Sunni Brown: Doodlers, unite!

238,338 views ・ 2011-09-27

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:15
So I just want to tell you my story.
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I spend a lot of time
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teaching adults how to use visual language
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and doodling in the workplace.
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And naturally, I encounter a lot of resistance,
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because it's considered to be anti-intellectual
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and counter to serious learning.
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But I have a problem with that belief,
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because I know that doodling has a profound impact
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on the way that we can process information
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and the way that we can solve problems.
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So I was curious about why there was a disconnect
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between the way our society perceives doodling
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and the way that the reality is.
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So I discovered some very interesting things.
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For example, there's no such thing
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as a flattering definition of a doodle.
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In the 17th century, a doodle was a simpleton or a fool --
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as in Yankee Doodle.
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In the 18th century, it became a verb,
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and it meant to swindle or ridicule or to make fun of someone.
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In the 19th century, it was a corrupt politician.
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And today, we have what is perhaps our most offensive definition,
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at least to me, which is the following:
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To doodle officially means
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to dawdle,
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to dilly dally, to monkey around,
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to make meaningless marks,
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to do something of little value, substance or import,
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and -- my personal favorite --
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to do nothing.
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No wonder people are averse to doodling at work.
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Doing nothing at work is akin to masturbating at work;
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it's totally inappropriate.
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01:36
(Laughter)
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Additionally, I've heard horror stories
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from people whose teachers scolded them, of course, for doodling in classrooms.
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And they have bosses who scold them for doodling in the boardroom.
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There is a powerful cultural norm against doodling
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in settings in which we are supposed to learn something.
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And unfortunately,
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the press tends to reinforce this norm
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when they're reporting on a doodling scene --
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of an important person at a confirmation hearing and the like --
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they typically use words like "discovered"
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or "caught" or "found out,"
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as if there's some sort of criminal act being committed.
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And additionally, there is a psychological aversion to doodling --
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thank you, Freud.
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In the 1930s, Freud told us all
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that you could analyze people's psyches
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based on their doodles.
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This is not accurate, but it did happen to Tony Blair
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at the Davos Forum in 2005,
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when his doodles were, of course, "discovered"
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and he was labeled the following things.
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Now it turned out to be Bill Gates' doodle.
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(Laughter)
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And Bill, if you're here, nobody thinks you're megalomaniacal.
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But that does contribute
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to people not wanting to share their doodles.
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And here is the real deal. Here's what I believe.
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I think that our culture
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is so intensely focused on verbal information
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that we're almost blinded to the value of doodling.
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And I'm not comfortable with that.
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And so because of that belief that I think needs to be burst,
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I'm here to send us all hurtling back to the truth.
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And here's the truth:
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doodling is an incredibly powerful tool,
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and it is a tool that we need to remember and to re-learn.
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So here's a new definition for doodling.
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03:10
And I hope there's someone in here from The Oxford English Dictionary,
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because I want to talk to you later.
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Here's the real definition:
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Doodling is really to make spontaneous marks to help yourself think.
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That is why millions of people doodle.
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Here's another interesting truth about the doodle:
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People who doodle when they're exposed to verbal information
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retain more of that information
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than their non-doodling counterparts.
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We think doodling is something you do when you lose focus,
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but in reality, it is a preemptive measure
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to stop you from losing focus.
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Additionally, it has a profound effect
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on creative problem-solving
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and deep information processing.
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There are four ways that learners intake information
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so that they can make decisions.
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They are visual, auditory,
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reading and writing and kinesthetic.
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Now in order for us to really chew on information
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and do something with it,
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we have to engage at least two of those modalities,
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or we have to engage one of those modalities
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coupled with an emotional experience.
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The incredible contribution of the doodle
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is that it engages all four learning modalities simultaneously
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with the possibility of an emotional experience.
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That is a pretty solid contribution
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for a behavior equated with doing nothing.
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This is so nerdy,
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but this made me cry when I discovered this.
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So they did anthropological research
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into the unfolding of artistic activity in children,
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and they found that, across space and time,
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all children exhibit the same evolution in visual logic
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as they grow.
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In other words, they have a shared and growing
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complexity in visual language
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that happens in a predictable order.
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And I think that is incredible.
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I think that means doodling is native to us
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and we simply are denying ourselves that instinct.
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And finally, a lot a people aren't privy to this,
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but the doodle is a precursor
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to some of our greatest cultural assets.
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This is but one:
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this is Frank Gehry the architect's precursor to the Guggenheim in Abu Dhabi.
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So here is my point:
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Under no circumstances should doodling be eradicated
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from a classroom or a boardroom
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or even the war room.
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On the contrary,
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doodling should be leveraged in precisely those situations
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where information density is very high
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and the need for processing that information is very high.
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And I will go you one further.
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Because doodling is so universally accessible
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and it is not intimidating as an art form,
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it can be leveraged as a portal
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through which we move people
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into higher levels of visual literacy.
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My friends, the doodle has never been
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the nemesis of intellectual thought.
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In reality, it is one of its greatest allies.
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05:39
Thank you.
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05:41
(Applause)
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