On Creativity & Education

14 Jul

21st Century Western Culture is obsessed with education, and for great reason.  Young minds need to be trained, the genius of the older generations must be passed down, and the torch must burn brighter than ever before.  I cannot imagine anyone in any society, in any social setting disagreeing with passing down knowledge from one generation to the next.  But ask people how to accomplish that feat, and the debate is on.  Even amongst education administrators there is a large debate as how to educate our young.

Ken Robinson, in the following video provides a fresh (and often comical) look at education, creativity, and a passion for life.  Check it out.

I have a younger brother who is one of the most athletic and creative people I know.  It is actually quite irritating how quickly he can master musicianship and endeavors of athleticism.  So what seems logical is to allow him to exploit his strengths, gain power, finesse and experience.  But our society requires these dreams to be extracurricular.  Why is it that we require our young ones to learn chemistry (which many of them will never use), calculate complex formulas (that are soon forgotten by 95% of individuals), and then wonder why we are failing to educate this upcoming generation?

Contradictions abound in the realm of education.  We explain that everyone is unique, that everyone has their own strengths.  And yet we require everyone to participate in the same classes, learn the same things, and become the same as everyone around them.

What if, instead of bringing our children up to take all of the most advanced classes in the maths, sciences, and language, we allowed them to gain a basic understanding and then begin to exploit the gifts that are natural within them.  Give the students a foundation, instill within them a desire, but allow their natural gifting to drive them to excellence.  Our children are talented.  Let’s train them to embrace their talents, not destroy them before they even get to explore them.

5 Responses to “On Creativity & Education”

  1. James 14. Jul, 2010 at 8:53 pm #

    Another great TED talk. How awesome would it be to attend a TED conference one day?! Only sets you back some 20,000 dollars.

  2. Brandon Hansen 15. Jul, 2010 at 12:20 am #

    Actually, the upcoming conference (hosted at Oxford) is set at $5200 USD. But, with airfare and hotel and food, you are probably looking at $15k.

    http://www.ted.com/registration/tedglobal2011

  3. Brandon Hansen 15. Jul, 2010 at 12:22 am #

    The other problem, is they don’t just accept “anyone” to a TED conference. It is a lot of (very much worth it) effort to even be accepted as a candidate attendee.

  4. James 31. Jul, 2010 at 3:07 pm #

    Yeah they are very selective indeed. You never know though, with my dad owning a Ferrari now, I have been bumping shoulders with some pretty hob nob people lately.

    • brandon 01. Aug, 2010 at 9:40 pm #

      I can’t tell if you are serious or not :)

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