Bring on the learning revolution - Sir Ken Robinson
Conference held in California - 2010
Conference held in California - 2010
(Transcription from the video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r9LelXa3U_I)
I was here four years ago, and I remember, at the time, that the talks weren't put online.
I think they were
given to TEDsters in a box, a box set of DVDs, which they put on their shelves,
where they are now. (Laughter)
And actually, Chris
called me a week after I'd given my talk and he said, "We're going to
start putting them online.
Can we put yours
online?" And I said, "Sure."
And four years later, as
I said, it's been seen by four ... Well, it's been downloaded four million
times.
So I suppose you could
multiply that by 20 or something to get the number of people who've seen it.
And, as Chris says,
there is a hunger for videos of me. (Laughter) (Applause) ... don't you feel? (Laughter)
So, this whole event
has been an elaborate build-up to me doing another one for you, so here it is. (Laughter)
Al Gore
spoke at the TED conference I spoke at four years ago and talked about the
climate crisis.
And I referenced that at
the end of my last talk.
So I want to pick up
from there because I only had 18 minutes, frankly.
So, as I was saying ...
(Laughter)
You see, he's right.
I mean, there is a
major climate crisis, obviously, and I think if people don't believe it, they
should get out more. (Laughter)
But I believe
there's a second climate crisis, which is as severe, which has the same
origins, and that we have to deal with, with the same urgency.
And I mean by this - and
you may say, by the way, "Look, I'm good.
I have one climate
crisis; I don't really need the second one."
But this
is a crisis of, not natural resources - though I believe that's true - but a
crisis of human resources.
I believe
fundamentally, as many speakers have said during the past few days, that we
make very poor use of our talents.
Very many
people go through their whole lives having no real sense of what their talents
may be, or if they have any to speak of.
I meet all
kinds of people who don't think they're really good at anything.
Actually, I kind of
divide the world into two groups now.
Jeremy Bentham, the
great utilitarian philosopher, once spiked this argument.
He said, "There
are two types of people in this world:
those who divide the
world into two types and those who do not." (Laughter)
Well, I do. (Laughter)
I meet all
kinds of people who don't enjoy what they do.
They
simply go through their lives getting on with it.
They get
no great pleasure from what they do.
They
endure it rather than enjoy it and wait for the weekend.
But I also
meet people who love what they do and couldn't imagine doing anything else.
If you
said to them, "Don't do this anymore," they'd wonder what you were
talking about.
Because it
isn't what they do, it's who they are. They say, "But this is me, you
know. It would be foolish for me to abandon this, because it speaks to my most
authentic self."
And it's not true of
enough people.
In fact, on the
contrary, I think it's still true of a minority of people.
I think
there are many possible explanations for it.
And high
among them is education, because education, in a way, dislocates very many
people from their natural talents.
And human resources are like
natural resources; they're often buried deep.
You have to go looking for them, they're
not just lying around on the surface.
You have
to create the circumstances where they show themselves.
And you
might imagine education would be the way that happens, but too often it's not.
Every
education system in the world is being reformed at the moment and it's not
enough.
Reform is no use anymore, because
that's simply improving a broken model.
What we need - and the word's been
used many times during the course of the past few days - is not evolution, but
a revolution in education.
This has
to be transformed into something else. (Applause)
One of the
real challenges is to innovate fundamentally in education.
Innovation is hard because
it means doing something that people don't find very easy, for the most part.
It means
challenging what we take for granted, things that we think are obvious.
The great problem for reform or
transformation is the tyranny of common sense;
things that people think, "Well,
it can't be done any other way because that's the way it's done."
I came
across a great quote recently from Abraham Lincoln, who I thought you'd be
pleased to have quoted at this point. (Laughter)
He said this in
December 1862 to the second annual meeting of Congress.
I ought to explain
that I have no idea what was happening at the time.
We don't teach
American history in Britain.
(Laughter)
We suppress it. You
know, this is our policy. (Laughter)
So, no doubt,
something fascinating was happening in December 1862, which the Americans among
us will be aware of.
But he
said this:
"The dogmas of the quiet past are
inadequate to the stormy present.
The occasion is piled high with difficulty,
and we must rise with the occasion."
I love
that.
Not rise to it, rise with it.
