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[marker squeaks]
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(Sir Ken Robinson) Every country on Earth at the moment
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is reforming public education.
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There are two reasons for it.
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The first of them is economic.
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People are trying to work out,
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how do we educate our children
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to take their place in the economies of the 21st century?
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How do we do that, given that we can't anticipate
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what the economy will look like at the end of next week,
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as the recent turmoil is demonstrating?
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How do we do that?
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The second, though, is cultural.
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Every country on Earth is trying to figure out how do we
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educate our children, so they have a sense of cultural identity
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and so that we can pass on the cultural genes
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of our communities,
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while being part of the process of globalization?
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How do you square that circle?
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The problem is, they're trying to meet the future
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by doing what they did in the past.
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And on the way they're alienating millions of kids
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who don't see any purpose in going to school.
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When we went to school,
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we were kept there with a story:
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which is if you worked hard, and did well,
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and got a college degree, you would have a job.
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Our kids don't believe that.
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And they're right not to, by the way.
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You're better having a degree than not,
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but it's not a guarantee anymore.
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And particularly not if the route
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to it marginalizes most of the things
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that you think are important about yourself.
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And some people say,
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"We have to raise standards," as if this is a breakthrough.
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You know, like, really? Yes, we should.
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Why would you lower them? [audience chuckles]
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You know, I haven't come across an argument
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that persuades me of lowering them.
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But raising them, of course, we should raise them.
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The problem is that the current system of education
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was designed, and conceived,
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and structured for a different age.
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It was conceived
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in the intellectual culture of the Enlightenment,
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and in the economic circumstances of the Industrial Revolution.
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Before the middle of the 19th century,
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there were no systems of public education, not really.
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I mean, you could get educated by Jesuits,
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you know, if you had the money.
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But public education, paid for from taxation,
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compulsory to everybody, and free at the point of delivery.
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That was a revolutionary idea.
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And many people objected to it.
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They said it's not possible
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for many street kids, working class children
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to benefit from public education.
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They're incapable of learning to read and write,
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and why are we spending time on this?
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So, there's also built into it a whole series of assumptions
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about social structure and capacity.
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It was driven by an economic imperative of the time.
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But running right through it
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was an intellectual model of the mind,
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which was essentially the Enlightenment view of intelligence,
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that real intelligence consists in this capacity
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for a certain type of deductive reasoning,
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and a knowledge of the classics, originally.
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What we come to think of as academic ability.
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And this is deep in the gene pool of public education
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that there are really two types of people:
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academic and non academic,
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smart people and non-smart people.
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And the consequence of that is
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that many brilliant people think they're not
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because they've been judged against this particular
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view of the mind.
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So, we have twin pillars, economic and intellectual.
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And my view is
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that this model has caused chaos in many people's lives.
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It's been great for some;
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there have been people who've benefited wonderfully from it,
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but most people have not.
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Instead, they suffered this.
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This is the modern epidemic,
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and it's as misplaced and it's as fictitious.
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This is the plague of ADHD. [crowd murmurs]
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Now, this is a map of the incidence of ADHD in America,
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or prescriptions for ADHD.
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Don't mistake me, I don't mean to say there is no such thing
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as Attention Deficit Disorder.
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I'm not qualified to say if there is such a thing.
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I know that a great majority of psychologists
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and pediatrician think there is such a thing.
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But it's still a matter of debate.
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What I do know for a fact is it's not an epidemic.
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These kids are being medicated
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as routinely as we had our tonsils taken out,
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and on the same whimsical basis,
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and for the same reason, medical fashion.
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Our children are living in the most intensely stimulating period
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in the history of the Earth.
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They're being besieged with information,
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and caught their attention from every platform:
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computers, from iPhones, from advertising hoardings,
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from hundreds of television channels.
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And we're penalizing them now
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for getting distracted.
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From what? You know, boring stuff.
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At school for the most part.
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It seems to me it's not a coincidence, totally,
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that the incidence of ADHD
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has written in parallel with the growth of standardized testing.
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These kids are being given Ritalin, and Adderall,
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and all manner of things-- often quite dangerous drugs--
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to get them focused and calm them down.
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But according to this, Attention Deficit Disorder
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increases as you travel east across the country.
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People start losing interest in Oklahoma. [audience erupts in laughter]
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They can hardly think straight in Arkansas.
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And by the time they get to Washington,
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they've lost it completely.
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And there are separate reasons for that, I believe. [laughs]
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It's a fictitious epidemic.
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If you think of it, the arts.
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And I don't say this exclusively the arts,
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I think it's also true of science and of maths.
