books: I described myself to knock at the creative door from Weston's book, because he gave us some initial and basic ideas on creativity. Plus,Da vinchi and Tharp's books provide many useful creative thinking methods and principles which to some extent let me know much deeper and more comprehensive on creativity. Especially Tharp's book, one of the most memorable points is that it encourages everyone to be creative and indicates that every layperson could also be able to be creative, which make me become more confident on my creative ability.
From the arts: After seeing the arts, I feel that even though some of them are hard to understand, we could still summarize some good implications from it. For example, like seeing the art, if next time I'm thinking about some problems/ideas or making judges on some objects, I should take any possible perspectives into consideration, not just from one side. And I should also hear from other people's opinions to see if there are any better alternatives.Furthermore, to understand a problem/situation, I should first have a whole/comprehensive understanding on it, like backgrounds and history, which offer a good platform to take further step on exploring deeper ideas and thoughts.
From YTU: This session provide me huge information on creativity, by different people on various areas. Some showed good cases about how some famous brands make creative strategies, and some gave us lessons on other useful creative thinking and management skills that different from the class sessions'.
What I have changed:
Like Tharp suggests us, I have tried to change my thinking habits and cultivate new habit on my creative life. For example, I start to think about thinking and figure out some potential implications on my dreams, which I never did before. Plus, the creative thinking methods help me a lot to solve problems when I'm doing group works and advertising projects, which in other words improve my proficiency on my work and life, that is, I'm becoming more effective and productive.
Charlotte's Creative Life
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Questions - YTU Implication ideas
When I was doing the YTU sessions, I was wondering how can they apply to my major field like advertising and marketing. For example, the cinemagraphs, and the six thinking hats. How can the be adjusted and made use of to be implemented in the marketing communication strategies that brands can utilize to refresh the traditional format of advertising and attract more eyeballs of the end markets?
Friday, November 11, 2011
YTU #3 Creative Photograph
Objectives:
1. Learn about the importance of the very common object - “photography” in which creativity plays a vital role.
2. Case studies on three different kinds of creative photography varied from plain people to professional photographers, and find some relations with both creative thinking process and ideas from the text books we have discussed.
3. Explore meanings and insights behind the case studies, and learn a lesson with a comprehensively understanding on how to break out of our creative shell to embrace all the possibilities that are available in daily life.
4. Intrigue people to think creatively on how to they apply this creativity or what they learned into their creative life.
Course content:
1. Importance of photography for creativity
2. Case studies on 3 different creative series of galleries
3. Discussion and Implications from the case studies
A. Importance of photography for creativity
Definition:
Photography is the art, science and practice of creating durable images by recording light or other electromagnetic radiation, either electronically by means of an image sensor or chemically by means of a light-sensitive material such as photographic film.[1]
Photography is undoubtedly one of the most important inventions in history. It has truly transformed how people conceive of the world. Now we can "see" all sorts of things that are actually many miles -- and years -- away from us. Photography lets us capture moments in time and preserve them for years to come. As one will say, photography is a way of feeling, of touching, of loving.
As in today’s modern society, photography has been defined as one of the members in creative industries, which has great influence on our societies harmonious and economy. Essentially put, the creative industries have been seen to become increasingly important to economic well-being, proponents suggesting that "human creativity is the ultimate economic resource,"[2] and that “the industries of the twenty-first century will depend increasingly on the generation of knowledge through creativity and innovation."[3]
Creativity is one of the essential elements to great nature photography. A good photo remains one of the most powerful expressions for creativity. Because of the flexibility on angles and perspectives, people could gain a unique way to see a different world by using creativities on taking photos, which help you to see the world better and to adopt a new point of view on it. This new point of view can thus become a real source of innovation and creativity.
B. Case Studies on creative photography
From a professional perspective
a) “Cinemagraphs” by Jamie Beck & Kevin Burg
Cinemagraphs was created by visual graphic artist Kevin Burg and photographer Jamie Beck. A Cinemagraph is an image that contains within itself a living moment that allows a glimpse of time to be experienced and preserved endlessly. Marrying original content photography with the desire to communicate more to the viewer birthed the cinemagraph process. Starting in-camera, the artists take a traditional photograph and combine a living moment into the image through the isolated animation of multiple frames. In other words, Cinemagraphs are still images that capture motion within a still frame. As supermodel Coco Rocha said, "it's more than a photo but not quite a video".
