Uvod
This course is developed within the project “Fostering Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Cultural and Creative Industries through Interdisciplinary Education (FENICE) with the support of the Erasmus+ Programme of the European Union.
It is designed for BA and MA students in business and economic studies who want to improve their knowledge, skills, and competences for pursuing careers in the field of the cultural and creative industries (CCIs).
The course is interdisciplinary and unites subjects and themes from arts-, heritage-, culture-, IT-, media and business studies in ways that corresponds to the varied, innovative, and socially valuable profile of the CCIs.
CCIs are content-, knowledge- and technology-driven and as such, they are by definition а subject of interdisciplinary research and education. CCIs combine the creation (often by artists or designers), production (often by companies) and distribution (often by multinationals) of goods and services that are cultural in their nature and usually protected by intellectual property rights (IPR). Raising the CCI-literacy and skills of the business students and graduates will provide the sector with professionals that can lead and contribute to the viable and sustainable functioning not only of the CCIs themselves, but also to the many other related sectors of the experiential economy such as tourism and hospitality.
Ciljevi predmeta
This course is intended to provide a multi-faceted introduction to operation of CCI enterprises for the students in business and economics (B&E) and to explore practical and theoretical issues facing cultural entrepreneurs, professionals and policy-makers. It builds on the interdisciplinary approach that is pertinent to CCIs to showcase how creativity and culture can be sustainably commercialized and bring to life viable and innovative enterprises.
In this sense, the goals of the course are
- To make students aware of the specifics of the CCIs and their business potential;
- To develop a holistic overview of the issues that impact these industries;
- To equip students with specific managerial skills that are relevant to the CCIs;
- To make B&E students aware and capable to cooperate with Arts&Humanties students as in real-life situations within the CCIs i.e. work in interdisciplinary CCI teams.
Metodika nastave
Considering teaching-learning strategies/methodologies, the main approach in this course is experiential learning. Accordingly, this course makes use of different teaching, learning and assessment methods, in line with the needs of the students and the learning objectives. Teaching methodologies were designed to boost autonomous work while respecting students’ diversity and needs, allowing flexible learning paths.
This course aims at fostering an active learning environment, proven effective in developing higher-order cognitive skills. By being involved in an active and participatory learning process, enhanced by the integration of digital technologies, students intervene directly in the construction of knowledge, questioning and co-creating it. As opposed to conventional approaches, generally passive and unidirectional, the students become the centre of the learning process and the trainer/teacher assumes the role of mediator.
Ishodi učenja
Upon the completion of the course, the students should be able to:
- Explain of the evolution, rationale and role of CCIs as growth and innovation drivers at local and regional level in the Europe and worldwide
- Apply concepts related to CCIs, notably when analysing and assessing real-life cases
- Interpret the key characteristics of the economy of the cultural and creative industries, the important challenges the industries face, such as technological, legal and economic, and the policies adopted to meet those challenges
- Develop business models for creative business ventures, including strategic planning for entrepreneurship initiatives, innovative methods for generating funds, stakeholder management and development of partnerships, governance structures of creative enterprises, etc.
- Discuss the innovation process in CCIs as an open, interactive, collaborative and interdisciplinary process as opposed to the traditional models of innovation in science
- Identify new opportunities within social and business problems and develop business solutions, while at the same time, securing revenue sources that achieving financial sustainability
- Justify the need for business to demonstrate accountability by regularly measuring performance and impact
In addition, the course encourages the implementation of the European Entrepreneurship Competence Framework (EntreComp)[1]. Competencies are presented by area and with reference to whether they are improved (when they are effectively developed within the scope of the contents foreseen for the course) and/or assessed (when subject to evaluation), and with regards to the two content units proposed within this course – Unit 1: Understanding Entrepreneurship in the CCIs and Unit 2: Entrepreneurial Practice – Modelling a CCI Enterprise – which are further detailed in section IV of this syllabus.
[1] http://europa.eu/!kR69Tb
Sadržaj predmeta
The contents of the course refer to the following main considerations and rationales in the CCIs:
- Mutual understanding and comprehension between artistic creativity and economics/management, toward feasibility and economic viability of CCI product/project is indispensable. Professionals with both types of profiles need to be aware of the necessity to develop and employ skills for team work and cooperation;
- The development of the creative process is different from its transfer to third parties, therefore each participant in the course is required to acquire a business discipline (to see if it can be implemented in the form of diagrams specific to each artistic discipline);
- The key feature of the creative economy is the transformation of artistic value in economic value; as such all the characteristics that give value to an artistic product will have to be monetized as economic values (thus generating business): uniqueness, non-standardization as impossibility of reproduction, technological process, recognition, copyrights, etc., that is, understanding the artistic product in relation to the market is essential.
