Index

Abstract

Innovativeness plays a decisive role in the progress of society, the sustainable development of nations, and the success of individuals in the era of information technology and knowledge economy, especially because the world is now confronted with major challenges such as climate change, environmental degradation, social inequality and resource exhaustion that have no ready solutions. As cradles for talent, higher education institutions attach great importance to promoting the innovative capabilities of their students. This study aims to introduce the existing studies on students’ innovativeness in institutions of higher learning for sustainable development. This study applies a bibliometric analysis by conducting collaboration, co-citation, co-reference, and co-occurrence analysis on university students’ innovativeness toward sustainable development. A total of 1,531 academic publications have been collected from the Web of Science Core Collection database from 2011 to 2021 and further analyzed. The major researchers and publications, productive countries or regions, collaborative institutions, research hotspots, and trends related to the innovativeness of college students are identified in this study. By adopting Co-occurrence (COOC) and VOSviewer to analyze and visualize the data, this research reveals that college students’ innovation capability continues to be an emerging research issue. Training, entrepreneurship education, and entrepreneurial intention are identified as the gaps for further studies. The results of this study suggest that academia in higher education institutions and government agencies are strongly encouraged to enhance the innovativeness of college students to tackle the unsustainable issues haunting society today.

Keywords: Bibliometrics, College students, Higher education, Innovation, Sustainable development, VOS viewer.

Received: 8 April 2022 / Revised: 29 September 2022/ Accepted: 20 January 2023 / Published: 23 February 2023

Contribution/ Originality

The paper contributes to the revelations of the main researchers, major journals, high-yield countries or regions, cooperating institutions, knowledge landscape, and research hotspots of college students’ innovativeness based on the academic literature between 2010 and 2021. It sheds light on the research status in the past decade and identifies the research trends connected with undergraduates’ innovativeness in higher education.

1. INTRODUCTION

Innovativeness in higher education institutions plays an increasingly crucial role in determining the economic prosperity of all countries across the world (Phelps, 2014; Wang, Ren, Wang, & Yu, 2018). Human society has stepped into the era of information and knowledge that is more dependent on innovation. The fierce competition among countries is a competition of talents and innovation. As early as 1972, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) put forward the cultivation of creativity as one of the most critical contemporary educational goals in its report Learning to Be: The World of Education Today and Tomorrow. As the key outcomes of higher education (McWilliam, 2009), the innovativeness of college students is the emerging vitality of social development and plays a significant part in the improvement of productivity, the advancement of science and technology, and the promotion of employment (Li, 2017). At the same time, the development of technologies such as the internet (Gulati, Reid, & Gill, 2020), big data (Hou, 2019), artificial intelligence (Cantú-Ortiz, Galeano Sánchez, Garrido, Terashima-Marin, & Brena, 2020; Wu, Shen, & Lv, 2021), and visual technology (Borgen, Ropp, & Weldon, 2021; Kumar, Pandey, & Rahman, 2021; Obeid & Demirkan, 2020) has also provided unprecedented opportunities for nurturing college students’ innovative capabilities. As a result, the cultivation of such capabilities has become a top priority for all higher education institutions in different countries across the world (Touahmia et al., 2017), and the research on college students’ creativity has also received extensive attention from the academic community.