Jamie and Kevin named the process "Cinemagraphs" for their cinematic quality while maintaining at its soul the principles of traditional photography (Relation, scratch for ideas from current ideas –“Creativity is more about taking the facts, fictions, and feelings we store away and finding new ways to connect them.”(Tharp)). Their common goal is to find life’s subtleties and use those elements to enhance and make an image come alive. To quote the words from Burg:
“We take the storytelling element of photography and give a little bit more information, which can bring the viewer closer to the subject, or illuminate a particular concept in a new way.”
2. Case studies on 3 different creative series of galleries
3. Discussion and Implications from the case studies
A. Importance of photography for creativity
Definition:
Photography is the art, science and practice of creating durable images by recording light or other electromagnetic radiation, either electronically by means of an image sensor or chemically by means of a light-sensitive material such as photographic film.[1]
Photography is undoubtedly one of the most important inventions in history. It has truly transformed how people conceive of the world. Now we can "see" all sorts of things that are actually many miles -- and years -- away from us. Photography lets us capture moments in time and preserve them for years to come. As one will say, photography is a way of feeling, of touching, of loving.
As in today’s modern society, photography has been defined as one of the members in creative industries, which has great influence on our societies harmonious and economy. Essentially put, the creative industries have been seen to become increasingly important to economic well-being, proponents suggesting that "human creativity is the ultimate economic resource,"[2] and that “the industries of the twenty-first century will depend increasingly on the generation of knowledge through creativity and innovation."[3]
Creativity is one of the essential elements to great nature photography. A good photo remains one of the most powerful expressions for creativity. Because of the flexibility on angles and perspectives, people could gain a unique way to see a different world by using creativities on taking photos, which help you to see the world better and to adopt a new point of view on it. This new point of view can thus become a real source of innovation and creativity.
B. Case Studies on creative photography
From a professional perspective
a) “Cinemagraphs” by Jamie Beck & Kevin Burg
Cinemagraphs was created by visual graphic artist Kevin Burg and photographer Jamie Beck. A Cinemagraph is an image that contains within itself a living moment that allows a glimpse of time to be experienced and preserved endlessly. Marrying original content photography with the desire to communicate more to the viewer birthed the cinemagraph process. Starting in-camera, the artists take a traditional photograph and combine a living moment into the image through the isolated animation of multiple frames. In other words, Cinemagraphs are still images that capture motion within a still frame. As supermodel Coco Rocha said, "it's more than a photo but not quite a video".
Jamie and Kevin named the process "Cinemagraphs" for their cinematic quality while maintaining at its soul the principles of traditional photography (Relation, scratch for ideas from current ideas –“Creativity is more about taking the facts, fictions, and feelings we store away and finding new ways to connect them.”(Tharp)). Their common goal is to find life’s subtleties and use those elements to enhance and make an image come alive. To quote the words from Burg:
“We take the storytelling element of photography and give a little bit more information, which can bring the viewer closer to the subject, or illuminate a particular concept in a new way.”
http://cinemagraphs.com/ |
Creative process:
“There's movement in everything and by capturing that plus the great things about a still photograph you get to experience what a video has to offer without the time commitment a video requires.” - Burg
Jamie Beck’s first few animated images were sequenced still shots looped in rapid succession which is a fairly common way of making an animated image. Then she began utilizing more fluid motion isolated in certain parts of an image to capture a moment of time, but also to un-freeze a still photograph by showing that moment's temporal movement (Ideation).
Even though the concept of animated GIFs is as old as the Internet, the ones that commonly appear on the web are often mediocre and even tacky. However, Jamie Beck’s, have an amazing atmosphere instead which has elevated the art of animated GIFs to a more creative and touching step (Wisdom).
Launched virally through social media platforms Twitter and Tumblr, both the style of imagery and terminology has become a class of its own (Wisdom). The creative duo are looking forward to exploring future display technologies for gallery settings as well as pushing this new art form and communication process as the best way to capture a moment in time or create a true living portrait in our digital age while embracing our need to communicate visually and share instantly (Further Ideation, Fruition).
Discussion:
How their creative process relate to the principle of creativity we’ve talked about in class? (Ideation, Relation, Wisdom, Fruition) How about Tharp’s ideas?
