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Confounded by conventionality |
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FTLComm - Tisdale - Friday, March 2, 2007 | ||||||
Among us humans, daring to be different can get you into really serious trouble on the playground, in school, or even at home. As a species, we praise conformity and shun those who are different. |
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It would come as no shock to you to know that during my lifetime, left handed people have had to adapt to a right handed world, even though they are a significant proportion of the population. Similarly, we know that homosexuality has been around forever and the persecution of this difference is only modestly curtailed in our society. As a part of my training, as an educational psychologist, I spent a lot of my time working on the measuring tools that are used to determine the relative abilities of developing children. We like to refer to this as intelligence, but have come to realise that remarkable differences in ability exist in the population, yet we exercise extreme measures to get just about everyone into the same relatively narrow band of abilities. People with very high ability and very low cognitive abilities are rarely given an opportunity in our world of conformity, as we demand rigourous similarity. |
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A quick survey of successful novelists and writers will immediately show you the |
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disproportionate number of these creative people to being just a bit odd, in one way or another. For example, there tends to be large numbers of left handed people, homosexuals and people whom we would consider eccentric, among the successfully creative. A Yale psychology professor Robert J. Sternberg has put together teaching materials and activities that would tend to improve a person's creativity and he is only one of the many psychologists who have realised that the seed of exceptional ability is being able to think creatively. Today our world is faced with some very serious problems. Many of these problems are extremely complex, yet we seem bent on attacking these things with standard conventional means. Despite the massive amounts of money raised and spent on cancer research, the innovations in medicine and treatment are coming not from the research money, but from odd-ball creative thinking. Global warming, racism, cultural conflict, the raping of the natural resources of the planet, are all real and dangerous problems that need to be solved, and sadly, all of them seem to be failing. |
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As a high school principal I had to witness the amazing swing away from creativity in the classroom and by the very conservative nature of students. The generation who came along in the eighties and nineties were all seemingly bent on out doing one another by being so sucked into the corporate world, that we have seen social sciences being snuffed out in colleges and MBA programmes flourishing. As a student in the sixties we considered commerce and engineering students as the grunts, unable to think themselves out of any issue and prone to repeat the same mistake time after time after time. Has that changed? The problems facing mankind in this twenty-first century need more than those who think that strong leadership is the solution to political problems, we need people willing to risk, willing to take a chance on being different and suggesting solutions that are radical. This is not the time to turn to bible thumpers who declare that all is needed, is faith and rigid conformity to dogma. We need cutting edge science, that will ask hard questions and not accept traditional theory as answers. The responsibility of shaping the future is not in the hands of the children of tomorrow, it is in the minds of those who demand conformity today. You individually have to do a reality check and note that the lack of success and the achievement of failure is so easy and as the path of least resistance it is the trail most followed. |
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