Since the 1950s, social scientists have studied creativity using a standard called the . Using that measure, researchers have found creativity in decline among young people over the past two decades.
Now, a has refined the picture of adolescent creativity. A team of researchers, led by Katie Davis of the University of Washington Information School, found that it matters what kind of art youâre talking about. Taking examples of fiction and visual art published in student literary magazines in the 1990s and 2000s, Davis and her team catalogued them by characteristics such as genre, structure, tone, style, and other criteria. What they found surprised them: Fiction by adolescents was more inventive and experimental in the 1990s, while stories written in the 2000s stick more closely to everyday reality. âWhat we found was the creative writing became more mundane,â Davis tells Kurt Andersen in an interview. âThey may take place in a school or in a home, whereas in the earlier pieces they may take place on Mars.â
Davis chalks up the decline in literary creativity to changes in educational policy as well as technology. âWith the introduction of No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top, thereâs an increased emphasis on passing a standardized test, and thereâs not a lot of room for experimenting and risk-taking.â And while texting and social media have encouraged teenagers to write more than ever, that writing is mostly ephemeral. âThereâs a sense that whatever you communicate is not going to last,â Davis says. âItâs going to get drowned out in the sea of tweets that itâs posted among.â
But living digital isnât just a negative influence. When it comes to visual art, Davis found that young people are actually becoming more creative â adding complexity and experimenting more with composition. This, she believes, is the result of support young artists can find online. âThere are just so many more tools available for young people to create [art],â Davis explains. âYou can post something online and, especially if you post it in an online community like deviantART, youâre going to get valuable feedback thatâs probably going to push you forward in your work.â