How to build your creative confidence | David Kelley

2,324,626 views ・ 2012-05-16

TED


Dvaput kliknite na engleske titlove ispod za reprodukciju videozapisa.

00:00
Translator: Timothy Covell Reviewer: Morton Bast
0
0
7000
Prevoditelj: Suzana Baric Recezent: Tilen Pigac - EFZG
00:16
I wanted to talk to you today about creative confidence.
1
16433
3629
00:20
I'm going to start way back in the third grade
2
20703
3144
00:23
at Oakdale School in Barberton, Ohio.
3
23871
2921
00:27
I remember one day my best friend Brian was working on a project.
4
27257
3980
00:31
He was making a horse out of the clay our teacher kept under the sink.
5
31750
4363
00:37
And at one point, one of the girls that was sitting at his table,
6
37376
3559
00:40
seeing what he was doing, leaned over and said to him,
7
40959
3614
00:44
"That's terrible. That doesn't look anything like a horse."
8
44597
3054
00:49
And Brian's shoulders sank.
9
49025
1778
00:50
And he wadded up the clay horse and he threw it back in the bin.
10
50827
3313
00:55
I never saw Brian do a project like that ever again.
11
55045
4304
00:59
And I wonder how often that happens, you know?
12
59955
2561
01:03
It seems like when I tell that story of Brian to my class,
13
63356
3485
01:08
a lot of them want to come up after class
14
68286
2023
01:10
and tell me about their similar experience,
15
70333
2017
01:12
how a teacher shut them down,
16
72374
1610
01:14
or how a student was particularly cruel to them.
17
74008
2661
01:16
And then some kind of opt out of thinking of themselves as creative
18
76693
3542
01:20
at that point.
19
80259
1155
01:22
And I see that opting out that happens in childhood,
20
82415
3622
01:26
and it moves in and becomes more ingrained, even,
21
86061
3295
01:29
by the time you get to adult life.
22
89380
2000
01:33
So we see a lot of this.
23
93401
4137
01:37
When we have a workshop
24
97562
1400
01:38
or when we have clients in to work with us side by side,
25
98986
2746
01:41
eventually we get to the point in the process
26
101756
2277
01:44
that's kind of fuzzy or unconventional.
27
104057
2321
01:47
And eventually, these big-shot executives whip out their BlackBerrys
28
107003
3538
01:51
and they say they have to make really important phone calls,
29
111207
2903
01:54
and they head for the exits.
30
114134
1571
01:56
And they're just so uncomfortable.
31
116278
1836
01:58
When we track them down and ask them what's going on,
32
118550
2619
02:01
they say something like, "I'm just not the creative type."
33
121193
2923
02:04
But we know that's not true.
34
124828
1619
02:06
If they stick with the process, if they stick with it,
35
126963
2668
02:09
they end up doing amazing things.
36
129655
2221
02:11
And they surprise themselves at just how innovative
37
131900
2950
02:14
they and their teams really are.
38
134874
2171
02:18
So I've been looking at this fear of judgment that we have,
39
138368
4586
02:22
that you don't do things, you're afraid you're going to be judged;
40
142978
3482
02:26
if you don't say the right creative thing, you're going to be judged.
41
146484
3797
02:31
And I had a major breakthrough,
42
151014
1962
02:33
when I met the psychologist Albert Bandura.
43
153000
4167
02:37
I don't know if you know Albert Bandura, but if you go to Wikipedia,
44
157191
3277
02:40
it says that he's the fourth most important psychologist in history --
45
160492
4142
02:44
you know, like Freud, Skinner, somebody and Bandura.
46
164658
3709
02:48
(Laughter)
47
168391
1412
02:49
Bandura is 86 and he still works at Stanford.
48
169827
2984
02:52
And he's just a lovely guy.
49
172835
1756
02:56
So I went to see him,
50
176342
1280
02:57
because he's just worked on phobias for a long time,
51
177646
3502
03:01
which I'm very interested in.
