Dourado, Pérola Cavalcante; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0590-2735; http://lattes.cnpq.br/0510095423506408
Resumo:
Creativity is vital for organizations and future managers, as well as for educational
processes and society in general. However, the topic remains sparse in the field of
management education (ME). The objective of this research is to understand,
problematize and discuss how creativity can be taught and learned in management
training, based on a conception of creativity as practice. The study is anchored in
theories about ME, organizational creativity (OC), practice-based studies (PBS) and
theater improvisation (TI). Educational practices were carried out over four semesters
with students from the undergraduate management course at the School of
Management at the Federal University of Bahia. The methodological approach was
based on practice and narrative analysis. The sources of information were: documents
produced by the participants, direct observation, photographs, videos and semistructured
interviews. The thesis is structured into articles. The objective of the first
article is to integrate and consolidate academic knowledge about OC in ME through a
systematic and narrative review of academic production. The results conceptually
grouped OC in the context of ME into positions, pedagogies and perspectives, in order
to map and better understand existing research, as well as identify its needs and
research opportunities. The second article aims to map and integrate academic
production on OC, proposing it conceptual renewal based on the epistemology of
practice. The results include a set of conceptions of creativity, which integrate
management research and a structured proposal for renewing the conceptualization of
creativity based on the epistemology of practice. The third article aims to understand
how TI supports and regenerates the teaching and learning process of organizational
creativity. As results, we identified four organizational creativity learning practices
provided by theatrical improvisation: state of presence, willingness to make mistakes
and risks, interpersonal cooperation and dynamics between freedom and structure. The
fourth article explores how a practice-based approach can renew OC education. The
main results reveal that creative teaching and learning are driven by the practical ways
in which students develop creative experiences, narrating, feeling, sharing and playing
in the classroom. The fifth article developed pedagogical resources from TI to feed the
teaching of organizational creativity as a practice. The research results offer practical
and didactic knowledge for educators: eight TI games applied to OC teaching. This
thesis will contribute to the advancement of knowledge in the fields of ME and OC by
developing pioneering content with the help of TI and based on practice. Additionally,
the study has impacts on teaching and management practice in educational
organizations concerned with OC in the training of future managers