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But let me-- I say about the arts, particularly,
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because they are the victims of this mentality currently,
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particularly.
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The arts, especially address the idea of
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aesthetic experience.
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An aesthetic experience is one in which your senses
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are operating at their peak,
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when you're present in the current moment,
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when you're resonating with the excitement of this thing
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that you're experiencing,
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when you are fully alive.
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An anaesthetic is when you shut your senses off,
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and deaden yourself to what's happening.
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And a lot of these drugs are that.
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We're getting our children through education by anaesthetizing them.
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And I think we should be doing the exact opposite.
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We shouldn't be putting them asleep, we should be waking them up
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to what they have inside of themselves.
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But the model we have is this.
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It's, I believe, we have a system of education
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that is modeled on
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the interests of industrialism
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and in the image of it.
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I'll give you a couple of examples.
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Schools are still pretty much organized on factory lines:
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ringing bells, separate facilities,
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specialized into separate subjects.
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We still educate children by batches.
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You know, we put them through the system by age group.
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Why do we do that? You know, why is there this assumption
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that the most important thing kids have in common
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is how old they are?
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You know, it's like the most important thing about them
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is their date of manufacture.
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Well, I know kids who are much better than other kids
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at the same age in different disciplines,
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or at different times of the day,
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or better in smaller groups than in large groups.
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Or sometimes they want to be on their own.
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If you're interested in a model of learning,
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you don't start from this production line mentality.
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These-- it's essentially about conformity,
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and increasingly it's about that as you look at the growth
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of standardized testing and standardized curricula.
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And it's about standardization.
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I believe we've got to go in the exact opposite direction.
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That's what I mean about changing the paradigm.
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There was a great study done recently
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of divergent thinking, published a couple of years ago.
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Divergent thinking isn't the same thing as creativity.
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I define creativity as the process of having original ideas
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that have value.
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Divergent thinking isn't a synonym,
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but it's an essential capacity for creativity.
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It's the ability to see lots of possible answers to a question;
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lots of possible ways of interpreting a question;
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to think, whatever De Bono would probably call, laterally;
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to think not just in linear or convergent ways;
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to see multiple answers, not one.
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So, I mean, there's tests for this.
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I mean, one kind of common example would be,
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people might be asked to say,
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how many uses can you think of for a paperclip?
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All those routine questions,
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most people might come up with 10 or 15.
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People who are good at this might come up with 200.
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And they do that by saying, well,
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could the paperclip be 200 foot tall
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and be made out of foam and rubber?
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You know, like does it have to be a paperclip as we know it, Jim?
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You know.
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Now, there are tests for this, and they gave them to 1500 people
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in a book called "Breakpoint and Beyond".
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And on the protocol of the test,
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if you scored above a certain level,
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you'd be considered to be a genius at divergent thinking.
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Okay, so my question to you is
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what percentage of the people tested
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of the 1500
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scored at genius level for divergent thinking?
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Now, you need to know one more thing about them.
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These were kindergarten children.
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So, what do you think, what percentage at genius level?
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-(audience member) 80%.
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-(Ken) 80? You think 80, okay.
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98% Now, the thing about this was it was a longitudinal study.
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So, they retested the same children
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five years later, age of 8 to 10.
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What do you think? 50?
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They retested them again, five years later,
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ages 13 to 15.
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You can see a trend here, can't you?
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Now, this tells an interesting story
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because you could have imagined it
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going the other way, could you?
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You start off not being very good,
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but you get better as you get older.
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But this shows two things:
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one is we all have this capacity,
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and two, it mostly deteriorates.
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Now, a lot of things have happened to these kids
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as they've grown up, a lot.
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But one of the most important things that happend to them,
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I am convinced, is the by now they have become educated.
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They've spent 10 years at school being told there's one answer,
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it's at the back
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and don't look
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and don't copy because that's cheating.
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When outside schools, that's called collaboration. [audience chuckles]
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Not inside schools.
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This isn't because teachers want it this way,
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it's just because it happens that way.
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It's because it's in the gene pool of education.
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We have to think differently about human capacity,
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we have to get over this old conception
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of academic, non-academic,
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abstract, theoretical, vocational,
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and see it for what it is
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a myth.
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Secondly, we have to recognize that most great learning
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happens in groups, that collaboration is the stuff of growth.
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If we atomized people, and separate them,
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and judge them separately,
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we form a kind of disjunction between them
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and their natural learning environment.
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And thirdly, it's crucially about the culture
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of our institutions, the habits of institution
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and the habitats that they occupy.