Ken Robinson says it.
Conference held on 2006 - California
Transcription of the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iG9CE55wbtY
"Good morning. How are you? It's been great, hasn't it?
Conference held on 2006 - California
Transcription of the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iG9CE55wbtY
"Good morning. How are you? It's been great, hasn't it?
I've been blown away
by the whole thing.
In fact, I'm leaving.
(Laughter)
There have been three themes, haven't there, running
through the conference, which are relevant to what I want to talk about.
One is the extraordinary evidence of human
creativity in all of the presentations that we've had and in all of the people here. Just the
variety of it and the range of it.
The second is that it's put us in a place
where we have no idea what's going to happen,
in terms of the future. No idea how
this may play out.
I have an interest in
education - actually, what I find is everybody has an interest in education. Don't you? I find this very interesting.
If you're at a dinner
party, and you say you work in education - actually, you're not often at dinner
parties, frankly, if you work in education. (Laughter) You're not asked.
And you're never asked
back, curiously. That's strange to me.
But if you are, and
you say to somebody, you know, they say, "What do you do?" and you
say you work in education, you can see the blood run from their face. They're
like,
"Oh my God,"
you know, "Why me? My one night out all week." (Laughter)
But if you ask about
their education, they pin you to the wall. Because it's one of those things that
goes deep with people, am I right?
Like religion, and
money and other things.
I have a big interest
in education, and I think we all do.
We have a huge vested
interest in it, partly because it's education that's meant to
take us into this
future that we can't grasp.
If you think of it,
children starting school this year will be retiring in 2065. Nobody has a clue
- despite all the expertise that's been on parade for the past four days - what
the world will look like in five years' time. And yet we're meant to be
educating them for it. So the unpredictability, I think, is extraordinary.
And the
third part of this is that we’ve all agreed, nonetheless, on the really
extraordinary capacities that children have - their capacities for innovation.
I mean, Sirena last
night was a marvel, wasn't she? Just seeing what she could do.
And she's exceptional,
but I think she's not, so to speak, exceptional in the whole of childhood.
What you have there is
a person of extraordinary dedication who found a talent. And my contention is all
kids have tremendous talents.
And we squander them,
pretty ruthlessly.
So I want to talk
about education and I want to talk about creativity. My contention is that creativity
now is as important in education as literacy, and we should treat it with the
same status. (Applause)
Thank you. That was
it, by the way.
Thank you very much.
(Laughter) So, 15 minutes left.
Well, I was born ...
no. (Laughter)
I heard a great story
recently - I love telling it - of a little girl who was in a drawing lesson.
She was six and she was at the back, drawing, and the teacher said this little
girl hardly ever paid attention, and in this drawing lesson she did. The
teacher was fascinated and she went over to her and she said, "What are
you drawing?"
And the girl said,
"I'm drawing a picture of God."
And the teacher
said, "But nobody knows what God looks like."
And the girl said,
"They will in a minute."
(Laughter)
When my son was four
in England
- actually he was four everywhere, to be honest. (Laughter) If we're being
strict about it, wherever he went, he was four that year.
He was in the Nativity
play. Do you remember the story? No, it was big.
It was a big story.
Mel Gibson did the sequel. You may have seen it: "Nativity II."
But James got the part of Joseph, which we were thrilled about.
But James got the part of Joseph, which we were thrilled about.
We considered this to
be one of the lead parts. We had the place crammed full of agents in T-shirts: "James
Robinson IS Joseph!" (Laughter)
He didn't have to
speak, but you know the bit where the
three kings come in. They come in bearing gifts, and they bring gold,
frankincense and myrhh.
This really happened. We were sitting there and
I think they just went out of sequence,
because we talked to the little boy afterward
and we said, "You OK with that?" And he said, "Yeah, why? Was
that wrong?"
They just switched, that was it.
Anyway, the three boys came in -
four-year-olds with tea towels on their heads -and they put these boxes down,
and the first boy
said, "I bring you gold."
And the second boy
said, "I bring you myrhh."
And the third boy
said, "Frank sent this." (Laughter)
What these things have
in common is that kids will take a chance.
If they don't know,
they'll have a go.
Am I right? They're
not frightened of being wrong.
Now, I don't mean to say
that being wrong is the same thing as being creative.
What we do know is, if
you're not prepared to be wrong, you'll never come up with anything original - if
you're not prepared to be wrong.
And by the time they
get to be adults, most kids have lost that capacity.
They have become frightened of being wrong.
And we run our
companies like this, by the way.
We stigmatize
mistakes. And we're now running national education systems where
mistakes are the worst thing you can make.
And the result is that we are educating people
out of their creative capacities.
Picasso once said this - he said that all children are born artists.
Picasso once said this - he said that all children are born artists.
The problem is to
remain an artist as we grow up. I believe this passionately, that we don't
grow into creativity, we grow out of it. Or rather, we get educated out if it.
So why is this?
I lived in
Stratford-on-Avon until about five years ago.
In fact, we moved from
Stratford to Los Angeles.
So you can imagine
what a seamless transition that was. (Laughter)
Actually, we lived in
a place called Snitterfield, just outside Stratford,
which is where
Shakespeare's father
was born. Are you struck by a new thought? I was.