From plain people’s perspective
b) “Mila’s Dream” by Adele Enersen
When babies take naps, busy mums generally sigh with relief and either fall on the sofa exhausted or use the time to clean up the mess left behind by the baby when it was awake. But what happens if you’re a creative mum who is on the maternity leave? (Showing the video “Mila’s Dream”from YouTube.)
If you’re like Adele Enersen from Finland, who is a copywriter of an advertising agency as well as a housewife, you might grab your sleeping baby, some clothes and your camera and let your imagination fly. While her daughter is soundly asleep, she create a completely different world form whatever she can find around her!
Creative Process:
When Mila was born she slept almost 18 hours a day. Most of the pictures that Adele took of her were sleep pictures. Once, Mila fell asleep on the floor in a funny posture, and Adele’s musician husband Lasse Enersen placed a conductor’s baton in her hand which made her look like a little fencer. The couple found it very amusing and next day Adele decided to take the idea further, so while Mila was sleeping Adele took some pillows and blankets and created a little forest on the floor, put Mila in the middle and took a photo. Their friends and family responded to it with glee, so Adele decided to continue making more.
All of the images in Adele Enersen’s dream photography are created around clothing and fabric items like clothes, towels, umbrellas and toys; they include typical dream cliches as well as some abstract visions. In the photos, Mila may be fishing, playing with pets, hanging on a clothes line, riding a horse or an elephant, playing in blossom as a butterfly, flying as a pink superman, or playing some musical instruments. From creating ideas to implementation and editing, each of the photos is finished within a few minutes.
As she described in her blog:
“This blog is my maternity leave hobby. While my baby is taking her nap, I create scene around her and take quick snap photos.
I use only few minutes per picture, including creating idea, implementation and editing, 'cause I don't want to disturb her sleeping and most of my time is for my family. My camera is small and inexpensive Canon IXUS 750.”
Yes, only a small amount of leisure time and an inexpensive normal camera could produce nothing but so talented and amazing creative works! While some people waste their time on wandering their meaningless minds, or investigating how can they shoot great photos from only the professional cameras, this Finland mom instead picked up every trivial thing she could find around herself and created this cute and eyeball-catching photography. So what are you waiting? Just do it!
Discussion:
Talk about what you have learned from this creative mother, you can either make comparison with Jamie and Kevin’s Cinemagraph or relate it to our previous class discussions, or propose your own idea.
c) “Today’s Levitation” by Natumi Hayashi
This is gallery of photographs by and all featuring Natsumi Hayashi, a Tokyo teenager who takes hundreds of pictures of herself jumping until she captures just the right one where, instead of jumping, it looks like she's levitating. Natumi Hayashi‘s blog featured all kinds of normal photos of herself, her pet cat, friends and Tokyo sights, but on September 16, 2010 she posted a photo entitled “Today’s Levitation” and Hayashi has become an Internet sensation that.
All of the images in Adele Enersen’s dream photography are created around clothing and fabric items like clothes, towels, umbrellas and toys; they include typical dream cliches as well as some abstract visions. In the photos, Mila may be fishing, playing with pets, hanging on a clothes line, riding a horse or an elephant, playing in blossom as a butterfly, flying as a pink superman, or playing some musical instruments. From creating ideas to implementation and editing, each of the photos is finished within a few minutes.
As she described in her blog:
“This blog is my maternity leave hobby. While my baby is taking her nap, I create scene around her and take quick snap photos.
I use only few minutes per picture, including creating idea, implementation and editing, 'cause I don't want to disturb her sleeping and most of my time is for my family. My camera is small and inexpensive Canon IXUS 750.”
Yes, only a small amount of leisure time and an inexpensive normal camera could produce nothing but so talented and amazing creative works! While some people waste their time on wandering their meaningless minds, or investigating how can they shoot great photos from only the professional cameras, this Finland mom instead picked up every trivial thing she could find around herself and created this cute and eyeball-catching photography. So what are you waiting? Just do it!
Discussion:
Talk about what you have learned from this creative mother, you can either make comparison with Jamie and Kevin’s Cinemagraph or relate it to our previous class discussions, or propose your own idea.
c) “Today’s Levitation” by Natumi Hayashi
This is gallery of photographs by and all featuring Natsumi Hayashi, a Tokyo teenager who takes hundreds of pictures of herself jumping until she captures just the right one where, instead of jumping, it looks like she's levitating. Natumi Hayashi‘s blog featured all kinds of normal photos of herself, her pet cat, friends and Tokyo sights, but on September 16, 2010 she posted a photo entitled “Today’s Levitation” and Hayashi has become an Internet sensation that.
