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World View Anita Brown-Graham October 20, 2010

World View Anita Brown-Graham October 20, 2010. Presentation Outline. Institute for Emerging Issues Why Creativity Can’t Wait Local Initiatives Aimed at Creativity. Who We Are and What We Do . The Institute for Emerging Issues (IEI) is a public policy think-and-do tank.

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World View Anita Brown-Graham October 20, 2010

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  1. World ViewAnita Brown-GrahamOctober 20, 2010

  2. Presentation Outline • Institute for Emerging Issues • Why Creativity Can’t Wait • Local Initiatives Aimed at Creativity

  3. Who We Are and What We Do • The Institute for Emerging Issues (IEI) is a public policy think-and-do tank. • We convene and support leaders who tackle the biggest issues facing North Carolina's future.

  4. Factors: Outsourcing

  5. Factors: Automation

  6. Factors: Abundance

  7. What is Creativity? Creativity means generating ideas that can be used to solve problems or invent new products and services. CreativityInnovationCompetitive Advantage

  8. What Are Creative Skills? Right • They utilize more of your right brain Source: Wired Magazine, February 2005

  9. What Are Creative Skills? Left Brained Skills Right Brained Skills Big Picture Empathy Inventiveness Artistry (Think Multidisciplinary) • Linear • Logical • Analytical Tasks (Think of the SAT)

  10. Why Creativity Can’t Wait • North Carolina companies can no longer compete on price alone to stay ahead. • N.C. lost 130,000 jobs in 2009 (276,000 since January 2008) and we are expected to add only 32,000 jobs in 2010. • N.C. must think our way out of the recession by generating intellectual capital and rethinking design.

  11. Creativity Examples Providing new services Smarter ways to do old jobs Combining existing technology

  12. New Thinking, New Jobs • Creative workers are found in N.C. in all sectors of the economy. • Jobs pay above the state average and are more resilient in economic downturns. • Creative workers are 5.5% of N.C.’s workforce. • Creative job growth outpaced overall job growth in N.C. from 2002-2009 (18% vs. 8%). • Creative work increased faster in NC than in the U.S. as a whole (18% vs. 13%).

  13. New Thinking, New Jobs • 15 industries with highest concentration of creative workers employed 4.5% of N.C.’s workforce in 2008. • Top creative industry growth rates (2002-08): • Internet publishing and broadcasting (167%) • Science and engineering research (90%) • Specialized design (37%)

  14. IEI’s Business Committee on Creativity • BCC will review promising practices for assessing creativity in K-12 education aligned with skills needed for today’s business employees. • As a K-12 educator, what advice would you give the BCC about education?

  15. World ViewAnita Brown-GrahamOctober 20, 2010

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