Sunday, December 8, 2013

Final Draft Unit 3 Essay

Paola Merrill
               
English 101

Unit 3 Final Paper

12/7/2013

According to education legend Sir Ken Robinson, "people grow out of creativity." He believes that the K12 school system oppresses creativity and diverse ideas in children, and makes many singular thinkers believe that they are unintelligent. In our modern world, the K12 curriculum puts math and science as our top priorities, and cuts financial aid to art programs the moment it is in need of funding. While many schools claim to encourage creativity, they do it in a controlled manner by telling a child to be creative, as long as they follow their rules. While concrete subjects suited to logical thinkers are crucial to progress and invention, so are more ambiguous and creative subjects, that not only inspire unique ideas, but encourage critical thinking. Creativity is not only self-expression, but a way to define ourselves as humans. Creativity is primarily associated with the arts, but it is even broader than that. Every time you express an opinion, be it genius or misguided, people are being creative, and that defines us as a people. The K12 curriculum needs to recognize the importance of creative thinking and encourage it as a core part of achieving a rounded education. To encourage creativity and free thinking in our students we must increase funding to our Arts programs and form after school clubs, for instance during their Junior High years where children are beginning to form their identities, and always have opportunities for children to take part in creative endeavors.
Free thinking and creativity, is for the most part, unwelcome in our school system and the K12 curriculum. This stems primarily from the way children are taught, to simply accept information without reflecting on it. In his paper, The Banking Method of Education, Paolo Friere states that in the classroom, "Narration leads the students to memorize mechanically the narrated content... turns them into 'receptacles' to be 'filled' by the teacher." (4) Friere refers to teacher lectures as just another way that students are conditioned to become great test takers, proving their intelligence on a Scantron sheet and their ability to consume temporary information. Simply absorbing information without truly understanding it is not an effective way to learn, since students are not acquiring a deeper understanding of a subject to be able to apply it later in life. Learning this way also prevents a child from forming opinions and finding opportunities to be creative. By creating multiple after school clubs and celebrating the arts, Junior High students can discover a new form of learning that is dynamic and full of passion. In her book, Teaching Critical Thinking, celebrated author bell hooks affirms that, "Schools shun independent thinking, and by the time the student reaches college, they come to dread it." (8) She explains that children are predisposed to be critical thinkers, and begin life wanting to pursue knowledge. Schools that do not fund their creative art programs create an environment that is completely toxic to those who wish to think deeply and form creative opinions on subjects. Those in favor of the present K12 curriculum, including members of the National Association of State Boards of Education, argue that math and science encourages students to think critically, but the truth is that concrete subjects always have definite answers, while creative programs are ambiguous. Creative subjects allow students to find their own answers to questions and be creative with their homework assignments. There isn’t one correct answer, so students get to form their own voice. This can only be achieved through schools giving students constant opportunities to take part in creative subjects, helping them believe their ideas are worth hearing, which spark confidence along with creativity.                                                                        
In John Gatto’s Against School; How School Cripples our Kids, he reflected that, "I taught for thirty years... and during that time I became an expert in boredom." He claims that schools are designed to make sure that no one ever really "grows up." Schools create people that follow trends mindlessly and don't have singular thoughts that allow them to ask questions and to improve themselves and their community. Some might think this behavior has nothing to do with oppressed creativity, but it is actually the core of the evil it does to children. When children are encouraged to be creative they are being encouraged to think for themselves, which is not only revealed through their artistic endeavors but their ability to become free thinking citizens later in life.  To writer Keith Gilyard society can benefit from encouraging creativity, as he states in his article Children, Arts, and Du Bois, that "The common good. Creative arts programs are integral to this vision." (2) Funding creative subjects in our school systems would allow many children to thrive in an environment that holds mastering music and poetry in such high regard as calculus. Multitudes of scientific studies have revealed that not everyone has the same abilities to process and understand the same subjects, but our school systems treat us like we should. Encouraging creativity will also allow students to unravel their sense of self, confidence, opinions, and be able to better apply them later in life.
While increasing opportunities for Junior High students to take part in art programs, Schools must hold creative subjects, such as the arts and classes that encourage singular thought, in high regard. Instead of seeing it as a pastime, schools should celebrate these subjects, and show their students possible career opportunities along those lines. Schools need to stop teaching children to pass tests, but give them an education that will benefit them in the future. As Paulo Friere adequately stated, “Liberating education consists in acts of cognition, not transferals of information.” Many teachers might make the argument that concrete subjects like math and science are more important than art, because they are used in the real world. It is true that these subjects are extremely important, but to say they are more so than art programs is to say that culture is irrelevant. Our culture is made up all forms of art, and if that is lost our culture will loose its identity. As the K12 school system, they cannot let this happen.   
Sir Ken Robinson stated during a TED talk “At the bottom of every school system is art,” and that "Intelligence is diverse and dynamic... and distinct." Intelligence is relative, but school systems tend to make students believe that a test score makes them competent or not. When students evaluate their own intelligence by grades, many feel lacking. The moment, however, that you allow children to begin expressing themselves through any form of art, many show a deep understanding of human emotion. This reveals that intelligence is ‘diverse’ and discouraging students to pursue free thinking is suppressing a large amount of people that could make a difference in the world, if given a chance. Creativity and critical thinking are inexplicably intertwined, and to reap the full benefits school systems must fund and form art programs. As bell hooks summarized in her paper, “In such a community of learning there is no failure. Everyone is participating and sharing whatever resource is needed at a given moment in time to ensure that we leave the classroom knowing that critical thinking empowers us.” (11) As a society we can continually be improving ourselves, and the greatest difference we can make is in the next generation, and the only way is to do this is to encourage each and every form of intelligence. Only then is when we can truly make a difference in our students, and the world.



                                                    
Works Cited Page

          Hooks, bell. “Teaching Critical Thinking: Practical Wisdom.” New York and London: Routledge 2009. Print
           Freire, Paulo. “The Banking Concept of Education.” Pedagogy of the Oppressed. New York: Continuum Books, 1993. Print.          
Gilyard, Keith. “Children, Arts, and Du Bois.” The Council Chronicle. National Council of Teachers of English, Sept 2012. Web. 11/29/13.
Robinson, Ken. “How School Kills Creativity.” TED Talk: Feb 2006. Web.
Gatto, John. "Against School - John Taylor Gatto." Wes Jones, 2003. Web. 

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