Innovation is regarded as a multidimensional and complex construct (Guilford, 1956; Kupers, Lehmann-Wermser, McPherson, & Van Geert, 2019) with three mutually reinforcing dimensions: the intrapersonal, the social, and the cognitive (Selznick & Mayhew, 2018). Plucker, Beghetto, and Dow (2004) define innovation as the interaction between ability, process, and environment through which individuals or groups produce original, meaningful and perceivable products in the social environment. Innovation ability refers to the overall capabilities of fulfilling the procedure of innovation and attaining innovative results through knowledge (Hao, 2021) with invention and discovery as its embodiment (Hu, Ding, & Ni, 2016), which mainly includes innovative character, awareness, thinking, and experience (Wen, Liu, Beaulieu, Wang, & Wang, 2016). Several researchers have explored different approaches to measuring creativity, which include the tests for divergent thinking, such as the Consensual Assessment Technique (Amabile, 1982), the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking (Kim, 2017), and questionnaires such as the Runco Ideational Behavior Scale (Runco, Plucker, & Lim, 2001), the Creative Achievement Questionnaire (Carson, Peterson, & Higgins, 2005), and the Kaufman Domains of Creativity Scale (Kaufman, 2012). Research has also been done on the factors that shape or influence the creativity of college students. Parental warmth and parental rejection (Guo, Zhang, & Pang, 2021) and public service motivation (Jung, Lee, & Workman, 2018) are positively associated with creativity. Gregariousness, excellence, humility, kindness and other positive psychological traits affect the sense of innovation among students at institutions of higher learning (Zhang, Liu, Wang, & Yang, 2020). Students’ creativity is supported by learner involvement, external environment, and academic atmosphere (Richardson & Mishra, 2018).

Related research on the innovation capability of college students has been conducted in a variety of research domains, such as education (Shoop & Ressler, 2011; Taylor, Esmaili Zaghi, Kaufman, Reis, & Renzulli, 2020), psychology (Carter, Hass, Charfadi, & Dinzeo, 2019), engineering (Genco, Hölttä-Otto, & Seepersad, 2012), nursing and health care (Dai, Wei, Chen, & Ju, 2019), business and management (Gugerty & Teeven, 2015), and information science (Mizrachi & Bates, 2013). However, a bibliometric and visual analysis of the literature concerning this research topic from 2011 to 2021 has not been done yet, especially in light of sustainable development that is of paramount importance to the current and future generations because the world is now subject to climate change (Holden, 2019), resource exhaustion (Ahamad & Ariffin, 2018), and wildlife decline (Brito et al., 2018). Innovation is at the core of pushing society onto the track of a more sustainable path (Sandri, 2013), but the innovative potential of college students for sustainable development has long been neglected (Braßler & Schultze, 2021). Blewitt and Senior (2010) argued that future graduates will be required to fully understand sustainability as an indispensable part of their knowledge and skills and is a necessary supplement to their professions and disciplines. Based on the analysis of collaboration, co-citation, co-reference and co-occurrence of the retrieved bibliographic data, this paper reveals the main researchers, major journals, high-yield countries or regions, cooperating institutions, knowledge landscape and research hotspots to shed light on the research status in the past decade and identifies the research trends connected with college students’ innovativeness in higher education.

2. DATA AND METHODS

2.1. Data Source

The current research obtained bibliographic data from the Web of Science (WoS) Core Collection on March 29, 2021. The WoS is considered to be the most reliable and influential resource among the leading bibliographic databases for academic publications (Birkle, Pendlebury, Schnell, & Adams, 2020). The keywords of research topics are 'innovation' and 'college students' or 'innovation' and 'undergraduate' or 'creativity' and 'undergraduate' or 'creativity' and 'college students'. English was the language selected, the document type was 'article', and the timespan was set between 2011 and 2021. Editions were restricted to Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-Expanded) and the Social Science Citation Index (SSCI). As a result, 1,531 articles were obtained via this search strategy.

2.2. Research Method

Bibliometric analysis that reveals the network of co-authors, co-citations, co-references, and co-occurrences can demonstrate the intellectual framework of a research area (Chen, Dubin, & Kim, 2014). This research utilizes two bibliometric analysis tools – Co-Occurrence 6.7 (COOC 6.7) and VOSviewer 1.6.13. COOC 6.7 is mainly used for data analysis, data mining, and data visualization in the field of bibliometrics and has excellent performance in terms of accuracy, function, and operation. It can process multiple databases at the same time, such as Web of Science, PubMed, EI, Scopus, and ScienceDirect, and implement synonym merging; frequency counting; the co-occurrence, dissimilarity, bimodal, coupling matrices; pedigree, clustering and time zone graphs; and theme evolution paths (Xueshudiandi, 2020). VOSviewer 1.6.13 is free JAVA-based bibliometric software developed by Van Eck and Waltman from the Centre for Science and Technology Studies at Leiden University in the Netherlands. VOSviewer is a well-known scientific tool for knowledge plots based on citation, co-citation, co-authorship, and bibliographic coupling of bibliographic references (Van Eck & Waltman, 2010) and has been adopted in bibliometric analysis in various knowledge fields (Williams, 2020). In this study, COOC 6.7 is used to count frequency and draw a weighted time-zone map of keywords. VOSviewer 1.6.13 is adopted to analyze and visualize publication information, authors, journals, institutions, countries or regions, and keywords.

