Showing posts with label TED. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TED. Show all posts

Monday, November 08, 2010

Ken Robinson and National Thought Leaders to Join “Shaping the Future of Creativity Today” Workshop at the Creativity World Forum

Following the launch of the National Creativity Network on Monday, November 15, more than 50 people from around the country will gather to work on the “Shaping the Future of Creativity Today.” This workshop runs from 2 to 5 p.m. and is part of the seventh annual Creativity World Forum 2010 to be held in Oklahoma City, November 15 to17.

Noted creativity expert Sir Ken Robinson will help officially launch the National Creativity Network from 9 to 11:30 a.m., and then will join the opening of the workshop at 2 p.m. Both events take place at the Skirvin Hilton Hotel in Oklahoma City.

Robinson is author of The Element and speaks globally about the importance of creativity and arts in education, work and society. He will join several other national thought leaders who will help in the first hour of the workshop to set context about creative alternatives that are already happening related creativity across society. This group includes:
  • Carrie Fitzsimmons – executive director of ArtScience Labs.
  • Jean Hendrickson – executive director of Oklahoma A+ Schools.
  • Dan Hunter – arts advocate and policy expert.
  • Mary Alice Long – play consultant and advocate.
  • Scott Noppe-Brandon – executive director of the Lincoln Center Institute and co-author of Imagination First.
  • Scott Rich – assessment specialist at Scholastic Testing Service.
Steven Dahlberg, director of the International Centre for Creativity and Imagination, and Cheryl Whitesitt, executive director of the Minnesota Future Problem Solving Program, will facilitate the workshop, which focuses on:
  • Exploring the state of creativity today.
  • Engaging creative alternatives about the future of creativity.
  • Directly involving participants in creative processes and tools that help move beyond merely advocating the value of creativity to igniting action for change about creativity's role in society.
The workshop is open to all, and seeks diverse participants -- representing education, business, arts, government, nonprofits and beyond -- who all share an interest in applying more personal, organizational and community creativity. The workshop fee is $45 and people may participate whether or not they are attending the Creativity World Forum. More workshop information is available at www.appliedimagination.org/cwf.

More information about the Creativity World Forum is available at http://www.stateofcreativity.com/ and about the National Creativity Network at http://www.nationalcreativitynetwork.org/. [8 November 2010 - National Creativity Network - For more information, contact Kathy Oden-Hall, Creativity World Forum, (405) 203-5742 or kodenhall@stateofcreativity.com]

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Ken Robinson ... TED Part II

Ken Robinson returned to TED earlier this year and talked about the intersection of talents, passion and education.
[May 2010 - TED] In this poignant, funny follow-up to his fabled 2006 talk, Sir Ken Robinson makes the case for a radical shift from standardized schools to personalized learning -- creating conditions where kids' natural talents can flourish. More


As he did in his first TED talk about creativity and education, he sums up in less than 18 minutes key ideas that seem so obvious, yet are so far from the practices we employ in schools and society. Some of Ken's insights from his 2010 talk:
  • There is a crisis of human resources -- we make poor use of our talents.
  • Many people simply endure what they do rather than enjoy what they do.
  • But some people do what they ARE and engage part of their authentic selves.
  • Education dislocates people from their natural talents.
  • We have to create the circumstances where talents show themselves. Education should be where this happens, but too often it's not.
  • Education REFORM is not enough -- reform is only improving a broken model.
  • We need not an evolution in education, but a revolution ... to transform it into something else.
  • It needs innovation, which is hard because it challenges what we take for granted.
  • Quoting Abraham Lincoln, Ken talked about "rising with the occasion" and the idea of "disenthralling ourselves."
  • Life is organic ... not linear.
  • We are obsessed with getting people to college. College does not begin in kindergarten. Kindergarten begins in kindergarten.
  • Problem of conformity in education -- like fast food where everything is standardized.
  • Human talent is tremendously diverse.
  • Passion -- what excites our spirit and energy -- is important.
  • Education doesn't feed a lot of people's spirits.
  • Education, which is primarily based on a manufacturing model, should shift to one based on principles from agriculture.
  • Human flourishing is an organic process. We cannot predict the outcome of human development. All you can do is create the conditions under which they begin to flourish.
  • Customizing and personalizing education is the answer to the future.
And he finished with a poem excerpt from W. B. Yeats about how we spread our dreams before others' feet -- like kids do everyday -- and askied us to "tread softly, because you tread on my dreams."

If you care about the future of children and education and society, show Ken's two TED talks (and this one, too!) to your friends and colleagues and family and talk about how you can begin to act to make positive change in the ways we educate and work. Show these clips in a public meeting at your children's school. Show them in your workplace with your colleagues. Show them at the public library. You'll be amazed who cares about these topics, who shows up and what you might accomplish together. Imagine what if ...