"As our case is new, so we
must think anew and act anew.
We must disenthrall ourselves, and
then we shall save our country."
I love
that word, "disenthrall."
You know
what it means?
That there
are ideas that all of us are enthralled to, which we simply take for granted as
the natural order of things, the way things are.
And many
of our ideas have been formed, not to meet the circumstances of this century, but
to cope with the circumstances of previous centuries.
But our
minds are still hypnotized by them, and we have to disenthrall ourselves of
some of them.
Now, doing
this is easier said than done.
It's very
hard to know, by the way, what it is you take for granted. (Laughter)
And the
reason is that you take it for granted.
So let me
ask you something you may take for granted.
How many
of you here are over the age of 25?
That's not
what I think you take for granted, I'm sure you're familiar with that already.
Are there
any people here under the age of 25?
Great.
Now, those over 25, could you put your hands up if you're wearing your
wristwatch?
Now that's
a great deal of us, isn't it?
Ask a
room full of teenagers the same thing.
Teenagers
do not wear wristwatches.
I don't
mean they can't or they're not allowed to, they just often choose not to.
And the
reason is, you see, that we were brought up in a pre-digital culture, those of
us over 25.
And so for us, if you
want to know the time you have to wear something to tell it.
Kids
now live in a world which is digitized, and the time, for them, is everywhere.
They
see no reason to do this.
And by the
way, you don't need to do it either; it's just that you've always done it and
you carry on doing it.
My daughter never
wears a watch, my daughter Kate, who's 20.
She doesn't see the
point.
As she says,
"It's a single function device."
(Laughter)
"Like, how
lame is that?"
And I say,
"No, no, it tells the date as well."
(Laughter) "It has multiple functions."
But, you see, there are
things we're enthralled to in education.
Let me give you a
couple of examples.
One of
them is the idea of linearity:
that it
starts here and you go through a track and if you do everything right, you will
end up set for the rest of your life.
Everybody who's spoken
at TED has told us implicitly, or sometimes explicitly, a different story:
that life is not linear; it's
organic.
We
create our lives symbiotically as we explore our talents in relation to the circumstances
they help to create for us.
But, you
know, we have become obsessed with this linear narrative.
And
probably the pinnacle for education is getting you to college.
I think we
are obsessed with getting people to college.
Certain
sorts of college.
I don't
mean you shouldn't go to college, but not everybody needs to go and not
everybody needs to go now.
Maybe they
go later, not right away.
And I was up in San Francisco a while ago doing
a book signing.
There was this guy
buying a book, he was in his 30s.
And I said, "What
do you do?"
And he said, "I'm
a fireman."
And I said, "How
long have you been a fireman?"
He said, "Always.
I've always been a fireman."
And I said,
"Well, when did you decide?"
He said, "As a
kid." He said, "Actually, it was a problem for me at school, because
at school, everybody wanted to be a fireman."
He said, "But I
wanted to be a fireman."
And he said,
"When I got to the senior year of school, my teachers didn't take it
seriously.
This one teacher
didn't take it seriously.
He said I was throwing
my life away if that's all I chose to do with it; that I should go to college,
I should become a professional person, that I had great potential and I was
wasting my talent to do that."
And he said, "It
was humiliating because he said it in front of the whole class and I really
felt dreadful.
But it's what I
wanted, and as soon as I left school, I applied to the fire service and I was
accepted."
And he said, "You
know, I was thinking about that guy recently, just a few minutes ago when you
were speaking, about this teacher," he said, "because six months ago,
I saved his life." (Laughter)
He said, "He was
in a car wreck, and I pulled him out, gave him CPR, and I saved his wife's life
as well."
He said, "I think
he thinks better of me now." (Laughter) (Applause)
You
know, to me, human communities depend upon a diversity of talent, not a
singular conception of ability.
And at the heart of
our challenges (Applause)
At the
heart of the challenge is to reconstitute our sense of ability and of
intelligence.
This
linearity thing is a problem.
When I arrived in L.A. about nine years
ago, I came across a policy statement -
very well-intentioned
- which said, "College begins in kindergarten."
No, it
doesn't.(Laughter)
It doesn't.
If we had time, I
could go into this, but we don't. (Laughter)
Kindergarten begins
in kindergarten. (Laughter)
A friend of mine once
said, "You know, a three year-old is not half a six year-old." (Laughter) (Applause)
They're three.