52
181172
1433
03:02
He had developed this way,
53
182629
4238
03:06
this, kind of, methodology,
54
186891
2726
03:09
that ended up curing people in a very short amount of time,
55
189641
2951
03:12
like, in four hours.
56
192616
1359
03:13
He had a huge cure rate of people who had phobias.
57
193999
3436
03:17
And we talked about snakes -- I don't know why --
58
197459
2964
03:20
we talked about snakes and fear of snakes as a phobia.
59
200447
4182
03:25
And it was really enjoyable, really interesting.
60
205531
2956
03:28
He told me that he'd invite the test subject in,
61
208511
4943
03:33
and he'd say, "You know, there's a snake in the next room
62
213478
2887
03:36
and we're going to go in there."
63
216389
1604
03:39
To which, he reported, most of them replied,
64
219681
2140
03:41
"Hell no! I'm not going in there, certainly if there's a snake in there."
65
221845
4780
03:46
But Bandura has a step-by-step process that was super successful.
66
226649
4300
03:50
So he'd take people to this two-way mirror
67
230973
2906
03:53
looking into the room where the snake was.
68
233903
2295
03:56
And he'd get them comfortable with that.
69
236628
2040
03:58
Then through a series of steps,
70
238692
1556
04:00
he'd move them and they'd be standing in the doorway with the door open,
71
240272
3685
04:03
and they'd be looking in there.
72
243981
1514
04:05
And he'd get them comfortable with that.
73
245519
1947
04:07
And then many more steps later, baby steps,
74
247490
2690
04:10
they'd be in the room, they'd have a leather glove like a welder's glove on,
75
250204
4072
04:14
and they'd eventually touch the snake.
76
254300
2654
04:17
And when they touched the snake, everything was fine. They were cured.
77
257835
4604
04:22
In fact, everything was better than fine.
78
262463
2120
04:24
These people who had lifelong fears of snakes
79
264607
3253
04:28
were saying things like,
80
268479
1510
04:30
"Look how beautiful that snake is."
81
270656
1978
04:32
And they were holding it in their laps.
82
272658
3115
04:36
Bandura calls this process "guided mastery."
83
276933
3553
04:40
I love that term: guided mastery.
84
280842
2587
04:44
And something else happened.
85
284341
1680
04:46
These people who went through the process and touched the snake
86
286482
3502
04:50
ended up having less anxiety about other things in their lives.
87
290008
3503
04:54
They tried harder, they persevered longer,
88
294779
2572
04:57
and they were more resilient in the face of failure.
89
297375
2756
05:01
They just gained a new confidence.
90
301088
2720
05:05
And Bandura calls that confidence "self-efficacy,"
91
305399
4079
05:09
the sense that you can change the world
92
309859
2888
05:12
and that you can attain what you set out to do.
93
312771
2824
05:16
Well, meeting Bandura was really cathartic for me,
94
316717
2764
05:19
because I realized that this famous scientist
95
319505
3533
05:23
had documented and scientifically validated
96
323062
3160
05:26
something that we've seen happen for the last 30 years:
97
326246
3391
05:29
that we could take people who had the fear that they weren't creative,
98
329661
3789
05:33
and we could take them through a series of steps,
99
333474
2726
05:36
kind of like a series of small successes,
100
336224
3396
05:39
and they turn fear into familiarity.
101
339644
3350
05:43
And they surprise themselves.
102
343575
1475
05:45
That transformation is amazing.
103
345074
2003
05:47
We see it at the d.school all the time.
104
347101
2396
05:49
People from all different kinds of disciplines,
105
349521
2706
05:52
they think of themselves as only analytical.
106
352251
2491
05:54
And they come in and they go through the process, our process,
107
354766
3504
05:58
they build confidence and now they think of themselves differently.
108
358294
3182
06:01
And they're totally emotionally excited about the fact that they walk around
109
361500
5065
06:06
thinking of themselves as a creative person.