As Hayashi said in one of the interviews, it was an English idiom that inspired her to take the first photo of herself levitating - ‘to have one’s feet firmly planted on the ground’. But since she doesn’t consider herself a practical person she chose not to have her feet firmly on the ground in her self-portrait photos, to show how she really is.
“In being free of gravity in the pictures, I am also not bound to societal conventions. I feel as though I am not tied to many things and able to be my true self.”
What makes Hayashi’s photos so popular is her natural expression and pose which has you wondering if she’s actually floating. But the Japanese teen swears she’s no magician, so how does she do it? “The only way to get a right timing for a shot is jumping a lot,” this quote from Hayashi herself dispels our hopeful illusions that she's the first human being who can actually fly. As soon as she finds the perfect spot for her shot, Natsumi sets the self-timer on her Canon EOS 5D Mark II, or asks a friend to press the shutter, and just starts jumping, and continues to do so until she achieves that perfect, natural-looking “levitation.” "Sometimes I need to jump over 100 times to get a right shot."
Learn How to take "Today's Levitation"
(Posted by Hayashi on her blog http://yowayowacamera.com/pineapple1/)
² Equipments and shutter speed
Camera body: Canon EOS 5D Mk2
Lenses: Canon EF50mm F1.2L USM, EF24-70mm F2.8L USM, PENTAX 67 lenses (with adaptors)
Tripods: Gitzo's rapid-pole 3 steps with ball heads (from 1980s)
Shutter speed: 1/500 sec. or faster (1/320 sec. can be used in a darker condition)
² With a self-timer
EOS 5D Mk2 has a 10sec. timer as its longest timer set up. This means that I can get away as far as 10 second distance from the camera after I press the shutter release button.
First, I get a composition and a focus manually.
Then I press the shutter release, run to the right position for a levitation as checking the camera's blinking red LED counts down 10 seconds and jump by my intuition.
In this manner, I need to jump over and over to get the right shot.
² Ask someone to press the shutter release button
When I take my levitation farther away from the camera than 10 second distance, I ask someone (mostly my friend) to press the shutter release button. First, I ask my friend to be a stand-in in a proper position to get a composition and a focus.
Then I go to the position to levitate, and my friend come to the camera (we switch our position) to press a shutter release button in time with my jumps.
C. Discussion and Implications
a) What can you see from these 3 photographs? Are they creative to you? Which one is the most impressive for you, why?
b) How can we learn from their creativities? If you are an expertise of some industry vs. if you are just normal people in daily life?
c) How will you put their creativity into your daily creative life? Habits like photo shooting, painting, dancing, etc. (Further: How to break out of our creative shell to embrace all the possibilities that are available in daily life.)
d) Other implications?
Reference:
[1] Spencer, D A (1973). The Focal Dictionary of Photographic Technologies. Focal Press. p. 454. ISBN 240 50747 9.
[2] Florida, Richard (2002), The Rise of the Creative Class. And How It's Transforming Work, Leisure and Everyday Life, Basic Books
[3] Landry, Charles; Bianchini, Franco (1995), The Creative City, Demos
[2] Florida, Richard (2002), The Rise of the Creative Class. And How It's Transforming Work, Leisure and Everyday Life, Basic Books
[3] Landry, Charles; Bianchini, Franco (1995), The Creative City, Demos
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Tharp Discussion
Guest Speaker
Today we have a guest speaker Kate in class and she gave us a really interesting lesson, which we made movements and tried to follow others movements. From this activity, I learned the importance to share your inner thoughts and express them with your movements. Kate said communication and connection with your partners play critical roles in one's creative life.What's important?
1. Indentify your creativity ritual.
Tharp starts her day by taking a cab to the gym. She says that having a ritual makes it a habit and for her, getting in the cab is the first very important step. She needs to be literally warmed up to get creative and her time at the gym does just that.
The ritual can be as simple as lighting a candle or putting on music. It is a symbol that it is time to do your creative work.
2. Combining Ideas.
3. Education and hard work.
4. Scratch ideas.
We often think that to be creative you have to come up with something brand new, out of thin air; something never done before. Yet, really those brand new things are often just new ways of combining or connecting what has been done before. Scratching for ideas can seem like you are appropriating someone else’s work (which of course you should not do), but there is a subtle difference. Others’ ideas can serve as inspiration for your own.Tharp cites Harvard psychologist Stephen Kosslyn, in presenting four ways to act on an idea – generate it (from memory or experience), retain it, inspect it, and finally transform it.