3. RESULTS

3.1. Publication Reviews

As shown in Figure 1 , research on the innovativeness of college students increased continuously from 2011 to 2020.

Figure 1. Distribution map of the annual publications from the Web of Science.

It needs to be clarified that the 52 journal articles were published only in the first three months of 2021. The number of published academic papers reached 268 in 2020, nearly quadrupling the number of publications of 2011. At the same time, the total publications rose to 1,479 at the end of 2020, 19 times more than in 2010, which proves that the innovativeness of college students is a research hotspot with a growing trend.

3.2. Most Cited Articles

In the current academic community, the influence and significance of a paper are assessed mainly by the number of times it has been cited by other researchers in the bibliographic database. According to the Web of Science Core Collection, the 1,531 articles retrieved in this research have been cited 13,633 times in total. The top 10 most frequently cited articles, which have been cited more than 110 times, are listed in Table 1 .

Table 1. Top 10 references in the field of innovativeness of college students from 2011 to 2021.
Ranking
Year
Citations
Journal Author(s)
1
2011
314
Psychological Science in the Public Interest Subotnik et al. (2011)
2
2016
215
Computers in Human Behavior Sheldon and Bryant (2016)
3
2014
175
Computers & Education Arteaga Sánchez et al. (2014)
4
2011
175
CBE: Life Sciences Education Andrews et al. (2011)
5
2011
154
Journal of Mechanical Design Linsey et al. (2011)
6
2011
149
Journal of Knowledge Management Xue et al. (2011)
7
2012
141
Research Policy Astebro et al. (2012)
8
2012
131
Journal of Personality Markowitz et al. (2012)
9
2011
128
Psychology of Violence Banyard and Moynihan (2011)
10
2016
114
Information & Management Shiau and Chau (2016)

The most cited article was composed by Subotnik, Olszewski-Kubilius, and Worrell (2011), which introduced a comprehensive definition of giftedness and offered some suggestions for the future development of gifted education that includes general and professional abilities, creativity, motivation, mindset, commitment, passion, interest, and opportunity (Subotnik et al., 2011).

The second most influential article, which was cited 215 times, found that a positive relationship exists between the college students who scored highly in interpersonal communication and used Instagram for coolness, creativity, and surveillance (Sheldon & Bryant, 2016).

The articles by Arteaga Sánchez, Cortijo, and Javed (2014) and Andrews et al. (2011) rank third with 175 citations each. The former identified the factors that stimulated students in higher learning to use Facebook for academic purposes based on the models used for the diffusion and adoption of technology innovation (Arteaga Sánchez et al., 2014). The latter showed no correlation between learning outcomes and the adoption of active learning instruction among students (Andrews, Leonard, Colgrove, & Kalinowski, 2011).

Linsey et al. (2011) suggested that the combination of Brainsketching, C-Sketch, and Gallery could produce more ideas and increase their quality, thereby promoting creativity and innovation in engineering design. They also showed that the interactions between individuals and groups had a prominent place in the process of generating new ideas.

Based on a survey of 434 students in a large university in the United States, Xue, Bradley, and Liang (2011) found that an innovation team whose members trusted each other and were led by authorized leaders would have a more positive attitude toward sharing knowledge and tended to generate knowledge-sharing behavior.

