196. From Problem Solving to Problem Finding (Part 1)
Welcome everyone, I'm your host, Greg McEwen, and I'm here with you on this journey to
learn, to understand, so that we can make a higher contribution without burning ourselves
out.
Have you ever been so busy addressing peripheral issues but have that sinking feeling that
the real core of the issue is not being addressed?
This is part one of a four-part solo series on that subject, and the interviews will also
be providing more insight on the same subject.
By the end of today's episode, you will understand that the seminal research, that is the first
empirical research that was produced, on the distinctive difference between problem finding
and problem solving, and you'll begin your journey of improving skill in this essential
area.
Let's get to it.
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Recently I was speaking at an event and afterwards somebody came up to ask a question.
They were curious about how to pursue a life as a writer.
Before jumping into an answer, I wanted to understand more about why they were thinking
about it.
When they had begun thinking about it, how deep the feeling went and what kind of writing.
I didn't want to jump in with my own autobiography of how I had approached it and why I was
doing it.
I wanted to make sure I understood her questions and what was driving it before jumping in with
what could end up being either irrelevant or even harmful advice and suggestions.
Right as I was beginning that inquiry, somebody else joined our conversation, unaware of the
context.
She immediately went to work asking questions of the person who had been asking questions
to me.
I wasn't offended at the interruption, but I was curious.
I stepped back looking at the interaction as an observer, as a researcher.
And I watched as this well-intended newcomer jumped to conclusions about what was going
on and began to drill down with a series of precise questions, none of which had anything
to do with writing.
This went on for just five or ten minutes before quite naturally we were interrupted again.
We did get the chance to continue that conversation later.
I was able to listen and understand with, I think, profit what was really behind her
questions, but that little interaction is a microcosm to me of a macro problem, something
I have seen happen interpersonally and without exaggeration a thousand times.
How often people prematurely judge a situation and jump in with solutions, well-intended,
in other ways, well-informed, competent, capable people.
And I am curious and not little to understand this phenomenon and from many different angles,
because it seems to me that nothing is so irrelevant as addressing the wrong issue.
And that, as it turns out, is the best-case scenario.
When we address the wrong issue, we can do enormous damage.
There are lots of ways of studying the problem of addressing the wrong problem, and today
I want to do it from the perspective of creativity, specifically in an article called From Problem
Solving to Problem Finding by J.W.
Getsels and M. Cheek Simply High.
I'm going to read a little from that article which we'll put in the show notes and make
some commentary as we go.
How did we come to study the creativity of problems when we began by studying the creativity
of solutions, they ask?
How did we reach the conclusion that the creative act involves problem finding as much as it
does problem solving if the two processes can be separated at all?
And to hold the hypothesis that creative problems may be as fruitful a subject of study as creative
solutions.
We did not come to these considerations which were vastly surprising to us by following the
prevailing fashion in research or the suggestions contained in the prevailing literature, quite
the contrary.
The emphasis in the literature and in research pointed the other way.
There was an abundance of conceptual and empirical work on problem solving.
Literally they write a dozen theoretical books and hundreds of experimental articles, I'll
add parenthetically, that it's far more than a dozen theoretical books and hundreds of experimental
articles now.
But they're writing here in 1975 about what led them to create the seminal empirical work
on this question.
So prior to them there was a lot of theoretical work and the difference is that somebody is
just trying to guess what the relationship is between factors.
They were the first to be able to try and run an actual experiment on it.
They continued there was virtually no systematic work on problem finding, the posing and formulating
of problems.
Nor did we get to these considerations through any common sense notions of the relative importance
of skill in problem finding and problem solving.
Indeed, at first the very notion of problem finding as a human skill sounds absurd.
By the way, I relate to that.
Some people don't find that terminology problem finding particularly helpful.
They continue.
Does not human skill lie in avoiding problems rather than in finding problems?
Or if the problems are unavoidable in solving them?
In fact, need one find problems is not the world already teaming with dilemmas and problems
wherever one turns at home and in business and economics and in technology, in the arts
and in the sciences.
The world is of course teaming with dilemmas.
But problematic situations do not present themselves automatically as problems capable
of solution to say nothing of creative solution.
They must be formulated in creative ways.
If they are to be moved to creative solutions.
I'm adding now that I literally think there are people unaware of the need for that part
of the process.