What's new?
1. Find a spine.
The spine we’re talking about here is the original thought or basis for your creative project. When you start to get off track, go back to the spine to help you stay on course. For Tharp, the spine is a tool. It is not the message, but it keeps her on message. She suggests finding the spine of your creative work with the help of a friend or co-worker, through music, or by remembering your original intentions and clarifying your goals.
2. Be aware of what distracts you and give it up for a while.
If you get your important creative work done first, there is usually plenty of time to do the rest of it. This requires deciding what the important work is, and setting realistic deadlines for it. Tharp suggests eliminating your persistent distractions from your life – temporarily at least, and see how your work is affected. For example, give up TV or movies or background music, whatever is your biggest distraction, for a week. How does it affect the quantity and quality of your work?
3.Know when you’re in a rut and know how to get out of it.
To Tharp, a rut is different from a creative block. It’s more like a false start. You know something’s not working, whether you want to admit it or not. This could be the result of a bad original idea, or bad luck, or sticking to past methods when new ones are required. To deal with a rut, the first step is to admit you’re in one. Often, spinning your wheels, or letting pessimism creep in, are signals that you’re in a rut. She suggests brainstorming as a way to come up with a new idea, and get past old habits. Also, challenging your initial assumptions and then acting on those challenges is another way. She warns against over working and over tinkering. Know when to stop for the day, always leaving something on the table for the next day.
What's to do?
Scratching and Approach.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Questions - Fall leaves
I like the fall leaves a lot. And this make me think about some ideas to make them creative. How it works? Since the leaves will change season by season, if it can be used on some energy-saving devices which can show the power and energy, etc.? Something environmental friendly?
Thursday, October 27, 2011
BioCreativity – Stunt Bicycle Power Assist
Bio-inspiration: The Mantis Shrimp is a marine crustacean native to tropical regions of the Indian and Pacific Ocean. It earned this name because its body resembles a shrimp and its head resembles a praying mantis. It is actually neither shrimp nor mantis and is classified as a stomatopod. The mantis shrimp may reach 12 inches in length, with largest recorded measuring in at 15 inches.
One feature that makes this creature very unique and interesting and provided inspiration for a new product is its extremely powerful punch. This punch is reputedly strong enough to break through the glass walls of aquariums.
The mantis shrimp’s punch is regarded as one of the strongest in the natural kingdom. The punch is deployed at blinding speed, with an acceleration of 10,400 g and speeds 50 mph (80 kph) and peak forces of 1,500 newtons from a standing start. The strike is so rapid that it generates bubbles which burst, producing extremely high temperatures. The mantis shrimp uses both of these weapons, its powerful punch and the resultant bubbles, to kill or maim its prey; mainly crabs by cracking their shells.
Video of the mantis shrimp using its punch is available at the link below:
Considering that this feat is achieved under water makes the mantis shrimp’s ability even more impressive. Mantis shrimps are able to achieve such extreme forces by slowly storing muscular energy with a spring and latch mechanism. Once the arm is cocked, a ratchet locks it firmly into place. The large muscles present in the upper portion of the arm contract and build up energy gradually. When the latch is released, all this energy is released at once and the lower arm is launched forwards with tremendous force. An illustration of this phenomenon created by S. N. Patek, W. L. Korff & R. L. Caldwell in Nature is given below. The diagram illustrates the essential components in the mantis shrimp’s arm. In the simplified diagram the red is the strong muscular spring, the latch mechanism is shown in yellow, the blue shapes are the arm, and the four dots show the hinges of the four-bar linkage used to generate this motion.
Proposed Idea: Power Assist for Stunt Bicycles
The mechanism used by the organism to store energy and rapidly release it may have great applications in extreme sports especially bicycling. We believe this will be very useful in providing the extra boost of speed while performing stunt maneuvers such as jumps.
The challenge with these maneuvers is that they require the rider to build up a significant speed prior to taking off. Sometimes the margin of error is small and failure to achieve a high enough speed may result in crashes and injuries. During our research we found that almost 30% of accidents occur due to rider not building up enough speed.