Astebro, Bazzazian, and Braguinsky (2012) conducted case studies on Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Halmstad University, and Chalmers University of Technology, which have innovation-related programs, and found that recent college graduates were twice as likely as the faculty to establish start-ups three years after their graduation. It is a common phenomenon for graduates to start businesses regardless of the type of school.

Markowitz, Goldberg, Ashton, and Lee (2012) found that a high level of aesthetics, creativity, and curiosity, rather than the personality traits connected with altruism, may stimulate the performance of environmentally friendly behavior.

The paper by Banyard and Moynihan (2011) explored the correlation of practical helping behaviors and the prevention of sexual and intimate partner violence among students in higher learning institutions, though they mentioned that innovations in preventing violence encouraged people to become positive bystanders.

Shiau and Chau (2016) found that the motivational model, technology acceptance model, innovation diffusion theory, theory of planned behavior, self-efficacy, and service quality can all firmly explain the willingness to use cloud computing in the classroom, which is an innovative form of information technology characterized by demonstrability, visibility, and testability to enhance students’ learning. Except for computer self-efficacy and trialability, all the other factors of the abovementioned models had a significant positive impact on the willingness to use cloud computing in the classroom. The proposed united model showed that perceived usefulness had the most decisive and positive impact on students’ intentions, and the other influencing factors included attitude, cloud service quality, perceived behavior control, results display, visibility, and cloud self-efficacy.

3.3. Journals

Table 2 lists the top 23 journals that published academic articles related to the creativity or innovativeness of college students, which could help future researchers find the relevant journals to submit their relevant papers. The International Journal of Engineering Education and the Creativity Research Journal are the most prolific in this research field, with more than 40 publications in the studied period, followed by Agro Food Industry Hi-Tech; Frontiers in Psychology; Thinking Skills and Creativity; Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts; Journal of Chemical Education; Sustainability; Journal of Creative Behavior; Journal of Nursing Education; and BMC Medical Education, with more than 20 published literature. These journals mainly concentrate on the research field in education, psychology, engineering, health care sciences and service.

Table 2. Top 23 journals for innovativeness of college students from 2011 to 2021.
Ranking Journal
Publications
Ranking
Journal
Publications
1 International Journal of Engineering Education
65
13
Medical Teacher
18
2 Creativity Research Journal
48
14
Academic Medicine
17
3 Agro Food Industry Hi-Tech
36
15
Personality and Individual Differences
16
4 Frontiers in Psychology
33
16
Nurse Education Today
15
5 Thinking Skills and Creativity
32
17
Journal of Engineering Education
15
6 Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts
30
18
International Journal of Technology and Design Education
15
7 Journal of chemical education
29
19
PLoS ONE
13
8 Sustainability
29
20
Computers in Human Behavior
13
9 Journal of Creative Behavior
26
21
International Journal of Art & Design Education
12
10 Journal of Nursing Education
23
22
Eurasia Journal of Mathematics Science and Technology Education
11
11 BMC Medical Education
21
23
International Journal of STEM Education
10
12 Educational Sciences: Theory & Practice
19
 

The International Journal of Engineering Education (Impact Factor: 0.97, Hirsch Index: 50) is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes academic manuscripts that only address issues in engineering education. The Creativity Research Journal (Impact Factor: 2.37, Hirsch Index: 82) publishes academic research on all fields of creativity covering behavioral, educational, clinical, cross-cultural, cognitive, organizational, psychometric, and social aspects, etc., through a double-blind and anonymous review process.

A co-citation analysis of the journals is helpful in tracking the distribution of academic resources and the cooperation between the journals. The number of citations of a journal determines the size of its nod in the co-citation map (see Figure 2), and the frequency of the co-citation of journals in the literature is represented by the distance between the respective nodes (Chen & Liu, 2020). Figure 2 (minimum number of citations of a source ≥ 20) shows that the Creativity Research Journal, the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and the Journal of Creative Behavior are the most co-cited journals, which also have the strongest association power within each co-citation group. It is noteworthy that two of them are also among the top 23 most productive journals.

