Words matter. These are the best Ken Robinson Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
If you’re running an engineering or finance company, all companies depend on ideas and ingenuity. I think the principles of creative leadership apply everywhere, whether it’s an advertising company or whether you’re running a hospital.
You create your life, and you can recreate it, too. In times of economic downturn and uncertainty, it’s more important than ever to look deep inside yourself to fathom the sort of life you really want to lead and the talents and passions that can make that possible.
The arts, sciences, humanities, physical education, languages and maths all have equal and central contributions to make to a student’s education.
Very often, organizations are inflexible because there is too little communication between functions; they are too segregated.
What you’re doing now, or have done in the past, need not determine what you can do next and in the future.
All children start their school careers with sparkling imaginations, fertile minds, and a willingness to take risks with what they think.
Now the problem with standardized tests is that it’s based on the mistake that we can simply scale up the education of children like you would scale up making carburetors. And we can’t, because human beings are very different from motorcars, and they have feelings about what they do and motivations in doing it, or not.
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.
If you’re not prepared to be wrong, you’ll never come up with anything original.
You can be creative in anything – in math, science, engineering, philosophy – as much as you can in music or in painting or in dance.
School systems should base their curriculum not on the idea of separate subjects, but on the much more fertile idea of disciplines… which makes possible a fluid and dynamic curriculum that is interdisciplinary.
Passion is the driver of achievement in all fields. Some people love doing things they don’t feel they’re good at. That may be because they underestimate their talents or haven’t yet put the work in to develop them.
The role of a creative leader is not to have all the ideas; it’s to create a culture where everyone can have ideas and feel that they’re valued.
I believe this passionately: that we don’t grow into creativity, we grow out of it. Or rather, we get educated out if it.
Many highly talented, brilliant, creative people think they’re not – because the thing they were good at at school wasn’t valued, or was actually stigmatized.
The answer is not to standardize education, but to personalize and customize it to the needs of each child and community. There is no alternative. There never was.
You can’t just give someone a creativity injection. You have to create an environment for curiosity and a way to encourage people and get the best out of them.
Creativity is the process of having original ideas that have value. It is a process; it’s not random.