Our proposed solution to this problem is to use an energy storage mechanism similar to the biological system the mantis shrimp uses to for its punch; only in this case it would be adapted as a power assist mechanism to generate extra wheel speed. The aim is to design a device which stores energy generated by normal movements of the cyclist in the form of elastic energy and can release it on demand to provide extra acceleration as desired.
The product would store energy using a strong torsion spring mounted on the rear wheel, and would use a ratchet to ensure that the spring does not unwind prior to desired deployment. The energy would be generated either by various forces applied to the bicycle during use, or may be manually wound to achieve full energy potential prior to riding. The rider would have a manual switch on the handlebars to release the ratchet, activating the power assist of the spring and accelerating the bicycle.
Creative Process: In order develop this idea the team started with individual ideation processes to identify biological sources of inspiration. The group came together, presented these ideas, and through an open discussion explored opportunities related to each. Examples were the mantis shrimp’s punch, plate tectonics, and pheromones. There was an initial set of product ideas, and the group worked to juxtapose some of these to try to find new creative options. This led to ideas such as pheromones to help track customer habits in malls, energy storage for above elbow prosthetics, and considering automobile emissions as a method for distributing deer repellent around roads. Group members then took these ideas and used individual ideation processes to branch off from the central ideas of the group. Several days later the group reconvened to compare their divergent ideas and use those to develop a final central idea for the project. The ideas of the mantis shrimp energy storage and roadway pheromone deer repellent were discussed in detail, considering alternatives within each technology. Through this discussion the group coalesced around the idea of an energy storage / power assist system for high performance stunt bicycles.
There were a series of provocation that spurred the idea of applying the energy storage system on a bicycle. The two most significant provocations are discussed here. The original idea had been to use the system for storing energy to actuate a prosthetic arm, and it was a short leap to consider wheelchairs as a similar handicap which may benefit from a power assist mechanism. This brought the discussion to the realm of wheeled vehicles, and the potential for rapid acceleration was raised. This next provocation led the group to consider high performance situations, which is how the idea of stunt bicycle riding was introduced into the discussion.
After developing the idea it was noted that this is similar to KERS technology used in Formula One racing. KERS stands for kinetic energy recovery system; kinetic energy of a moving vehicle is recovered under braking and stored in a reservoir (for example a flywheel or a battery) for later use under acceleration.This energy is usually used to provide the extra burst of acceleration which can be critical in overtaking opponents during the race.
This is not the same as spring assist technologies currently available for bicycles such as the E-Hub. That spring system is designed to smooth energy consumption by storing energy on the downhill automatically and automatically releasing it as the rider slows down on the uphill. The E-Hub is designed to decrease the average energy output of the rider by smoothing over time, whereas this proposed system aims to increase the maximum energy delivered to the wheels during a high performance situation via a controlled release of the stored energy.
http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRWAF8k_OsHQ15h3qGTyjGA01a1Su_jCap8nqCqyXcZr6CXPszYew
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhRgUmqQ-maI7femKQET6yvYcrwC2nAhkSNYfpFtPOOI2Zt8ORr19IlJHfpiFWuRyUOfjzHw2r_FHjdX5jYSm8zuv93vfhweC5wHwFmpLSxZIaE8cqp9IaSROiJ77jIbA986c5p9UaUQQ9l/s1600/mantis.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantis_shrimp#cite_note-Patek_et_al.-6
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v428/n6985/full/428819a.html
http://classic.the-scientist.com/news/display/57731/
http://naturalhistorymag.com/biomechanics/082071/knockout-punch
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v428/n6985/fig_tab/428819a_F1.html
C M Illingworth, BMX compared with ordinary bicycle accidents, 461-464
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KERS
http://www.ehub.si/eng/default.asp?stran=opis
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
YTU#2 - Six Thinking Hats Creativing Thinking Method
Objectives:
l Introduce Edward De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats method to continuously develop ideas from Sawyer’s Group Genius book. This task aims to make people know how to use the Six Hats skill into their daily works in order to simplify thinking, to create more creative atmosphere and to improve communication in terms of the teamwork.
l Train people to use a clearer way of thinking. Make sure people know the benefits, meanings and sequence of Six Thinks Hats, and get a deep understanding on how to build ownership on the objectives and actions. Group members are not just told to do but are creating their own tasks and area of responsibility.
l By knowing how to develop the objectives and actions for themselves, the group members also to learn to tailor them to their knowledge and interests to execute them more efficiently and can be able to implement this creative thinking skill into future practical teamwork and initiate cross functional collaboration.