They turn to Einstein for an insight about that first part of the process.
It's a little wordy, but stay with me.
The formulation of a problem, Rot Einstein, is often more essential than its solution,
which may be merely a matter of mathematical or experimental skill to raise new questions,
new possibilities to regard old problems from a new angle, requires creative imagination
and marks real advance in science.
And Gethsel's and Cheek sent me high suggest that this skill set goes beyond advances in
science.
It's a composite that it is key for breakthroughs in art, society, education and all other aspects
of behavior, no less than in science.
So they began their journey by wanting to study creative output.
And they assumed that what they needed to focus on was problem solving to get there.
How do people come up with creative solutions to problems?
But the deeper they looked at that question, the more they realized that there was a road
less traveled by.
And that was the subject of how to frame and understand the problem itself.
Now, I'm jumping way ahead here.
They explained that it was the changing conceptions of human being and human intellect that drew
out for them the need to shift back to problem finding rather than just to the solutions.
So let's go first to the changing conceptions of the human being.
It's deep, but go with me.
They write in 1975 that a half century ago, the prevalent model of the human being was
a cognitively empty organism responding more or less randomly to stimulation and connecting
specific responses to specific stimuli through the effect of pleasure or pain.
So the model was that people would do nothing to learn or think if we were not forced into
such activity by drives like hunger and thirst or externally applied motives like reward
and punishment.
Stephen Covey once said to me that this was what he considered the jackass theory of human
motivation.
But here they say there was an evolution of thinking that this surface way of understanding
human behavior did not deal with all of the complexity that we were discovering within
the human being so that you and I are far from being an empty organism psychologically.
But rather that we are a cauldron of needs, values, conflicts, cognitive styles, repressions
and other conscious subconscious and unconscious forces which determine our thought and behavior.
In that first model, we are just reactive creatures.
In the second, there is so much to be explored.
They tried to explain it this way that a conspicuous portion of human behavior is devoted
to what can be classified only as art, science, play or just curiosity that we as humans are
not only a stimulus reducing or problem solving organism, but also a stimulus seeking or problem
finding organism.
Meanwhile, over the same period, there was a shift in the way people thought about intelligence.
If I can summarize it this way, the IQ test worked so well that it became utilized everywhere,
certainly in schools and at quite a young age, certainly in the corporation and in government.
An education was increasingly shaped around that measurement of intelligence.
They write, there is no question that the IQ metric is one of the most productive inventions
to come from psychological science.
Yet, there was so much not measured in the IQ test.
And I think so much damage done unintentionally by how it monopolized the thinking about human
potential.
Gerard, back in 1774, long before any of this conversation was taking place, noted that
a person may possess reason to perfection and yet be totally destitute of invention,
originality and genius.
The traditional measures of IQ have effectively done a poor job in explaining creative output.
What was originally called divergent thinking, that is to look at the problem itself with
new eyes.
And that may be tangible for a moment here because it seems to me that so much of traditional
school is spent measuring and developing only this narrow form of traditional IQ.
Guilford wrote about this.
He said, in tests of convergent thinking, there is almost always one conclusion or answer
that is regarded as unique and thinking is to be channeled or controlled in the direction
of that answer.
With thinking on the other hand, there is much searching about or going off in various directions.
Divergent thinking is characterized as being less goal-bound.
There is freedom to go off in different directions, rejecting the old solution and striking out
in some new direction is necessary and the resourceful organism will more probably succeed.
In traditional school, so very much of the learning is responding to what these researchers
call presented problem situations.
That is here is a problem with a known solution and the people presenting the problem know
that solution.
And your job as a student is to find the answer they already know.
You're testing memorization and understanding of a concept that was entirely defined by
somebody else.
That's not like it's valueless, but at the other end of this continuum, you have discovered
problem situations where the problem does not yet have a known formulation.
There's no routine method of solution.
There's no recognized solution.
So here the person must identify the problem itself and there are no established steps
for satisfying the requirements of the situation.
Now put to you, which seems more like real life.
One in which all the problems are defined clearly before you with a single right answer
and your job is to find it or is life with its inherent and massive ambiguity.
Much more about our ability to name, frame, reframe the problem itself and then come to
new and hopefully simpler solutions to it.
These scientists come to a conclusion that the questions they themselves were answering
were not the ones they should have been asking.
