Book Review: The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything by Lou Aronica and Ken Robinson

Like many others, I first came across Ken Robinson via his phenominal TED Talk clip about how schools are undermining creativity, sent to me by a friend who said I just “had to watch it.” I took her advice and not only did I watch the video, I immediately ordered the book. Robinson is certainly a good speaker, and he makes his points with humour, and a good dose of self-deprecating candour. But it isn't the quality of Robinson's delivery which hooked me. It was the obvious truth in what he was saying. Though much of the book follows what he talks about in the video, it is an excellent expansion of the topic, looking at the natural and varied forms of creativity that all of us possess, and how we can help our children and ourselves live up to that creativity. Aronica’s participation remains firmly in the background. For anyone familiar with Robinson’s speaking style, this is clearly his voice and he is most definitely the frontman.

The book is rich in anecdote and story (that's clearly Robinson's own element), and explores the real life 'left of centre' creativity of well-known figures such as Gillian Lynne, Matt Groening, Paul Samuelson, Mick Fleetwood, Bart Conner, Albert Einstein, Paul McCartney, Meg Ryan, Debbie Allen and a number of others. Many of these people were interviewed directly by Robinson and present engaging stories about how they nearly missed out on realising their capabilities, but for a chance encounter, a great mentor or a dedication to push through failure. Robinson is not afraid to put himself into the story either, and talks about his own mentorship experiences, his struggles, and those of his wife's and his friends. A common feature of all the people spotlighted in this book is that few of them were straight 'to the top' achievers. Many struggled at school and it was the very place where they struggled that formed the nexus of their talent and ultimate achievement. Good examples of this are Buckminster Fuller, designer of the geodesic dome (a strange feature of my own childhood) and Albert Einstein. Both Fuller and Einstein found their Element in an unusual ability to fuse different disciplines:

The second feature of intelligence is that it is tremendously dynamic. The human brain is intensely interactive. You use multiple parts of it in every task you perform. It is in fact in the dynamic use of the brain — finding new connections between things — that true breakthroughs occur. (49)

The Element goes beyond the individual and exposes many of our public systems including schooling and governmental policy. Although the tone is always warm and friendly and usually funny too with a commonsense approach, there is much in here to inform teachers and those that make legislative decisions (like the disastrous “No Child Left Behind” 2001 Act in the U.S.) Above all, this is a book that celebrates the diversity of human capability, informed by a deep humanism and presented in a way that is powerful and perspective changing:

I don't mean to say that no other species on Earth has any form of imaginative ability. But certainly none comes close to showing the complex abilities that flow from the human imagination. Other species communicate, but they don’t have laptops. They sing, but they don’t produce musicals. They can be agile, but they didn’t come up with Cirque du Soleil. They can look worried, but they don’t publish theories on the meaning of life and spend their evenings drinking Jack Daniel’s and listening to Miles Davis. And they don’t meet at water holes, poring over images from the Hubble telescope and trying to figure out what those might mean for themselves and all other hyenas. (67)

The book contains eleven chapters that cover such topics as the nature of an Element, about broadening our notions about the types of intelligence and where it might lie, about the power of creativity, about how to get “in the zone” (a mental space where our abilities suddenly flow freely, about the importance of community groups or “tribes”, about resistance, attitude, mentorship, on finding the Element late in life, and on the role of the education system.

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2

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Article Author: Maggie Ball

Magdalena Ball runs The Compulsive Reader. She is the author of the novels Black Cow and Sleep Before Evening, the poetry books Repulsion Thrust and Quark Soup, a nonfiction book The Art of Assessment, and, in collaboration with Carolyn Howard-Johnson, …

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  • 1 - Wilma Wu

    Feb 20, 2010 at 2:12 pm

    "The Element" is fantastic and inspirational.

  • 2 - Douglas Flacks

    Sep 19, 2010 at 10:53 am

    Simply astounding! Left me breathless!

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