Sir Ken Robinson is not just an amazing orator — he is the most-viewed speaker on TED.com. His three talks have been viewed an astounding 21.5 million times, making him the sneezing baby panda of the TED ecosystem.
- Ken Robinson Is Going To Check This Out Crossword
- Ken Robinson Is Going To Check This Out Now
- Ken Robinson Is Going To Check This Out Meme
- Ken Robinson Is Going To Check This Out Movie
- Eight years ago, a man named Ken Robinson made a TED speech that revolutionized the topic of education. It caused many parents to pull their kids out of school, it was a matter of hot debate among experts, and it has been watched on the TED website over 31 million times to date (not including over 7 million more times on YouTube).
- Ken Robertson's TED Talk is a personal favorite. Love the anecdote about how Gillian Lynn discovered she was a dancer. If you don't know it yet, its everything that a good talk should be and then.
- There have been three themes running through the conference, which are relevant to what I want to talk about. One is the extraordinary evidence of human creativity in all of the presentations that we've had and in all of the people here; just the variety of it and the range of it.
- Robinson was the author of several more books, including Out of Our Minds: Learning to Be Creative (2001), Finding Your Element (2014) and Creative Schools (2015). He was knighted in 2003.
Nick Corston FRSA writes in memory of Sir Ken Robinson who died this summer
About six years ago I was delighted, if not slightly flattered, to be invited to join the RSA for my “services to innovation in education” because of a project I had co-founded in my sons’ primary school and gave my career up to roll out across the country as a non-profit community enterprise called STEAM Co.
I soon realised how much membership of the Fellowship was going to change my life forever having met and collaborated with the widest range of inspiring, generous and gracious people from across the worlds of education, business and wider society.
I had been inspired to start the project a few years earlier in no small way by Sir Ken Robinson's TED talk on ‘How schools can kill creativity’, which was particularly poignant to me with two young sons and a career behind me in the creative industries.
I particularly enjoyed the RSA’s animate film accompanying Sir Ken's words, distilling his important message down into an even more concise, compelling and accessible format; I assumed that the majority of the other 35,000 RSA Fellows shared mine and Sir Ken's views
Five years ago, in a week I was due to launch STEAM Co. in Liverpool and delighted to include an interactive interview with Sir Ken, I was appalled to see an article in the Times Education Supplement (TES) referring to Sir Ken as the “butcher given a ticker tape parade by the National Union of pigs”.
I challenged the TES’ Editor in Chief, Ann Mroz on this, feeling that the letters FRSA behind her name gave me permission to reach out. She replied saying that the TES was “a broad church” and was duty bound to represent the range of opinions in the education community. Since then I have seen a similarly broad range of opinions represented at the RSA, not least a panel one evening representing the most extreme traditionalist and progressive views.
But if we can't have such conversations how will anything ever change? How will we ever find the middle ground on which we can build for all our futures?
Since that interview in Liverpool Sir Ken Robinson has been incredibly generous and supportive of what I have attempted to do with STEAM Co. I was particularly delighted when he name checked me and my work out of the blue at a major Arts Council conference in London and at other events. So, like many around the world I was saddened to hear of the passing of Sir Ken back in the summer.
When I heard the news, I was sitting in the back of the last camper van available for hire in Britain at the height of Covid-19 summer, on a surf beach in South Wales. This was a country that has recently rolled out a curriculum with creativity at its heart, alongside the values that Sir Ken had long argued were needed to nuture the individual talents of all our children for common good. But how to mark his passing? How to make sure I and as many other people as possible can be part of his legacy?
Last year I started recording an #ArtConnects podcast series which included both the Welsh education minister and Matthew Taylor, Chief Executive of the RSA who went on the record as saying “what you're doing is absolutely brilliant, I'm going to help you make this happen” and has been very supportive since.
Five years ago I gave a two minute talk at the RSA entitled ‘Creativity in Education: It's time to walk the talk,’ citing the inspiration not just of Sir Ken, but also Prof Guy Claxton and Seth Godin, two gurus in education and social change respectively.
In addition to providing STEAM.Co., a framework for people who want to help connect our children with their art and our communities with their schools, my tribute to Sir Ken Robinson is a short podcast series entitled #TalkWalkers20; 20 chats with people who knew and worked with him. One of the most revealing insights came from Mark Featherstone-Witty from the Liverpool Institute of Performing Arts who told me what the schools minister Nick Gibb had said to Sir Ken on meeting him for the first time: “So you're the enemy”
Ken Robinson Is Going To Check This Out Crossword
Sir Ken was never the enemy, but quite frankly one of the most inspiring, generous and gracious people this country never listened to, to its peril.
Photo: Nick Corston with Sir Ken Robinson at the Festival of Education in 2015
Nick Corston is the co-founder of STEAM Co., a non-profit community enterprise that aims to power communities to inspire their children with creativity, a project that he co-founded in his sons’ primary school in Paddington. “We are all born artists” – A Wag Inc film about STEAM Co.