But as we just heard
in this last session, there's such competition now to get into kindergarten - to
get to the right kindergarten - that people are being interviewed for it at
three.
Kids sitting in front
of unimpressed panels, you know, with their resumes, (Laughter)
flipping through and
saying, "Well, this is it?" (Laughter)
"You've been
around for 36 months, and this is it?" (Laughter)
"You've achieved
nothing - commit.
Spent the first six
months breastfeeding, the way I can see it." (Laughter)
See, it's outrageous
as a conception, but it …….
The other big issue is conformity.
We have
built our education systems on the model of fast food.
This is
something Jamie Oliver talked about the other day.
You know
there are two models of quality assurance in catering.
One is fast food, where everything is standardized.
The other are things like Zagat and
Michelin restaurants,
where everything is not standardized, they're customized to local
circumstances.
And we
have sold ourselves into a fast food model of education, and it's impoverishing
our spirit and our energies as much as fast food is depleting our physical
bodies. (Applause)
I think we have to
recognize a couple of things here.
One is that human talent is tremendously
diverse.
People
have very different aptitudes.
I worked
out recently that I was given a guitar as a kid at about the same time that
Eric Clapton got his first guitar.
You know,
it worked out for Eric, that's all I'm saying. (Laughter)
In a way,
it did not for me.
I could
not get this thing to work no matter how often or how hard I blew into it.
(Laughter) It just wouldn't work.
But it's not only
about that.
It's about
passion.
Often,
people are good at things they don't really care for.
It's about
passion, and what excites our spirit and our energy.
And if
you're doing the thing that you love to do, that you're good at, time takes a
different course entirely.
My wife's just
finished writing a novel, and I think it's a great book, but she disappears for
hours on end.
You know
this, if you're doing something you love, an hour feels like five minutes.
If you're
doing something that doesn't resonate with your spirit, five minutes feels like
an hour.
And the
reason so many people are opting out of education is because it doesn't feed
their spirit, it doesn't feed their energy or their passion.
So I think we have to
change metaphors.
We have to go from what is essentially an industrial model of
education, a manufacturing model, which is based on linearity and conformity
and batching people.
We have to move to a model that is based more on principles of agriculture.
We have to
recognize that human flourishing is not a mechanical process;
it's an organic process.
And you
cannot predict the outcome of human development.
All you
can do, like a farmer, is create the conditions under which they will begin to
flourish.
So when we
look at reforming education and transforming it, it isn't like cloning a
system.
There are great ones,
like KIPP's; it's a great system.
There are many great
models.
It's about
customizing to your circumstances and personalizing education to the people
you're actually teaching.
And doing
that, I think, is the answer to the future because it's not about scaling a new
solution;
it's about
creating a movement in education in which people develop their own solutions,
but with
external support based on a personalized curriculum.
Now in this room, there
are people who represent extraordinary resources in business,
in multimedia, in the
Internet.
These technologies, combined
with the extraordinary talents of teachers, provide an opportunity to
revolutionize education.
And I urge you to get
involved in it because it's vital, not just to ourselves, but to the future of
our children.
But we
have to change from the industrial model to an agricultural model,
where each school can be flourishing tomorrow.
That's
where children experience life.
Or at
home, if that's where they choose to be educated with their families or their
friends.
There's
been a lot of talk about dreams over the course of this few days.
And I wanted to just
very quickly ...
I was very
struck by Natalie Merchant's songs last night, recovering old poems.
I wanted
to read you a quick, very short poem from W. B. Yeats, who some of you may
know.
He wrote
this to his love, Maud Gonne, and he was bewailing the fact that he couldn't
really give her what he thought she wanted from him.
And he
says, "I've got something else, but it may not be for you."
He says
this:
"Had I the heavens'
embroidered cloths,
Enwrought with gold and silver
light,
The blue and the dim and the dark
cloths
Of night and light and the
half-light,
I would spread the cloths under
your feet:
But I, being poor, have only my
dreams;
I have spread my dreams under your
feet;
Tread softly because you tread on
my dreams."
And every day, everywhere, our
children spread their dreams beneath our feet.
And we should tread them softly.
Thank you. (Applause)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário