David Kelley starts
off his story in third grade, at Oakdale School in Ohio. His friend
Brian was making a horse out of clay. One of the girls sitting at his
table looked over and said, “that’s terrible! That’s not what a horse
looks like.” Brian’s shoulders sank, he wadded up the clay and threw
away his horse–and Kelley never saw him take on a project quite like
that again.
This type of thing happens all the time. People often become
uncomfortable around creativity — and yet surely creativity is not the
domain of only a chosen few. And so, Kelley set out to understand this
phenomenon and think about how he might counter it. One of his first
stops: the Stanford psychologist, Albert Bandura,
who developed a step-by-step process to help people overcome their
phobia of snakes. An unexpected consequence of this methodical journey:
overcoming fear in one domain subsequently gave people new confidence in
other areas of their lives, too.
Kelley realized that such “self-efficacy” was essentially a
validation of his own practice over the past 30 years. After all, much
of the design process is involved with turning fear into familiarity.
Now, at the d.school at Stanford,
he says he sees people from all disciplines entering the program and
learning a singularly useful lesson: to consider themselves as creative.
Now he tells two stories. This first is of a friend and colleague,
Doug Dietz, a designer at General Electric. Dietz creates complex
medical imaging equipment, including an MRI machine that is incredibly
important to the medical process. But one day, Dietz saw a little girl
crying, scared of the treatment she was about to receive. And whereas
he’d once been proud of the lives he’d helped save, now he was
disappointed to realize the fear the machine caused. And so he turned
the machine into an adventure.
The results were dramatic: From 80% of kids who had previously needed
to be sedated, now only 10% required anesthetic. Repeating a story that
has by now entered GE lore, Kelley recounts Dietz waiting with a mother
for her child to come out of a scan. The little girl ran up: “mommy? Can
we go again tomorrow?”
The second story is more personal. Kelley tells us the story of his
own recent dealings with hospitals. Diagnosed with cancer a few years
ago, he was given a less than 40% chance of survival. “But while you’re
sitting around in your pajamas and everyone’s pale and thin, and you are
waiting for your turn to get the gamma rays, you think about many
things,” he says. “Mostly, ‘am I going to survive? What will my
daughter’s life be like without me?’ But also other things: ‘what’s my
calling?’ ‘What was I put on earth to do?’” And it dawned on him. “The
thing I most wanted to do was help people regain the creative confidence
they lost along the way. If I survived, that’s what I wanted to do. And
I survived, just so you know,” he adds to laughter and applause.
Then he puts his own wish to the audience. Don’t divide the world
into “creative” and “non-creative,” he urges. Let people realize they
are naturally creative. “Let their ideas fly; let them achieve what
Bandura calls self-efficacy,” he concludes. ”When people regain that
confidence, magic happens.”
Source: http://blog.ted.com/2012/03/01/building-creative-confidence-david-kelley-at-ted2012/
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