Rebuilding our Cultural Assets post-Covid-19
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Emmie Kell FRSA
Emmie Kell FRSA on the impact of coronavirus on creative businesses and freelancers.
Myth busting our curriculum
Comment
Meena Wood FRSA
Meena Wood FRSA on the challenges we face as educators
Art Connects
Comment
Nick Corston
The #ARTCONNECTS19 Festival, led by RSA Nick Corston, celebrates and inspires creativity in school and work and runs throughout 2019. Will you be a part of it?
Nick Corston FRSA writes in memory of Sir Ken Robinson who died this summer
About six years ago I was delighted, if not slightly flattered, to be invited to join the RSA for my “services to innovation in education” because of a project I had co-founded in my sons’ primary school and gave my career up to roll out across the country as a non-profit community enterprise called STEAM Co.
I soon realised how much membership of the Fellowship was going to change my life forever having met and collaborated with the widest range of inspiring, generous and gracious people from across the worlds of education, business and wider society.
I had been inspired to start the project a few years earlier in no small way by Sir Ken Robinson's TED talk on ‘How schools can kill creativity’, which was particularly poignant to me with two young sons and a career behind me in the creative industries.
I particularly enjoyed the RSA’s animate film accompanying Sir Ken's words, distilling his important message down into an even more concise, compelling and accessible format; I assumed that the majority of the other 35,000 RSA Fellows shared mine and Sir Ken's views
Five years ago, in a week I was due to launch STEAM Co. in Liverpool and delighted to include an interactive interview with Sir Ken, I was appalled to see an article in the Times Education Supplement (TES) referring to Sir Ken as the “butcher given a ticker tape parade by the National Union of pigs”.
I challenged the TES’ Editor in Chief, Ann Mroz on this, feeling that the letters FRSA behind her name gave me permission to reach out. She replied saying that the TES was “a broad church” and was duty bound to represent the range of opinions in the education community. Since then I have seen a similarly broad range of opinions represented at the RSA, not least a panel one evening representing the most extreme traditionalist and progressive views.
Ken Robinson Is Going To Check This Out Now
But if we can't have such conversations how will anything ever change? How will we ever find the middle ground on which we can build for all our futures?
Since that interview in Liverpool Sir Ken Robinson has been incredibly generous and supportive of what I have attempted to do with STEAM Co. I was particularly delighted when he name checked me and my work out of the blue at a major Arts Council conference in London and at other events. So, like many around the world I was saddened to hear of the passing of Sir Ken back in the summer.
When I heard the news, I was sitting in the back of the last camper van available for hire in Britain at the height of Covid-19 summer, on a surf beach in South Wales. This was a country that has recently rolled out a curriculum with creativity at its heart, alongside the values that Sir Ken had long argued were needed to nuture the individual talents of all our children for common good. But how to mark his passing? How to make sure I and as many other people as possible can be part of his legacy?
Last year I started recording an #ArtConnects podcast series which included both the Welsh education minister and Matthew Taylor, Chief Executive of the RSA who went on the record as saying “what you're doing is absolutely brilliant, I'm going to help you make this happen” and has been very supportive since.
Five years ago I gave a two minute talk at the RSA entitled ‘Creativity in Education: It's time to walk the talk,’ citing the inspiration not just of Sir Ken, but also Prof Guy Claxton and Seth Godin, two gurus in education and social change respectively.
In addition to providing STEAM.Co., a framework for people who want to help connect our children with their art and our communities with their schools, my tribute to Sir Ken Robinson is a short podcast series entitled #TalkWalkers20; 20 chats with people who knew and worked with him. One of the most revealing insights came from Mark Featherstone-Witty from the Liverpool Institute of Performing Arts who told me what the schools minister Nick Gibb had said to Sir Ken on meeting him for the first time: “So you're the enemy”
Ken Robinson Is Going To Check This Out Meme
Sir Ken was never the enemy, but quite frankly one of the most inspiring, generous and gracious people this country never listened to, to its peril.
Ken Robinson Is Going To Check This Out Movie
Photo: Nick Corston with Sir Ken Robinson at the Festival of Education in 2015
Nick Corston is the co-founder of STEAM Co., a non-profit community enterprise that aims to power communities to inspire their children with creativity, a project that he co-founded in his sons’ primary school in Paddington. “We are all born artists” – A Wag Inc film about STEAM Co.
Rebuilding our Cultural Assets post-Covid-19
Comment
Emmie Kell FRSA
Emmie Kell FRSA on the impact of coronavirus on creative businesses and freelancers.
Myth busting our curriculum
Comment
Meena Wood FRSA
Meena Wood FRSA on the challenges we face as educators
Art Connects
Comment
Nick Corston
The #ARTCONNECTS19 Festival, led by RSA Nick Corston, celebrates and inspires creativity in school and work and runs throughout 2019. Will you be a part of it?