Figure 2. Journal map of the co-citation of innovativeness of college students from 2011 to 2021.

3.4. Authorship

A total of 4,895 authors contributed to the 1,531 retrieved papers. Table 3 lists the leading contributors who published more than five academic papers in the field of the innovation capability of college students. The most prolific author is (Gibson & Mumford, 2013) with 14 articles over the past decade, which were all co-authored with other scholars. Figure 3 shows that the collaborative networks between the authors can be clustered into three groups (minimum number of documents of an author ≥ 2). Group #1 includes Gibson and Mumford (2013), Partlow, Medeiros, and Mumford (2015) and Vessey, Barrett, and Mumford (2011), whose principal research interests are cognition, leadership, forecasting, idea evaluation, creative problem solving, vision, and constraints. Group #2 includes Barrett et al. (2013) , Day (2012) , Hester et al. (2012) and Peterson et al. (2013) and Peterson et al. (2018) , who focus on exploration, problem-based learning, innovative teaching, self-regulation, active learning strategies, learning environment, and creativity barriers. Group #3 includes McIntosh, Mulhearn, and Mumford (2021) , Medeiros, Steele, Watts, and Mumford (2018) , Steele, Hardy, Day, Watts, and Mumford (2021) and Watts et al. (2020) , whose main research focuses are idea evaluation, creative problem solving, cognition, lifelong learning, leadership, stories, and idea sources.

Table 3. Top 17 most prolific researchers related to the innovativeness of college students from 2011 to 2021.
Ranking
Author Name
Number of Publications
Ranking
Author Name
Number of Publications
1
Mumford, M. D.
14
10
Medeiros, K. E.
6
2
Kaufman, J. C.
13
11
Zhang, Q. L.
6
3
Zhang, S.
10
12
Selznick, B. S.
5
4
Zhang, J. H.
9
13
Yeh, Y. C.
5
5
Watts, L. L.
7
14
Hass, R. W.
5
6
Kharkhurin, A. V.
6
15
Wang, Y.
5
7
Mayhew, M. J.
6
16
Valcke, M.
5
8
Chen, H. C.
6
17
Daly, S. R.
5
9
Qiu, J.
6
 

Figure 3. Co-authorship map.

3.5. Countries/Regions

The 1,531 bibliographic references obtained in this study were drafted by 81 countries or regions. The top 20 most prolific countries or regions that published over 15 pieces of literature from 2010 to 2021 are listed in Table 4 . The United States of America contributed 686 academic papers, which nearly triples the publications by China in second place, and it is almost eight times more than that of England, which is in third place. Figure 4 shows the collaboration between these countries or territories that are grouped into six clusters by VOSviewer (minimum number of documents of a country ≥ 5, minimum number of citations of a country ≥ 1, minimum cluster size ≥ 5). The biggest nod in each cluster signifies the contributor with the greatest link strength in the corresponding collaborative network. Cluster #1: Spain, Chile, France, Japan, Mexico, Ecuador, Portugal, Brazil, and Colombia; Cluster #2: USA, Canada, Germany, Singapore, Finland, Northern Ireland, Israel, and Hungary; Cluster #3: Malaysia, Netherlands, Ireland, Italy, Belgium, Wales, and Norway; Cluster #4: Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Russia, Austria, India, Pakistan, and the United Arab Emirates; Cluster #5: The People’s Republic of China, Taiwan, South Korea, Scotland, and the Philippines; Cluster #6: England, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, and Iran.

Table 4. Top 20 most prolific countries/regions of publications.
Ranking Country/Region
Number of Publications
Ranking
Country/Region
Number of Publications
1 USA
686
11
Brazil
24
2 People’s Republic of China
242
12
Italy
20
3 England
87
13
Malaysia
20
4 Australia
86
14
Ireland
19
5 Taiwan
73
15
Singapore
18
6 Canada
72
16
New Zealand
18
7 Spain
58
17
Netherlands
18
8 South Korea
37
18
Mexico
17
9 Germany
28
19
Turkey
17
10 India
26
20
Scotland
15

Figure 4. Association between countries/regions.