You don't think of
Shakespeare having a father, do you?
Do you? Because you
don't think of Shakespeare being a child, do you?
Shakespeare being
seven? I never thought of it. I mean, he was seven at some point. He was in somebody's
English class, wasn't he? How annoying would that be? (Laughter) "Must try
harder." Being sent to bed by his dad, you know, to Shakespeare, "Go
to bed, now," to William Shakespeare, "and put the pencil down. And
stop speaking like that. It's confusing everybody." (Laughter)
Anyway, we moved from Stratford to Los
Angeles, and I just want to say a word about the
transition, actually.
My son didn't want to come.
I've got two kids. He's 21 now; my daughter's
16.
He didn't want to come
to Los Angeles.
He loved it, but he had a girlfriend in England. This was the love of his
life, Sarah.
He'd known her for a month.
Mind you, they'd had their fourth anniversary,
because it's a long time when you're 16.
Anyway, he was really upset on the plane, and
he said, "I'll never find another girl like Sarah."
And we were rather
pleased about that, frankly, because she was the main reason we were leaving
the country. (Laughter)
But something strikes
you when you move to America
and when you travel around the world: Every education system on earth has the
same hierarchy of subjects.
Every one. Doesn't
matter where you go.
You'd think it would
be otherwise, but it isn't.
At the top are
mathematics and languages, then the humanities, and the bottom are the arts.
Everywhere on Earth.
And in pretty much
every system too, there's a hierarchy within the arts.
Art and music are
normally given a higher status in schools than drama and dance. There isn't an
education system on the planet that teaches dance everyday to children the way
we teach them mathematics. Why? Why not?
I think this is rather
important.
I think math is very
important, but so is dance.
Children dance all the
time if they're allowed to, we all do.
We all have bodies,
don't we? Did I miss a meeting?(Laughter)
Truthfully, what
happens is, as children grow up, we start to educate them progressively from
the waist up. And then we focus on their heads. And slightly to one side.
If you were to visit
education, as an alien, and say "What's it for, public education?"
I think you'd have to
conclude - if you look at the output, who really succeeds by this, who does
everything that they should, who gets all the brownie points, who are the
winners - I think you'd have to conclude the
whole purpose of public education
throughout the world is to produce university
professors. Isn't it?
They're the people who
come out the top.
And I used to be one,
so there. (Laughter)
And I like university
professors, but you know, we shouldn't hold them up as the high-water mark of
all human achievement.
They're just a form of
life, another form of life. But they're rather curious, and I say this out of
affection for them.
There's something
curious about professors in my experience - not all of them, but typically - they live in their heads.
They live up there,
and slightly to one side.
They're
disembodied, you know, in a kind of literal way.
They look upon
their body as a form of transport for their heads, don't they? (Laughter) It's a way of getting their head to
meetings.
If you want real
evidence of out-of-body experiences, by the way, get yourself along to a
residential conference of senior academics, and pop into the discotheque on the
final night.(Laughter)
And there you will see
it - grown men and women writhing uncontrollably, off the beat,
waiting until it ends
so they can go home and write a paper about it.
Now our
education system is predicated on the idea of academic ability.
And there's a reason.
The whole system was
invented - around the world, there were no public systems of education, really,
before the 19th century.
They all came into
being to meet the needs of industrialism.
So the hierarchy is
rooted on two ideas.
Number one, that the most useful subjects for
work are at the top. So you were probably steered benignly away from
things at school when you were a kid, things you liked, on the grounds that you
would never get a job doing that. Is that right?
Don't do music, you're
not going to be a musician;
don't do art, you
won't be an artist.
Benign advice - now,
profoundly mistaken. The whole world is engulfed in a revolution.
And the second is academic ability, which has really come to dominate our view of
intelligence, because the universities designed the system in their image.
If you think of it,
the whole system of public education around
the world is a protracted process of university entrance.
And
the consequence is that many highly talented, brilliant, creative people think
they're not, because the thing they were good at at school wasn't valued, or
was actually stigmatized.
And I think we can't
afford to go on that way.
In
the next 30 years, according to UNESCO, more people worldwide will be
graduating
through
education than since the beginning of history.
More people, and it's
the combination of all the things we've talked about -
technology and its
transformation effect on work,
and demography
and the huge explosion in population.
Suddenly,
degrees aren't worth anything. Isn't that true?
When I
was a student, if you had a degree, you had a job.
If you
didn't have a job it's because you didn't want one.
And I didn't want one,
frankly. (Laughter)
But now kids
with degrees are often heading home to carry on playing video games, because
you need an MA where the previous job required a BA, and now you need a PhD for
the other.
It's
a process of academic inflation.
And it indicates the
whole structure of education is shifting beneath our feet. We need to
radically rethink our view of intelligence.
We know three things about intelligence.
One, it's diverse. We think about the world in all the ways that
we experience it. We think visually, we think in sound, we think
kinesthetically.
We think in abstract
terms, we think in movement.
Secondly, intelligence is dynamic.