Course Content:
• Biggest enemy in good thinking
• Why Group Genius?
• How to facilitate?
• Parallel Thinking/ Six Thinking Hats
• Meanings of Hats
• Sequence of “Hats” creative process
• Exercises (easy-hard; daily- professional)
• Key Points
Introduction:
The difference between brilliant and mediocre teams isn’t so much in their collective mental capacity, but in how well they can tap into their collective wisdom and how well they function together.
Why?
To build ownership across the organization. When a group or an organization sets out new goals and directions it is crucial that their members fully understand the scope and consequences of the new goals. The better each group member understands and takes ownership of the new goals, the faster the group can reach them.
How?
Six Thinking Hats (Parallel Thinking Skills) – Created by Edward De Bono
Western model of thinking (adversarial thinking) is not sufficient to tackle all different problems. With the tradition of argument or adversarial thinking, each side takes a different position and then seeks to prove that the other side is wrong. Argument is relied on because we believe that if you remove what is wrong; you will be left with what is right. The reality is that most arguments, and therefore meetings, result in very little constructive output at all, only bruised egos.
Parallel Thinking offers a practical alternative. It encourages co-operation, exploration and innovation. With Parallel Thinking both sides, or all parties, are thinking in parallel, using the same style of thinking simultaneously. There is co-operative and co-ordinated thinking. The style of thinking used can be changed in order to give a balanced, objective view of the situation.
A simple and practical way of parallel thinking is to use the Six Thinking Hats method - this results in dramatically shorter meetings, and more constructive outcomes. The Six Thinking Hats let us focus our thought process and filter out ideas and outputs. It helps you make better decisions by forcing you to move outside your habitual ways of thinking. As such, it helps you understand the full complexity of the decision, and spot issues and opportunities to which you might otherwise be blind. When we think in the normal way, we try to do too much at once. We may be looking at the information, forming ideas, and judging someone else’s ideas all at the same time. The Six Hats method allows us to unbundle thinking. Instead of trying to do everything at once, we separate out the different aspects of thinking. This way we can pay full attention to each aspect in turn.
This method is now rapidly being taken up by corporations such as Du Pont, IBM, NASA Prudential Texas Instruments, NTT, Statoil, Shell and JP Morgan.
Benefits of Six Hat Thinking
l The hats are visual cues for us to allow an easy switch in our modes of thinking.
l Simplify thinking. Focus one thing at a time. Reduce the confusion.
l Reduce confrontation.
l Expand from one-dimensional to full-colored thinking.
l Explore subjects in parallel, explore each situation or problem and generate alternatives that go beyond obvious solutions.
l Increase the constructive output from group work and save time.
l Create, evaluate and implement action plans.
Meaning s of Six Thinking Hats
1. The Green Hat- Creativity, Possibilities
² Green Hat Role
² Takes us out of usual patterns of thinking
² Seeks new concepts and alternatives
² Brings momentum & breaks the rut, remove the faults
² Think “outside of the box”, don’t have to be logical
Ø Ask green hat questions
² Are there other ways to do this?
² What else could we do here?
² What are the possibilities?
² What will overcome our Black Hat concerns?
2. Yellow Hat – Positive Judgment
Ø Yellow Hat Purpose
² See the good parts of even a bad idea
There’s always a Bright Side
E.g. Bright Side of Global Warming? Bright Side of Marriage?
² Optimistic that a new idea will work
² Tend to see the valuable contributions in people’s ideas
² Usually positive and constructive
3. The Red Hat- Feelings, Intuition
Ø Red Thinking Hat Purpose
² See the emotional perspective to an issue
² Convenient to switch in and out of the feeling mode
² Never attempt to justify feelings or provide a logical base and reason
² Use of intuition and impression
² Hunches about the best decision
4. White Hat- Facts & Figures, Information
Ø White Hat Role
² Neutral and objective in presenting information - like a computer
² Distinguish facts. Exclude opinions& judgments
² Remove feelings and impressions
² Statistical evidence concerning a decision
Ø White hat questions
² What do we know? What do we don’t know?
² What do we need to know?