110
366589
2263
06:10
So I thought one of the things I'd do today
111
370826
2056
06:12
is take you through and show you what this journey looks like.
112
372906
3202
06:16
To me, that journey looks like Doug Dietz.
113
376738
4494
06:23
Doug Dietz is a technical person.
114
383486
1914
06:25
He designs large medical imaging equipment.
115
385424
3798
06:29
He's worked for GE, and he's had a fantastic career.
116
389692
3260
06:33
But at one point, he had a moment of crisis.
117
393502
2426
06:36
He was in the hospital looking at one of his MRI machines in use,
118
396326
4073
06:40
when he saw a young family, and this little girl.
119
400423
3247
06:44
And that little girl was crying and was terrified.
120
404047
3452
06:47
And Doug was really disappointed to learn
121
407523
2546
06:50
that nearly 80 percent of the pediatric patients in this hospital
122
410902
3855
06:54
had to be sedated in order to deal with his MRI machine.
123
414781
3718
07:00
And this was really disappointing to Doug,
124
420325
2079
07:02
because before this time, he was proud of what he did.
125
422428
2653
07:05
He was saving lives with this machine.
126
425105
2131
07:07
But it really hurt him to see the fear that this machine caused in kids.
127
427697
4520
07:12
About that time, he was at the d.school at Stanford taking classes.
128
432698
4460
07:17
He was learning about our process, about design thinking, about empathy,
129
437182
4651
07:21
about iterative prototyping.
130
441857
1825
07:23
And he would take this new knowledge and do something quite extraordinary.
131
443706
4689
07:28
He would redesign the entire experience
132
448419
3737
07:32
of being scanned.
133
452180
1238
07:33
And this is what he came up with.
134
453820
1599
07:35
(Laughter)
135
455443
1019
07:36
He turned it into an adventure for the kids.
136
456486
2573
07:39
He painted the walls and he painted the machine,
137
459083
2258
07:41
and he got the operators retrained by people who know kids,
138
461365
2779
07:44
like children's museum people.
139
464168
2510
07:46
And now when the kid comes, it's an experience.
140
466702
3698
07:50
And they talk to them about the noise and the movement of the ship.
141
470424
3606
07:54
And when they come, they say,
142
474054
1397
07:55
"OK, you're going to go into the pirate ship,
143
475475
2127
07:57
but be very still, because we don't want the pirates to find you."
144
477626
3517
08:02
And the results were super dramatic:
145
482574
2756
08:06
from something like 80 percent of the kids needing to be sedated,
146
486234
3150
08:09
to something like 10 percent of the kids needing to be sedated.
147
489408
4254
08:13
And the hospital and GE were happy, too,
148
493686
2039
08:15
because you didn't have to call the anesthesiologist all the time,
149
495749
3159
08:18
and they could put more kids through the machine in a day.
150
498932
2808
08:21
So the quantitative results were great.
151
501764
1907
08:23
But Doug's results that he cared about were much more qualitative.
152
503695
3666
08:27
He was with one of the mothers
153
507723
1726
08:29
waiting for her child to come out of the scan.
154
509473
2310
08:31
And when the little girl came out of her scan,
155
511807
2366
08:34
she ran up to her mother and said,
156
514197
1896
08:36
"Mommy, can we come back tomorrow?"
157
516117
1940
08:38
(Laughter)
158
518081
2228
08:41
And so, I've heard Doug tell the story many times
159
521306
3421
08:44
of his personal transformation
160
524751
2286
08:47
and the breakthrough design that happened from it,
161
527061
3346
08:50
but I've never really seen him tell the story of the little girl
162
530431
3111
08:53
without a tear in his eye.
163
533566
1437
08:55
Doug's story takes place in a hospital.
164
535315
2265
08:58
I know a thing or two about hospitals.
165
538281
2179
09:01
A few years ago, I felt a lump on the side of my neck.