If you look at the
interactions of a human brain, as we heard yesterday from a number of
presentations, intelligence is wonderfully interactive.
The brain isn't
divided into compartments.
In fact, creativity - which I define as the process of having
original ideas that have value - more often than not comes about
through the interaction of different disciplinary ways of seeing things.
The brain is
intentionally - by the way, there's a shaft of nerves that joins the two halves
of the brain called the corpus callosum. It's thicker in women.
Following off from
Helen yesterday, I think this is probably why women are better at
multi-tasking.
Because you are,
aren't you?
There's a raft of
research, but I know it from my personal life.
If my wife is cooking
a meal at home - which is not often, thankfully. (Laughter)
But you know, she's
doing - no, she's good at some things - but if she's cooking, you know, she's
dealing with people on the phone, she's talking to the kids, she's painting the
ceiling, she's doing open-heart surgery over here.
If I'm cooking, the
door is shut, the kids are out, the phone's on the hook, if she comes in I get
annoyed.
I say, "Terry,
please, I'm trying to fry an egg in here. Give me a break." (Laughter)
Actually, you know
that old philosophical thing, if a tree falls in a forest and nobody hears it, did
it happen? Remember that old chestnut?
I saw a great
t-shirt really recently which said, "If a man speaks his mind in a forest,
and no woman hears him, is he still wrong?" (Laughter)
And the third thing about intelligence
is, it's distinct. I'm doing
a new book at the moment
called
"Epiphany," which is based on a series of interviews with people
about how they discovered their talent. I'm fascinated by how people got to be
there.
It's really prompted
by a conversation I had with a wonderful woman who maybe most people have never
heard of; she's called Gillian Lynne - have you heard of her? Some have. She's
a choreographer and everybody knows her work.
She did
"Cats" and "Phantom of the Opera."
She's wonderful. I
used to be on the board of the Royal Ballet in England, as you can see.
Anyway, Gillian and I
had lunch one day and I said, "Gillian, how'd you get to be a dancer?"
And she said it was interesting; when she was at school, she was really
hopeless. And the school, in the '30s, wrote to her parents and said, "We
think Gillian has a learning disorder." She couldn't concentrate; she was
fidgeting.
I think now they'd
say she had ADHD.
Wouldn't you? But
this was the 1930s, and ADHD hadn't been invented at this point.
It wasn't an
available condition. (Laughter)
People weren't
aware they could have that.
Anyway, she went to
see this specialist. So, this oak-paneled room, and she was there with her
mother, and she was led and sat on this chair at the end, and she sat on her
hands for 20 minutes while this man talked to her mother about all the problems
Gillian was having at school.
And at the end of it -
because she was disturbing people; her homework was always late; and so on, little
kid of eight -- in the end, the doctor went and sat next to Gillian and said,
"Gillian, I've listened to all these things that your mother's told me,
and I need to speak to her privately."
He said, "Wait
here. We'll be back; we won't be very long," and they went and left her.
But as they went out
the room, he turned on the radio that was sitting on his desk. And when they got
out the room, he said to her mother, "Just stand and watch her." And
the minute they left the room, she said, she was on her feet, moving to the
music.
And they watched for a
few minutes and he turned to her mother and said, "Mrs. Lynne, Gillian
isn't sick; she's a dancer.
Take her to a dance
school.
"I said”, "What happened?"
"I said”, "What happened?"
She said, "She
did. I can't tell you how wonderful it was.
We walked in this room
and it was full of people like me. People who couldn't sit still.
People who had to move
to think." Who had to move to think.
They did ballet; they
did tap; they did jazz; they did modern; they did contemporary.
She was eventually
auditioned for the Royal
Ballet School;
she became a soloist; she had a wonderful career at the Royal Ballet. She
eventually graduated from the Royal
Ballet School
and founded her own company -- the Gillian Lynne Dance Company - met Andrew
Lloyd Weber. She's been responsible for some of the most successful musical
theater productions in history; she's given pleasure to millions; and she's a
multi-millionaire.
Somebody else might
have put her on medication and told her to calm down.
Now, I think ...
(Applause) What I think it comes to is this:
Al Gore spoke the
other night about ecology and the revolution that was triggered by Rachel
Carson.
I believe our only
hope for the future is to adopt a new
conception of human ecology,
one in which we start
to reconstitute our conception of the richness of human capacity.
Our education system
has mined our minds in the way that we strip-mine the earth: for a particular
commodity.
And for the future, it
won't serve us.
We have to rethink the
fundamental principles on which we're educating our children. There was a
wonderful quote by Jonas Salk, who said, "If all the insects were to
disappear from the earth, within 50 years all life on Earth would end.
If all human beings
disappeared from the earth, within 50 years all forms of life would
flourish."
And he's right.
What TED celebrates is
the gift of the human imagination.
We have to be careful
now that we use this gift wisely and that we avert some of the scenarios that
we've talked about. And the only way we'll do it is by seeing our creative
capacities for the richness they are and seeing our children for the hope that
they are. And our task is to educate their whole being, so they can face this
future.
By the way - we may
not see this future, but they will. And our job is to help them make something of
it. Thank you very much."
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