Creativity and imagination are skills that
are sought after by employers looking for the perfect candidate for a job.
Employers want someone who is capable of thinking of original ideas and
throwing themselves out there to pursue bigger possibilities. These are the
people that can push a company further and turn something small into something
that touches everyone’s lives in one way or another. But, why are these people
so hard to find? Surely, there has to more than a handful of people who are
capable of being creative and imaginative to reach previously unthinkable
places. In theory, that’s correct. In fact, everyone that was once a child is
capable of the same creative thought process that many infamous people are
known for. And that’s, well, everyone. Now, I’m not saying that the people who
have carried this thought process into their adult lives and made a career out
of it aren’t few in number, because they are. These people have managed to
preserve their childlike wonder and imagination through the harshest of
circumstances. That circumstance being, the education system. The current
education system teaches the skill of critical thinking, which is a great skill
to have. But in doing this, it manages to destroy the creative thinking that children
already possess before they even begin going to preschool.
The way the education system works is that
it slowly replaces the process of creative thinking with critical thinking.
Kids are quickly taught that there is only one right answer to problems and
that they have to approach everything logically. This has turned creativity and
imagination into childish characteristics because they are most often present
in children. In school, the main focus is on math, science, English and history,
without any strong emphasis on subjects that promote creativity and
originality. By creating a system that puts every single kid on the same path
there is no existing originality. This system, additionally, alienates the kids
that are still capable of creative thinking after years of going to school has
been trying to teach them to stop thinking creatively and start thinking
critically. Those kids are labelled as dumb or lazy and pushed to the side to let
the “real” geniuses shine. I’m not suggesting that we flip this system and let
the kids who think critically be stuck in the shadow of creative thinking, I’m
merely suggesting that we consider that not everyone is meant to think in the
exact same way. The way our education system is now treats kids like computers
that you can program to do exactly what you want, and ignores the fact that
this is destroying great minds.
It’s recommended that students pile on
more “impressive” classes that require “actual” intelligence. It’s this kind of
system that leads to some sort of weird intelligence hierarchy that creates
entitled students. These students demand their teachers to raise their grade to
an A. They cringe at a 90% on a test. The students who repeatedly mock someone
who has a C in a class as if that somehow makes them a lesser student because
they’re in a program for smart kids and “all smart kids get all A’s”. In their
defense, they are determined to get into great colleges so they can get a great
job. However, they seem to ignore the fact that they can only get so far in a
career without creative thinking. This system is a never-ending cycle of
ripping creativity away from kids and then teaching these kids to do the same
to the next generation. We need to develop a system that acknowledges different
learning and thinking processes without alienating one in favor of another.
When I talk about creativity, I’m not
specifically referring to artistic ability. People don’t put creativity on
their resume to tell the employer that they can play the piano or that they can
draw a REALLY realistic tree. I’m referring to a much coveted thinking process when
going into today’s work force. We have a rapidly developing society. Technology
is advancing at an incredible rate and, like Ken Robinson says, it’s going to
be impossible to keep progressing if we continue to push creative thinkers to
the side. Sure, the education system we have now has managed to produce some
prominent creative thinkers, but that’s by pure luck. These people have managed
to preserve their creative thinking process against all odds. If there have
only been a handful of creative thinkers that made incredible contributions to
our society, then maybe we should start thinking of a system that would increase
the amount of creative thinkers that are heading into the work force. Our
society can’t continue to develop and advance when we are purposely advocating
a system that teaches everyone to think the same way. We can’t sit back and not
think of a solution because there doesn’t seem to be one because if you ask
someone who thinks creatively they could give you countless solutions to our
education system problem. Creative thinkers have made advancements to our
society and culture that people now couldn’t live without. It’s time to return
the favor and change our education system to support the creative thinking
process.
Robinson, Ken. “Do Schools Kill Creativity?” TED. TED, Feb. 2006. Web. 19 June 2016.
Batey, Mark. “The Key Skill for the 21st
Century is Creativity.” YouTube.
YouTube, 04 Aug. 2011. Web. 25 June
2016.
Robinson, Ken. Out
of Our Minds: Learning to be Creative. Oxford: Capstone, 2011. Print.
Zak, Rebekah. “Raising Creativity.” Raising Creativity. YouTube, 29 July
2014. Web. 25 June 2016