Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Blog Assignment #10


What I learned from Sir Ken Robinson
There are two types of people in this world: People who enjoy what they do and endure it and people who love what they do and speak to their authentic selves.
Education keeps people from their natural talents. Talents must be searched for because they will not be lying on the surface. In education we need change. We need a revolution - it needs to be transformed into something else. Abraham Lincoln is quoted saying "We must rise with the occasion; not to it". I like this quote because he is saying we must be engaged. Ken points out that most teenagers don't wear watches because adults grew up in a time when if you needed something you wore it. Kids these days are growing up in a digitized world - the time is everywhere. Life is not linear it is organic. By linear, Ken means we are on a track that we follow and if we follow it correctly we end up set for the rest of our life. By organic, Ken means we create our lives symbiotically as we explore our talents in relation to circumstances they help to create for us. He says the pentacle for education is getting into college, although not everyone needs to go to college. The heart of the challenge is to reconstitute our sense of ability and of intelligence. He discusses the fact that parents are competitive and kindergarteners are being interviewed these days. It is a bit ridiculous that such young children have to compete for a place in kindergarten. Human talent is tremendously diverse. People are often good at things that they don't really care for. Passion is to love the things you are good at. Ken says that we need to understand that learning is an organic process. The outcome cannot be predicted.

2 comments:

  1. I love the concepts that you got from this video. In order for us to love what we do, we need to use our talents and find what is passionate to us. Great post! :)

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  2. Chloe,

    I could not agree more with your thoughts as well as Ken's. I have felt this way about education for some time and it is wonderful to finally see the change, or revolution, begin. We seem to have interpreted the video in the same way. I also liked how you embedded the video within the post so that others can see where you got these ideas from. Great post!

    Mitchell Lane

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