166
541730
3170
09:06
It was my turn in the MRI machine.
167
546471
2195
09:09
It was cancer, it was the bad kind.
168
549224
2960
09:12
I was told I had a 40 percent chance of survival.
169
552208
3159
09:16
So while you're sitting around with the other patients,
170
556163
2906
09:19
in your pajamas,
171
559093
1224
09:20
and everybody's pale and thin --
172
560341
2028
09:22
(Laughter)
173
562393
1016
09:23
you know? -- and you're waiting for your turn to get the gamma rays,
174
563433
3265
09:26
you think of a lot of things.
175
566722
1652
09:28
Mostly, you think about: Am I going to survive?
176
568398
2578
09:31
And I thought a lot about:
177
571641
1268
09:32
What was my daughter's life going to be like without me?
178
572933
2918
09:37
But you think about other things.
179
577756
2418
09:40
I thought a lot about: What was I put on Earth to do?
180
580198
2986
09:43
What was my calling? What should I do?
181
583208
3242
09:46
I was lucky because I had lots of options.
182
586623
2048
09:48
We'd been working in health and wellness,
183
588695
1959
09:50
and K-12, and the developing world.
184
590678
2098
09:52
so there were lots of projects that I could work on.
185
592800
2652
09:55
But then I decided and committed at this point,
186
595872
2318
09:58
to the thing I most wanted to do,
187
598214
1845
10:01
which was to help as many people as possible
188
601494
3691
10:05
regain the creative confidence they lost along their way.
189
605209
3132
10:09
And if I was going to survive, that's what I wanted to do.
190
609082
2824
10:11
I survived, just so you know.
191
611930
1461
10:13
(Laughter)
192
613415
2071
10:15
(Applause)
193
615510
6619
10:22
I really believe that when people gain this confidence --
194
622243
3905
10:26
and we see it all the time at the d.school and at IDEO --
195
626172
3001
10:29
that they actually start working on the things
196
629197
2798
10:32
that are really important in their lives.
197
632019
1987
10:34
We see people quit what they're doing and go in new directions.
198
634030
3711
10:37
We see them come up with more interesting -- and just more -- ideas,
199
637765
6449
10:44
so they can choose from better ideas.
200
644238
2903
10:47
And they just make better decisions.
201
647165
2023
10:49
I know at TED, you're supposed to have a change-the-world kind of thing,
202
649758
3493
10:53
isn't that -- everybody has a change-the-world thing?
203
653275
2700
10:55
If there is one for me, this is it, to help this happen.
204
655999
3127
10:59
So I hope you'll join me on my quest,
205
659150
2740
11:01
you as, kind of, thought leaders.
206
661914
1610
11:03
It would be really great if you didn't let people divide the world
207
663548
4241
11:07
into the creatives and the non-creatives, like it's some God-given thing,
208
667813
3962
11:11
and to have people realize that they're naturally creative,
209
671799
4356
11:16
and that those natural people should let their ideas fly;
210
676309
3529
11:20
that they should achieve what Bandura calls self-efficacy,
211
680925
4176
11:25
that you can do what you set out to do,
212
685125
3263
11:28
and that you can reach a place of creative confidence
213
688412
3688
11:32
and touch the snake.
214
692124
1684
11:33
Thank you.
215
693832
1152
11:35
(Applause)
216
695008
6315
O ovoj web stranici

Ova stranica Δ‡e vas upoznati s YouTube videozapisima koji su korisni za učenje engleskog jezika. Vidjet Δ‡ete lekcije engleskog koje vode vrhunski profesori iz cijelog svijeta. Dvaput kliknite na engleske titlove prikazane na svakoj video stranici da biste reproducirali video s tog mjesta. Titlovi se pomiču sinkronizirano s reprodukcijom videozapisa. Ako imate bilo kakvih komentara ili zahtjeva, obratite nam se putem ovog obrasca za kontakt.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7