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Education should develop our natural
abilities
By Sir
Ken Robinson
[Excerpted
from DishyMix podcast interview by Susan Bratton.]
Susan Bratton: So, Sir
Ken, you have worked all over the world, you started out in the UK,
worked a lot in Ireland, you’ve worked for governments, you’ve worked
for international organizations, Fortune 500 companies.
What
you have always worked on is innovation and creativity and a lot around
education. Can you just fill our listeners in on a little bit about who
you are?
Sir Ken Robinson: Yes,
well I am originally from Liverpool in England. I suppose my way into
all of this was not really creativity generally, but the arts; and that
was the area that always interested me.
Particularly,
the importance that the arts have for kids growing up and in education,
and it developed from there really to a bigger interest in creativity
and how that might be of importance in not just education, but in the
cultural sector and the corporate sector.
So, I
suppose it has been a process of organic development, from one set of
core interest into a much broader set of interest.
Susan Bratton: So, when I
saw you speak at Ted, you were really focused on the fact that
creativity has been leached from the educational process.
Primarily
based as I understood it on the industrial revolution and creating
factories for the education of our children.
You
called for a change to that process. I would like to hear what your
idea of how we should be educated. What is that?
Sir Ken Robinson: Well,
education has to do several things. One is, to enable people to lead a
life that has meaning and purpose and has some economic independence
and to contribute to economic development.
The
other is to help to build communities, and to help to promote cultural
understanding. I think that’s all fairly clear for education.
The problem is that we have in most of our countries, a very narrow
form of education, and it’s getting narrower.
That’s
my big concern, that education is meant among other things to develop
people’s natural abilities, and I believe it really doesn’t do that. In
many cases, it divorces people from their natural talents.
Susan Bratton: So,
instead of learning critical thinking and learning how to tap our
native creativity, we are being forced to learn memorization and rote
skills and heavy up on math and reading, and not enough in the arts. I
think that’s your position, is that accurate?
Sir Ken Robinson: Well,
I’d want to quantify that honestly, because this isn’t an argument
against math or against science. I think math and science are
tremendously important, and potentially tremendously courageous.
It’s a
twofold thing. One is the force of education reforms has been to narrow
education, so it only focuses on certain sorts of disciplines including
math and science. It doesn’t encourage them to be taught very
courageously.
So,
the net effect is that some disciplines are pushed out completely, like
the arts, and the ones that are left tend to be taught in a very narrow
sort of a way.
For both reasons, I think we have to really think fundamentally about
what we are doing in education, because these things are completely, in
my view, against the interests of individuals and of countries.
Susan Bratton: How many
children are in school in just the U.S. right now?
Sir Ken Robinson: I don’t
know what the exact figure is. I can tell you for example, where I live
now, LAUSD, the LA Unified School District, there are something like
800,000 kids in public schools just in this part of the country.
Susan Bratton: So, if I
let you just take those 800,000 kids and completely change U.S. LAUSD,
I think I got that right. What would Sir Ken Robinson’s school would be
like? Take me to school, take our listeners to school.
Sir Ken Robinson: Okay,
well, there would be some major differences. One is that the curriculum
would be much more broadly based.
You
would certainly be doing science and math and technology, but you would
be doing them in different ways.
There
would be much more emphasis on project work, on discovery, but you
would also be doing art and music and dance and theatre.
You’d
be doing interdisciplinary sessions, where you would be learning math
through theatre; you would be using math as a way of enhancing learning
and dance for example. So, that would be a much more dynamic
curriculum, much more broadly based.
Secondly, it would be much more tailored as you are getting older to
your particular interest, because people have very different talents
and abilities.
I
think they should be allowed to focus on them. In the traditional
school setting, very many brilliant people are weaned away from the
very talents that excite them.
I’m
sure people listening to this have had this experience of being pushed
away from doing certain things like art or music, because there’s a
belief that these things aren’t very useful for getting a job.
Susan Bratton: Right, you
can’t earn a living as an artist. How many times have you heard that?
Sir Ken Robinson: That
was true once, it’s not true now. It’s completely untrue as it turns
out.
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Excerpted from DishyMix
podcast interview by Susan Bratton at Personal Life Media.
~~~
Sir Ken Robinson is an internationally recognized leader in the
development of creativity, innovation and human resources. Now based in
Los Angeles, he has worked with national governments in Europe and
Asia, with international agencies, Fortune 500 companies,
not-for-profit corporations and some of the world’s leading cultural
organizations.
He is author of Out
of Our Minds: Learning to be Creative.
TED
conference video.
Also
see TEDblog 27 June
2006.
[TED stands for
Technology, Entertainment, Design]
Related
post: Sir
Ken Robinson: Do schools kill creativity?
More articles
by Ken Robinson.
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