Logo video2dn
  • Сохранить видео с ютуба
  • Категории
    • Музыка
    • Кино и Анимация
    • Автомобили
    • Животные
    • Спорт
    • Путешествия
    • Игры
    • Люди и Блоги
    • Юмор
    • Развлечения
    • Новости и Политика
    • Howto и Стиль
    • Diy своими руками
    • Образование
    • Наука и Технологии
    • Некоммерческие Организации
  • О сайте

Скачать или смотреть Correctness makes you less creative. Here’s why | Anthony Brandt | Big Think

  • Big Think
  • 2020-03-02
  • 14151
Correctness makes you less creative. Here’s why | Anthony Brandt | Big Think
  • ok logo

Скачать Correctness makes you less creative. Here’s why | Anthony Brandt | Big Think бесплатно в качестве 4к (2к / 1080p)

У нас вы можете скачать бесплатно Correctness makes you less creative. Here’s why | Anthony Brandt | Big Think или посмотреть видео с ютуба в максимальном доступном качестве.

Для скачивания выберите вариант из формы ниже:

  • Информация по загрузке:

Cкачать музыку Correctness makes you less creative. Here’s why | Anthony Brandt | Big Think бесплатно в формате MP3:

Если иконки загрузки не отобразились, ПОЖАЛУЙСТА, НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если у вас возникли трудности с загрузкой, пожалуйста, свяжитесь с нами по контактам, указанным в нижней части страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса video2dn.com

Описание к видео Correctness makes you less creative. Here’s why | Anthony Brandt | Big Think

Correctness makes you less creative. Here’s why.
Watch the newest video from Big Think: https://bigth.ink/NewVideo
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anthony Brandt argues that everyone is born with facilities for creativity. Being creative means being a risk-taker, and that's something that needs to be encouraged and taught to children.

Techniques such as sandboxing place more of an emphasis on the effort as opposed to the results. This gives people, children especially, permission to try different approaches and offer new ideas without the usual pressures.

Without experimentation, there can be no innovation.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ANTHONY BRANDT:

Anthony Brandt is a composer and professor at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music. He is also Artistic Director of the contemporary music ensemble Musiqa, winner of two Adventurous Programming Awards from Chamber Music America and ASCAP. Brandt has received a Koussevitzky Commission from the Library of Congress and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, Meet-the-Composer and the Houston Arts Alliance. He has co-authored papers on music cognition published in the journals Frontiers and Brain Connectivity. Brandt has written two chamber operas and works for orchestra, chamber ensembles, dance, theater, film, television, and sound and art installations. He currently lives in Houston with his wife and children.

Check his latest book The Runaway Species: How human creativity remakes the world on https://amzn.to/2VuXm9Z
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:

ANTHONY BRANDT: Sometimes we may feel that we, ourselves, aren't very creative. And, in fact, I saw a movie, The Gambler, with Mark Wahlberg and he's an English teacher and he looks at the class and he says, ""If you're not a genius, don't even try."" And I can't think of more horrible advice to give anybody. The fact of the matter is we all are born with a creative license. We have this software running in our brains.

When I look at my heroes in composition they are all incredible risk takers. And it's a constant reminder that you can't introduce something new to the world and be certain of the results. And so tolerating the risk, living with the risk, even enjoying it is again part of being a creative person. And that's something that you have to train in young people. One of the ways you do that is you praise their effort, not necessarily the results. And you honor the fact that oh my goodness, you were willing to go out there and try that and try that and try that, things you've never done before and maybe no one else has done before. Okay, it didn't pan out but what an extraordinary effort.

And one of the ways you can do this is the curriculum, for instance, is through something called sandboxing, where let's say you've given an assignment in a class and you say look, first step, everybody come up with eight possible solutions to this problem. But I'm not going to grade them but you and I will have a conversation about which ones are more successful and which ones are less successful. And I'll give you some feedback and I'll listen to what you feel about it. You can tell me your favorite was number three. I can say five looks pretty awesome. And then together we'll decide which one you develop to completion and that's the one you'll get graded on. And that gives the student the permission to try all sorts of crazy things without worrying about being evaluated and give them an opportunity to take risks without having the consequence of a grade.