5. The Black Hat : Caution
Ø Black Hat Role
² Not argument; objective attempt to identify negative elements
² Project an idea into the future to see what may fail or go wrong
² Not to be used for negative feelings which should use Red Hat
² Quickly see why an idea will not work
² The “devil’s advocate”
Ø Black Hat in Meetings
² Timing of the Black Hat invocation
- if the devil jumps in at the earliest stage, the idea never has a hope in hell, or ends up having its sharp edges smoothed over
² Black Hat has to draw a fine line
- Big difference between someone crushing an idea based on spinning out possible negative scenarios, vs. someone who voices a genuine concern backed with real facts.
² Black Hat Overdone
- “We tried that before and it didn’t work.” is probably the fastest way to stop an idea.
6. The Blue Hat- Manager/Facilitator
Ø Blue Hat Role
² Sets the focus, defines the problems, shapes the questions, determines the thinking tasks
² Responsible for overviews, summaries, & conclusions
² Handle requests from the group. Monitors thinking, stops argument, enforces discipline
² Ensures the “rules of the game” are observed
² Ask for changes in the thinking
² Focus on the big picture
Ø Thinking Process
² Why we are here /what we are thinking about /Definition of the situation or problem /Alternative definitions /what we want to achieve /where we want to end up /The background to the thinking
(Ask which two hats participants feel most comfortable wearing, have them each share their preferred hats and talk about the learning)
Sequence of the thinking and creative process
The thinking hats sequence can be changed depending on what the process or meeting is target towards.
1. Facilitator (Blue Hat) Open and Clarify the problem
2. Present the facts of the case (White Hat).
3. Generate ideas, how the case could be handled (Green Hat).
4. Evaluate the merits of the ideas; List benefits (Yellow Hat).
5. List drawbacks (Black Hat).
6. Gets everybody’s gut feeling about the alternatives (Red Hat).
7. Summarize (Blue Hat).
Exercise 1: Which style is this...?
ü Let’s run it up the flagpole – yellow and green
ü Tread carefully - black
ü Let’s think out of the box – green
ü We should get all out ducks in a row – white, black, blue
ü Let’s pick through the bones of this - white
ü How do we pull all this together? - blue
ü Who dares wins - red
Exercise 2: What Would You Do as a Leader?
ü If the group is becoming jaded & seems to have fallen into a rut? Try a green hat
ü If the team is discussing a Sensitive/Emotional Issue and team members are not forthright with their emotions? Red Hat
ü If the team is cozy & in a ‘Yes Boss’ mood? Have a Black Hat session to discuss the pitfalls force the issue by randomly assigning the role of devil’s advocates.
ü If the team has got carried away by a host of ideas in a meeting! White hat. Make someone responsible for researching and presenting counter-arguments to the best of their ability.
ü If the team is become defensive & is not open to change? Blue Hat
Exercise 3: Fit the hats to the following statement on Business
ü I think the competitive environment in the UK is getting tougher for Tesco.
ü So far, Tesco has largely confined its overseas expansion to emerging markets.
ü Tesco's other mooted US takeover target is Meijer, a privately owned business in Michigan. It's smaller than Albertsons and there's always a danger that small operators could be crunched by the big boys. Meijer would be an unnecessary distraction for Tesco.
ü To try to take on Wal-Mart on its own home turf would be a foolish endeavor for Tesco, but there are plenty of niche opportunities in US retailing.
ü I feel Tesco is treating its suppliers very badly.
ü According to new research conducted by Fitch, today’s consumer expects unprecedented levels of integrity from the companies behind the brands they buy. The consultancy found that 83 percent of British consumers it surveyed believe brands should be more open in their actions; and 41 per cent believe transparency is the best way for a company to demonstrate its honesty.
ü We have considered all the options suggested before the meeting. Now let’s see if we can think of some further options.
ü Launching a fair trade brand will generate sales that will replace the loss of revenue we’re suffering due to the decline in the coffee market overall.
Key Points:
ü Six Thinking Hats is a good technique for looking at the effects of a decision from a number of different points of view.
ü It allows necessary emotion and skepticism to be brought into what would otherwise be purely rational decisions. It opens up the opportunity for creativity within Decision Making. The technique also helps, for example, persistently pessimistic people to be positive and creative.
ü Plans developed using this technique will be sounder and more resilient than would otherwise be the case. It may also help you to avoid public relations mistakes, and spot good reasons not to follow a course of action before you have committed to it.
References:
Edward de Bono: Six Thinking Hats
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http://www.edwarddebonofoundation.com/sixthinking.htm
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