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Category: The Consulting Arts

Subtitle: A Timeline for the Transition from STEM to STEaM

Tonight, I was inspired to research the ultimate inclusion of the arts into the STEM* domain...vis a vis, "STEaM." While the "a" refers to "the arts," there is an implicit expectation that the arts involves creativity that is anticipated to fuel critical thinking that results in innovation

Gradually, I will add more and more to this timeline; at the moment, it simply contains my first thoughts about this progression. 

"It also seems true that centers of creativity tend to be at the intersection of different cultures [domains], where beliefs, lifestyles, and knowledge mingle and allow individuals to see new combinations of ideas with greater ease." (Source: Creativity: Flow and the Psychology of Discovery and Invention. New York: Harper Perennial. ISBN 0-06-092820-4)

So, maybe the better question is this: since science has always been married to the arts (for innovation, communication, and decorating), when, where and why were they decoupled?

Possible hypotheses (I'll continue to add both my ideas and ideas crowdsourced from you):

  1. "We can't do it all" fallacy - Budget-constrained educators (at any level) thought of education as a fixed line (4 years high school, 3 or 4 years college, etc.), and as the amount of available STEM content mushroomed, they began eliminating domains thought to be ancillary.
  2. False dichotomy of the so-called right- and left-brained person - If people could only be one or the other, they had no hope of blending the two. Refutation

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*STEM is an acronym for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics.

Another article about creativity: Leadership_Creativity Resources