- Creativity should be the main tool and competence to work within the CCIs. Usually perceived as a natural ability, individual creativity used in teamwork is able to accelerate the evolutionary pace of ideas within a teamwhen used in project-based team work. . During CCI projects, any type of creativity could be the difference of added value and capacity in a competitive market – thinking outside the box, avoiding clichés, permanent adaptation to contemporary realities - regardless of their nature - cultural, economic, technological.
- Within a CCI project team, all members are/should be creative, although only the ones with artistic background (A & H) are creators, from the point of view of professional skills in artistic transposition technology. The creators are motivated by the contemporary cultural and creative context, by the media exposure of the projects’ end product and obviously by the economic benefits of the CCI activities. Feasibility, economic viability and potential success of the CCI team product can be secured or positively evaluated only through the economic and management expertise provided by the members of the team with economic background. The cultural context should definitely be evaluated constantly together within the team, by both artists and CCI economics/management experts. There is also necessary to have a certain level of comprehension within the CCI team – the access to other one subjectivity /artistic creativity versus economic feasibility – and balance must always be reached for the lasting development of the project.
- Eastern, mainstream stakeholders usually state cultural policies tainted by latency, protochronism and reactionary traditionalism. There are some exceptions however: cultural institutions which are financed through competition CCI projects, private stakeholders with contemporary visions over CCI, young galleries, cultural/artistic hubs, independent galleries, private enterprises as cultural stakeholders/non-government organizations, local authorities interested in new cultural visions for their cities/regions. Stakeholders in cultural policies are either mainstream (state driven, institutionally or financed) or alternative (independent/young galleries, private architecture/design offices, independent cultural festivals, media, galleries, cinema, design, multimedia, etc.).
- The Test of Reality – even before the pandemic, it was obvious that financing CCI is more and more connected with some major subjects – is in improving quality of life, especially within urban environment, ecology, recycling, involvement to generate solutions for social problems, preserving and restoration of cultural heritage. Art for the sake of art is no longer an option for public funding. Media exposure is essential for any CCI activity/projects, such as social platforms, the World Wide Web, online publications, etc.
- Involvement in social activities of education – such as creative workshops, youth creative education. Even in a technological environment, an economic option for added value is creativity, originality, artistic creation inserted within production process and end product.
The contents of the course are divided in two major thematic Units, with specific learning objectives and learning outcomes.
Tematska jedinica 1 ciljevi učenja i ishodi
Concepts and Policy Overview
Specific learning objective
- To allow students to comprehend the CCIs, their connectivity, innovation and social innovation potential while focusing on open-science approaches, regulative and ethical issues, as well as the relevant innovative, participatory and interdisciplinary working approaches in the CCIs
Specific expected learning outcomes:
In addition to the generic course goals, Unit 1 will enable the students to
- Understand the CCIs and their position in society and economy;
- Distinguish the CCI project types;
- Distinguish roles in CCI teams and communication channels;
- Interpret the ethics related to the work and the products of the CCIs;
- Discern the key stakeholders related to cultural policies;
- Identify the economic implications of cultural policies;
- Interpret issues pertaining to intellectual property in CCIs;
- Analyse the importance of new digital transposition techniques and contemporary; technologies for CCI products, projects, activities;
- Promote CCIs’ activities, products and projects through free (costs and use) communication channels.
Tematska jedinica 2 ciljevi učenja i ishodi
A rally through the different steps in developing a Business Plan
Specific learning objectives:
- To allow the students to comprehend the specific nature of CCIs’ ventures and associated managerial specifics that can make them viable as economic activities while focusing on cooperation, co-creation and interdisciplinarity, and using business planning as a pedagogical tool.
Specific Expected learning outcomes:
In addition to the generic course goals, Unit 2 will enable the students to
- Generate and/or identify a business idea in the CCIs;
- Apply facts, theories and concepts from different disciplines/knowledge areas appropriately in formulating solutions to entrepreneurial problems;
- Distinguish relationships among various components of business and its environment
- Select relevant material, non-material and digital resources needed to turn ideas into action
- Plan value-creating activity which can be financially sustainable over time;
- Collaborate to develop business ideas for the CCIs, in particular with artists and cultural professionals;
- Work with scale models, artefacts, and projects in progress through exposure on social media/social platforms and various sites (this may also include testing scaled or real size models within urban or other environments);
- Thoroughly document artistic activities as part of the artistic research process and collect data as open science experiments.
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