3.6. Organizations

The most productive institutions with over ten publications from 2011 to 2021 are listed in Table 5. It is worth noting that all of the top ten universities are from the USA. To be more specific, on the list of the top 31 most prolific institutions, 25 are from the USA, three are from China’s mainland, one is from Taiwan, one is from Australia, and one is from Canada. Figure 5 illustrates the cooperative networks between the major institutions that can be divided into five main clusters (minimum number of documents of an organization ≥ 10, minimum cluster size ≥ 3). Cluster #1 includes Purdue University, Arizona State University, University of Colorado, Stanford University, University of Pittsburgh, University of California (Berkeley), University of Minnesota, University California (San Francisco), and Vanderbilt University, and focus on engineering education, entrepreneurship, medical education, midwifery, openness to experiences, personality, and design education.

Table 5. Top 31 most prolific organizations.
Ranking Name of Organization
Publications
Ranking
Name of Organization
Publications
1 Purdue University
21
17
University of Toronto
12
2 University of North Carolina
19
18
University of Texas, Austin
12
3 University of Michigan
18
19
Yale University
11
4 University of Oklahoma
17
20
Ohio State University
11
5 University of Pittsburgh
17
21
Iowa State University
11
6 University of Connecticut
16
22
Washington University
11
7 Arizona State University
15
23
Texas A&M University
11
8 Vanderbilt University
15
24
University of South Florida
11
9 University of California, San Francisco
14
25
Central China Normal University
11
10 Stanford University
14
26
Monash University
11
11 James Madison University
14
27
Pennsylvania State University
11
12 University of Minnesota
14
28
Shandong Normal University
10
13 University of California, Berkeley
14
29
The City University of New York
10
14 University of Colorado
14
30
University of Nebraska
10
15 National Taiwan Normal University
13
31
Southwest University
10
16 University of Illinois
13
   

Cluster #2 includes University of Texas at Austin, University of Illinois, National Taiwan Normal University, University of Toronto, and Texas A&M University, and focus on technology, medical education, curriculum, emotion, teaching/learning strategies, intervention, and engineering education. Cluster #3 includes Ohio State University, Pennsylvania State University, Iowa State University, University of Michigan, and James Madison University, which concentrate on design education, medical education, clerkship, personality, concept generation, assessment, idea generation, and ethical reasoning. Cluster #4 includes University of North Carolina, Southwest University, University of Connecticut, and Yale University, which prioritize divergent thinking, personality, education, intelligence, teaching methods, medical education, self-efficacy, evaluation, and originality. Cluster #5 includes University of South Florida, The City University of New York, University of Oklahoma, and Washington University, whose research focuses are on cognition, idea evaluation, leadership, creative problem solving, entrepreneurship, forecasting, vision, ethics, sustainability, and collaborative/cooperative learning.

Figure 5. Cluster map of organizations.

4. DISCUSSION

4.1. Hot Research Topics

Table 6 lists the top 15 keywords appearing more than 20 times in the retrieved literature over the past decade. Besides “creativity” and “innovation”, which are the topic words of this research, the other most frequent keywords are education, higher education, engineering education, entrepreneurship, medical education, curriculum, college students, divergent thinking, design education, active learning, and assessment. These high-frequency keywords show that the research hotspots related to college students’ innovative ability are mainly reflected in the fields of entrepreneurship, critical thinking, and autonomous learning in engineering, medicine, design, and other higher education disciplines.

Figure 6 shows the co-occurrence of the keywords and divides them into five clusters with an occurrence ≥ 10 and a minimum cluster size ≥ 5. Each cluster indicates a hot research theme within the field of the creativity of college students. Cluster #1 comprises 15 items and mainly focuses on creativity in educational innovation, such as active learning, critical thinking, curriculum development, and assessment, especially in medical education. Medical students should have a strong sense of creativity and obtain the sustainable development of entrepreneurial programs in the innovation and entrepreneurship of medical education (Li, 2017). As the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic hit the world at an unprecedented scale, it brought an urgent need to innovate medical education (Pravder et al., 2021; Southworth & Gleason, 2021).

