Present Appertaining To Books The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything
Title | : | The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything |
Author | : | Ken Robinson |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 274 pages |
Published | : | January 7th 2010 by Penguin (first published January 8th 2009) |
Categories | : | Nonfiction. Education. Self Help. Psychology. Personal Development. Business. Philosophy |

Ken Robinson
Paperback | Pages: 274 pages Rating: 3.89 | 14108 Users | 1484 Reviews
Commentary As Books The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything
The groundbreaking international bestseller that will help you fulfil your true potential.The Element is the point at which natural talent meets personal passion. In this hugely influential book, world-renowned creativity expert Ken Robinson considers the child bored in class, the disillusioned employee and those of us who feel frustrated but can't quite explain why - and shows how we all need to reach our Element.
Through the stories of people like Vidal Sassoon, Arianna Huffington and Matt Groening, who have recognized their unique talents and made a successful living doing what they love, Robinson explains how every one of us can find ourselves in our Element, and achieve everything we're capable of.
With a wry sense of humour, Ken Robinson shows the urgent need to enhance creativity and innovation by thinking differently about ourselves. Above all, he inspires us to reconnect with our true self - it could just change everything.
'The Element offers life-altering insights about the discovery of your true best self' Stephen R. Covey, author of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
'A book that lightens and lifts the minds and hearts of all who read it' Susan Jeffers, author of Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway
Define Books Supposing The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything
Original Title: | The Element |
ISBN: | 0141045256 (ISBN13: 9780141045252) |
Edition Language: | English |
Rating Appertaining To Books The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything
Ratings: 3.89 From 14108 Users | 1484 ReviewsWeigh Up Appertaining To Books The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything
I'm a sucker for books that talk about finding one's purpose, and this falls squarely in that category. I thought Ken provided lots of great examples of people who found their "element", but I felt the book was light on helping people to discover their own element (which is really why people are reading it). I expected the book to offer a lot more exercises and concrete actions people could take to figure out their purpose, but that did not happen.I've drastically changed my teaching methods in the last few years ever since I began to realize intuitively that the system is failing miserably and that the kids are not getting the best of me. I teach less but I teach wider and one of the teenagers told me that I am teaching them how to be a better human being. Yes, I try. But it is a daily struggle since the construction of family safety and support is crumbling down so kids carry these social cracks into the classroom and it backfires on us
The Element is a brilliant book, not the easy read of the Outliers.It speaks of Education systems and how they actually stiffle creativity and out the box thinking. Which is ironic since once out of school the push by employers is to hire people who are creative and willing to think outside of the box.It amazing how he defines the creativity and lack thereof in the context of the school system.The Element discusses the idea of finding what you are good at. Which is a process and not always

I have a great respect for Ken Robinson's opinions, especially as an educator. His opinions and theories that schools are partly responsible for the decline in human creativity are opinions shared by many. I appreciate that he does not blame teachers for this decline, but rather how schools are currently set up and functioning. If one spends any extended period of time talking with public school education teachers, the majority will talk about their distaste for the negative effects of testing
Overall, this was a good read but not a must read. If you watched Ken Robinson's TED talks, and it left you wanting more of the same, then you'll enjoy the book. If those talks were sufficient for you, this doesn't offer much new, just more depth.In the book, the author describes the importance of finding your passion. He doesn't describe -- and doesn't try to describe -- how to find your own passion. Rather, he describes what it feels like and looks like to live a life activated by passion. He
I don't really need to read a whole book on finding the crosspoint between passion and talent, but this is the quote that got me:p. 238 The most powerful method of improving education is to invest in the improvement of teaching and the status of great teachers. There isnt a great school anywhere that doesnt have great teachers working in it. But there and plenty of poor schools with shelves of curriculum standards and reams of standardized tests. The fact is that given the challenges we face,
Ken Robinson gave a lot of interesting stories and anecdotes in this book, but for some reason it fell flat for me in terms of igniting inspiration and sparking new motivation and thought. I enjoyed this book, but I was hoping for more.There were many times it brought up good questions to invite you to ponder on different aspects of what you want out of life however (my favorite being "HOW are you intelligent?"). He then goes on to talk more about divergent thinking and how you can only inspire
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