And so they shifted their question to how are discovered problems found?
What is the process for being able to uncover and then frame and name the right problem
or at least a better problem?
Here's what they did.
They identified 31 art students from the School of Art Institute of Chicago and those students
were tasked with creating still life drawings.
So the students come into the class and they see a whole series of objects from which they
can choose and they're to choose an object and to draw it.
And then their art is to be put before a series of independent judges who know nothing about
the different ways in which those art students approach the problem.
They enter the art studio, it's equipped with two tables, several chairs, Bristol boards,
drawing paper, a variety of dry media of the sort customarily used by the art students.
A constant arrangement of 27 objects of the sort students used to construct still life
problems was placed on one of the tables and the second table was left empty.
Each of the 31 fine art students came to the studio alone and was instructed to choose
some of the objects from the table, arrange them as desired on the second table and draw
them.
They wanted to find out if problem finders produce better art.
And then to discover whether problem finding art students become better, more creative artists
in the years that follow.
Some of the students approached the task directly selecting one or two objects, typically the
same ones and promptly commenced their work.
They quickly sketched an outline and then directed most of their efforts towards meticulously
filling in the details.
The other artists exhibited a more exploratory approach.
They interacted with a greater number of objects, deliberating over their choices before deciding
which ones to incorporate into their drawings.
Their interactions with the objects was more extensive, involving actions such as sniffing,
tossing them into the air, examining them in different lighting conditions near a window.
Furthermore, these participants tended to choose more unconventional objects compared
to their counterparts.
When they commenced drawing, they allowed the artwork to develop organically during the
process, rather than immediately settling on a preconceived idea.
The disparity between the two groups yielded striking results.
Judges, who were not privy to the participants' creative processes, consistently identified
the students who engaged in problem finding as producing drawings of greater artistic merit.
Moreover, they extended this into a longitudinal study, which found that the participants with
this problem-focused approach led to greater success in their career as artists.
Judges who exhibited less emphasis on problem finding either discontinued their artistic
approach or were struggling to sustain themselves.
While those who displayed a more problem-oriented mindset generally fared well with one participant,
within just a few years already having achieved the recognition of a painting into a highly
respected, permanent art music.
And this advantage went on throughout their careers.
What does it mean?
That sells in Chic-Scent-Bhi, found over the course of their research over many years.
Three distinct elements of problem finding, sensitization, restructuring and evaluation.
Sensitization refers to developing an awareness of problems or areas that merit attention and
investigation.
It involves being open to new experiences actively seeking information and questioning
existing assumptions or norms.
I love this.
Sensitization.
It comes long before any answer or anything that looks remotely like a solution.
Two, they suggested restructuring.
Restructuring involves reframing problems by shifting perspectives or altering the way
they are conceptualized.
This step encourages looking beyond the obvious and considering multiple dimensions or interpretations
of a situation.
It's another invitation to pause, but not passively, to actively understand, to look at it from
another perspective before jumping in.
Then third, evaluation.
Evaluation involves assessing the importance, relevance and feasibility of potential problem
definitions.
It requires considering factors such as resources, constraints, potential impact and personal
interests or values.
That is, a prioritization of the problems.
All of this before the skill we've all been taught how to do, which is how to actually
come up with a solution.
Problem finding in the way that we've been discussing it today is obviously a part of
problem solving.
You can't really separate them.
To entirely separate them, I think is unhelpful.
And nevertheless, they are distinct related processes.
I invite you today to begin with sensitization.
It's all to do with what Dewey called suspending judgment.
Just looking, seeing, listening, eyes open wide, exploring before you come to an opinion
about what you agree with or disagree with.
I've come to think about this as the five second rule, to pause between that tendency
we have to judge, whether we're agreeing or disagreeing, to understand.
And that's something that you can begin right now.
As I've been sharing this seminal research with you, what is one thing that you can do
immediately, in under a minute, as a result of this conversation, to be able to continue
the conversation so it becomes active and beneficial in your life.
And who is somewhere you can share it with if you have found value in today's episode?
I invite you to go to essentialism.com forward slash podcast promo, where you can add a review
on Apple podcasts about this episode.
The first five people to do it will get access at essentialism.com to the Essentialism Academy.
That's currently $300 in value for a one year access to the Academy, and you get it for
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Thank you, really, thank you for listening, and I'll see you next time.
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