It's one of the problems with standardized testing in the schools for instance because there is a premium on coming up with the right answer as fast as possible. And coming up with wrong answers is a total waste of time and has absolutely no value. The only thing is to point yourself exactly at the right answer. And creativity works essentially on almost a 180 on that. That the whole idea is to spend as much time as possible proliferating options, having standards of judgment which vary from field to field as to which ones deserve to be developed to completion. And then letting all the other ones go but with gratitude that they gave you a full spectrum of possibilities.

So what's most important is that we have to give every child the chance to take, receive knowledge and use it as a springboard and to use it as a launching pad to experiment, to try out things their own way. To take what we treasure from the past and totally remodel it and redesign it. When we do that we will have a thriving culture and society of innovation.

Комментарии

Информация по комментариям в разработке

Похожие видео

  • Perfectionism wastes everyone’s time. Here’s how. | Melanie Katzman | Big Think
    Perfectionism wastes everyone’s time. Here’s how. | Melanie Katzman | Big Think
    5 лет назад
  • Richard Dawkins: The Importance of Doing Useless Things | Big Think
    Richard Dawkins: The Importance of Doing Useless Things | Big Think
    14 лет назад
  • Less Internet Equals More Creativity
    Less Internet Equals More Creativity
    10 лет назад
  • Why schools need to embrace kids' creativity | Sir Ken Robinson
    Why schools need to embrace kids' creativity | Sir Ken Robinson
    4 года назад
  • How Creativity And Mental Illness Are Linked
    How Creativity And Mental Illness Are Linked
    10 лет назад
  • 3 creative exercises for analytical thinkers
    3 creative exercises for analytical thinkers
    1 год назад
  • 7 Signs You're a Highly Creative Soul
    7 Signs You're a Highly Creative Soul
    7 лет назад
  • The benefits of flexible thinking | BBC Ideas
    The benefits of flexible thinking | BBC Ideas
    4 года назад
  • Answer these 4 questions to become a better leader | Peter Fuda | Big Think
    Answer these 4 questions to become a better leader | Peter Fuda | Big Think
    5 лет назад
  • The power of everyday creativity | Emily Eisenhart | TEDxUTAustin
    The power of everyday creativity | Emily Eisenhart | TEDxUTAustin
    6 месяцев назад
  • Become an intellectual explorer: Master the art of conversation | Emily Chamlee-Wright | Big Think
    Become an intellectual explorer: Master the art of conversation | Emily Chamlee-Wright | Big Think
    6 лет назад
  • Арест военных в Украине / Обращение Киева к Москве
    Арест военных в Украине / Обращение Киева к Москве
    3 часа назад
  • The art of walking: How this everyday act can bring you inner peace | Erling Kagge | Big Think
    The art of walking: How this everyday act can bring you inner peace | Erling Kagge | Big Think
    5 лет назад
  • The Secret to Telling a Great Story — in Less Than 60 Seconds | Jenny Hoyos | TED
    The Secret to Telling a Great Story — in Less Than 60 Seconds | Jenny Hoyos | TED
    1 год назад
  • Обращение к нации, с которого началась война (English subtitles) @Максим Кац
    Обращение к нации, с которого началась война (English subtitles) @Максим Кац
    1 день назад
  • Are you creative or analytical? Find out in 5 seconds.
    Are you creative or analytical? Find out in 5 seconds.
    12 лет назад
  • Be a better leader: Knowing the dangers of ‘yes men’ | Garrett Reisman | Big Think
    Be a better leader: Knowing the dangers of ‘yes men’ | Garrett Reisman | Big Think
    5 лет назад
  • George Does The Opposite | The Opposite | Seinfeld
    George Does The Opposite | The Opposite | Seinfeld
    4 года назад
  • 3 Ways to Express Your Thoughts So That Everyone Will Understand You | Alan Alda | Big Think
    3 Ways to Express Your Thoughts So That Everyone Will Understand You | Alan Alda | Big Think
    8 лет назад
  • 19 Simple Psychological Tricks That Actually Work
    19 Simple Psychological Tricks That Actually Work
    7 лет назад
  • О нас
  • Контакты
  • Отказ от ответственности - Disclaimer
  • Условия использования сайта - TOS
  • Политика конфиденциальности

video2dn Copyright © 2023 - 2025

Контакты для правообладателей video2contact@gmail.com