About this Research Topic
However, despite the consensus on the importance of cultivating students’ higher order abilities and the empowerment brought about by new technologies, many school teachers and university professors still consider it not easy to handle the teaching and learning of students’ higher order abilities, because of the lack of experience and solid theoretical foundation. Hence, mature pedagogies, effective teaching aids, and accurate evaluation tools are desperately needed. Moreover, creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship, as higher-order abilities of talents, are practice-oriented and action-driven. Ways of linking theories and practices become topics worthy of discussion and research. Though it is acknowledged that creativity is the essential precondition of innovation, and innovation is the prelude for entrepreneurship, their systematic linkage and relational mechanism are still required for further investigations.
In this Research Topic, we aim to solicit a range of original research articles from different disciplines and perspectives that contribute to innovation-oriented education. To this end, there are three potential directions to be addressed. The first one could be scholarly reviews or meta-analyses in the field of creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship education. The second one could be empirical studies focusing on cultivating students’ higher-order abilities, such as creativity, innovative thinking, collaboration, entrepreneurship, and other 21st century competencies. The third one could be theories and practices of transformative teaching in creative and innovative competencies in different disciplines and domains. Especially, we welcome articles about new technologies or ways of empowering the training of higher-order abilities, and the cultivation of creativity, innovation and entrepreneurship from interdisciplinary perspectives.
Hence, in this Research Topic, we welcome submissions including but not limited to the following dimensions:
- Creativity
- STEM/STEAM education
- Innovative problem-solving
- Design thinking
- Reverse engineering pedagogy
- Problem-based learning
- Project-based learning
- Entrepreneurship education
- Entrepreneurial success
- Multidisciplinary collaborative environment
- Higher-order abilities
Keywords: Creativity, Innovation, Entrepreneurship, Learning science, Higher order ability, STEM/STEAM education
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.