Cluster #2 includes 13 items and studies innovation in design and engineering education from the perspectives of pedagogy, sustainability, and technology. Challenges, such as fast-growing industry needs, engineering practices, and students’ own career prospects, demand innovations in engineering education that integrates multidisciplinary knowledge, leadership, communication, entrepreneurship, sustainability, creation, and lifelong learning (Jamieson & Shaw, 2019; Tekmen-Araci & Mann, 2019). The application of design strategies and tools can promote critical thinking in the initial stages of engineering design, and diversified choices in the design process will bring more creative and innovative results (Lee et al., 2021).

Cluster #3 includes seven items and explores entrepreneurship in higher education from the perspectives of entrepreneurial intent, self-efficacy, and gender. Entrepreneurial self-efficacy is a mediator between self-perceived creativity and entrepreneurial propensity, and the support for creativity from families and colleges and participation in creativity courses can significantly predict self-perceived creativity (Laguía, Moriano, & Gorgievski, 2019). Many countries have formulated national strategies to support college students and youngsters to become cyber-entrepreneurs to grow the economy and boost innovation since cyber-entrepreneurship is a burgeoning practice of innovation in the information age. Self-efficacy of information technology-related entrepreneurship has a significant positive effect on cyber-entrepreneurial propensity, while thinking positively has no such effect. However, thinking positively is a moderating factor between self-efficacy in internet entrepreneurship and the intention to start an e-commerce business (Chang, Shu, Wang, Chen, & Ho, 2020).

Cluster #4 includes five items and expounds creativity from divergent thinking, personality, and motivation. General cognitive ability and creative personality traits are predictors of creativity in terms of divergent thinking, while cognitive and motivational variables as well as course grades can predict creative performance. Motivation has a predictive effect on creative activity and creative ideation (An, Song, & Carr, 2016).

Table 6. Top 15 keywords from the literature.
Ranking Keywords
Frequency
Ranking
Keywords
Frequency
1 Creativity
200
9
Medical education
25
2 Innovation
92
10
College students
24
3 Education
56
11
Undergraduate
23
4 Higher education
49
12
Divergent thinking
23
5 Engineering education
39
13
Design education
22
6 Entrepreneurship
28
14
Active learning
22
7 Undergraduate medical education
28
15
Assessment
21
8 Curriculum
27
 

Figure 6. Co-occurrence map of highly frequent keywords.

Cluster #5 also has five items, and its major research focuses are the curriculum of first-year and second-year undergraduates from the aspects of collaborative learning and hands-on learning. The application of sustainability to the university engineering curriculum brings about a noticeable improvement in knowledge and attitudes and modest changes in enabling new behaviors (Qu, Huang, & Zhou, 2020). Educators in the engineering field need to take more effective measures to make certain that creativity is a clear result of learning in the engineering curriculum because innovation has been proven to be a crucial competency for engineering professionals (Valentine, Belski, Hamilton, & Adams, 2019). Innovations in higher education, such as peer-led team learning (Frey, Fink, Cahill, McDaniel, & Solomon, 2018), the supplemental instruction model (Alden, 2017), and technology-enhanced learning (Urban, 2017), for first-year and second-year college students can improve their learning experience and enhance their academic achievements.

4.2. Research Trend

Figure 7 is a weighted time-zone map that displays the evolution of the research keywords and also reveals the research frontiers and trends. Each node on the map represents a keyword whose frequency determines the size of the node. The time of the keyword on the map is the average weighted year based on the retrieved bibliographic data. The specific formula is as follows:

In this formula, wy is weighted year, yeari refers to the year in which the keyword appears, and countsi refers to the frequency of the year in which the keyword appears.

The weighted time-zone map of keywords can reflect the changing trend of research topics in the field over time. As shown in Figure 7, the latest research trends in the area of college students’ innovativeness can be categorized into two major directions. The first is training; creativity can be improved by developing metacognitive skills by imagery training to generate new ideas and cultivate divergent thinking (May et al., 2020). The innovative capabilities of college students are not inborn and unchangeable but can be improved by training and practices that integrate active participation and clear guidance for individuals and teams (Tran, Kudrowitz, & Koutstaal, 2020). The second direction is entrepreneurship education and entrepreneurial intention. Developing students’ creativity in higher education institutions is a vital outcome of entrepreneurial education in terms of stimulating college students’ innovativeness (Shi, Yuan, Bell, & Wang, 2020). Increasing self-perceived creativity in college courses can raise students’ entrepreneurial intentions by intensifying entrepreneurial self-efficacy (Laguía et al., 2019).

Figure 7. Weighted time-zone map of the research keywords from 2011 to 2021.

5. RESEARCH IMPLICATIONS

Today’s world has entered the era of a knowledge economy that is dominated by modern high-tech industries. As a widely recognized indicator that measures the sustainability and vitality of a country’s or region’s economy, innovativeness has become the most important factor and decisive force of economic growth and social progress in this era. The advent of the knowledge economy not only poses challenges to the innovativeness of college students in modern society, but also breeds potential opportunities for cultivating their innovative abilities. One of the core tasks of higher learning institutions is to train high-quality talents with innovative consciousness, thinking and abilities because college is a critical period for developing such capacities. However, with increasingly fierce markets and social competition, college students will be confronted with more pressure to find jobs after graduation. As a result, college students should be able to transform knowledge into wealth, as knowledge is the most prominent factor in wealth growth in a knowledge economy society. Through the reform of higher education, research from academic communities, efforts by governments, and participation by business communities, the innovativeness of college students will be continuously improved to realize the sustainable development of the corresponding individuals and humanity.

6. CONCLUSIONS

Based on the visual and bibliometric review of the literature obtained from the Web of Science Core Collection from 2011 to 2021, the results show that the innovativeness of college students is still a hot area of research, and the number of papers published in academic journals is increasing each year. The top four most cited articles in this research field with more than 175 citations in the Web of Science database mainly explore innovativeness from giftedness, Instagram, Facebook, and active learning. Regarding the academic journals that focus on this specific research area, the International Journal of Engineering Education and the Creativity Research Journal are the most influential publishers with more than 40 publications in the past decade, while the most co-cited journals are the Creativity Research Journal, the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and the Journal of Creative Behavior. The leading authors in this field can be clustered into three major collaborative networks with specific research interests within each group. In terms of the productive countries or territories, it is noticeable that the number of articles contributed by the USA is three times the number of publications by the country in second place and eight times that of the country in third place. At the same time, all the top ten most prolific institutions are from the USA, and the contributing universities can be grouped into four major clusters based on their cooperation.

The co-occurrence analysis of keywords reveals five major research hotspots: (1) creativity in educational innovation; (2) innovation in design education and engineering education; (3) entrepreneurship in higher education; (4) creativity from divergent thinking, personality, and motivation; and (5) the curriculum for first-year and second-year undergraduates. The emerging research trends are shown as training, entrepreneurship education, and entrepreneurial intention.

The results provide valuable information for the status quo of the research on the innovativeness of college graduates and identify hot research themes, potential topics, and research trends. Since college students are the backbone of a country’s future, the key driver of economic prosperity and the problem solver for the issues concerning sustainable development, such as changing climate, social inequalities, and the contradiction between the security of food, the productivity of energy, and the protection of environment (Harvey & Pilgrim, 2011), the cultivation of their innovative capabilities will remain high on the agenda for governments, higher education institutions, and students themselves in this increasingly competitive world. The findings of this paper can be used in decision making for government officials, educational reform for colleges and universities, and the research priorities for researchers.

Funding: This research is supported by the Ph.D. Research Start-up Fund of Panzhihua University (Grant number: 035200187).

Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ Contributions: Both authors contributed equally to the conception and design of the study.

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