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The creative crisis

3/18/2013

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Tiara Zhan'e Hernandez
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PicturePhoto via Ted.com
In a 2006 video recording of Sir Ken Robinson, he speaks about the school system and how it often stifles creativity, mainly in children. Robinson also describes how the purpose of education for as long as he could remember has been to prepare people for the future. Education has been the gateway to the “ideal life” that everyone wants and looks forward to. 

However, Robinson also states that while humans have this incredible amount of undiscovered creativity, we on the other hand don’t have the ability to look into the future and see what’s to come. But we still have kept the same hierarchy order of education which includes first and “most importantly” mathematics and sciences, followed by languages, then humanities, and finally the arts.

In most public schools music, art, and dance aren’t taken as seri- ous as mathematics and language arts. In many cases when a school faces a budget problem the first thing to get cut is generally the arts.

Is self-expression and creativity not as important as history and mathematics?

Public education often encourages us to not take music and dance seriously if we don’t plan on becoming some incredibly known dancer or a musician, which always seems to be “very unlikely.” But still, we’re expected to study mathematics and explore history text books as if we all wish to become professors and historians.

Later in the video, Sir Robinson briefly discusses a book he’s been working on, “Epiphany.” In this book, Robinson introduces a number of people he has inter- viewed and documented exactly how they found their creative sides.

One woman, by the name of Jillian Lynn, told her story about how when she was younger her teachers told her mother that something was wrong with her because she didn’t focus on mathematics and reading like she should.

Assuming something was wrong with young Lynn, her mother took her to a specialist. The doctor listened as Lynn’s mother explained Lynn’s difficulty focusing in school. The doctor took note, the entire time Lynn sat at on her hands.

When Lynn’s mother was done describing her daughter’s “learn- ing problems” the doctor asked her to step out of the room with him to talk. Before he walked out he turned on his radio.

From the outside of the room, the doctor and Lynn’s mother watched her dance around the room to the music. It was then when Lynn’s mother discovered that the girl wasn’t slow, she didn’t need medication to focus, she was simply a dancer and she needed to be in an environment that allowed her to express her creative side. Lynn’s mother took her to a dance school after that.

Today, Jillian Lynn is a very accomplished dancer. She is also credited with many successful theater productions.

While academics are important, is it okay to stop someone from expressing themselves and being happy by doing what they desire, even if it doesn’t include academics?

How supportive is Penn State when it comes to student’s creative interests and self-expression?
Although Penn State is not a fine arts school, students should still be allowed and even encouraged to express their creativity.

Do students have equal access to sports facilities, art studios, and music rooms or is it all about academics?

A likely response could be “go to an art school if you want to practice fine arts” but how many times have you walked into a high school or college that didn’t have a gym or offer a variety of sports?

Don’t worry, I`ll wait.

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Condoms, candy & cash: The rotten egg hunt aims to please

3/18/2013

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Mylique Sutton
[email protected]

PicturePhoto by Pat Trosky.
The upcoming rotten egg hunt is providing college students with the essentials. There’s candy to put that special someone in a good mood, condoms to ensure nobody gets more than they bargained

for and some cash to treat your partner to something nice after- wards and they’re all conveniently packed inside of an egg just waiting to be discovered.

Spearheaded by April Harris- Snyder and Ryan Aten, the hunt is as much of a fun and games ordeal as it is an educational opportunity. Above all, Aten hopes that students walk away with not only stuffed pockets but also with an understanding of STDs, the danger they pose and how students can protect themselves.

“The whole idea behind it is that the eggs represent sexual partners and so everybody may look fine on the outside but people could be hiding sexually transmit- ted diseases from you. You’re not going to know that just by looking at someone,” Aten said. “So inside the eggs that have condoms there is also information about different sexually transmitted diseases.”

It takes Aten, Harris-Snyder and a few work study students about a month to prep for the hunt where Aten anticipates having hundreds of eggs scattered across the soccer field and 100 students scrambling to gather as many as possible.

“Sometimes we’ve seen people out there with garbage bags and book bags and one kid had a butterfly net the one year,” Aten said.

Considering what’s being given away for free it’s no surprise that things get intense on the field when the mad dash for the eggs gets underway. The hunt itself only last a few minutes, from the moment Harris-Snyder yells the purpose of the event through a megaphone to the moment the final egg is picked up, compared to the weeks it takes to get every- thing ready.

After all the work he puts into the hunt and making sure things go off without a hitch, Aten likes to have a little fun with the students and not all the eggs will have a prize inside.

“I’ve done that kind of as a joke in the past, throw some empty ones out there, but that’s for my own personal amusement,” Aten said.

However, the chances are pretty high that’ll you’ll like what you get when you discover an egg and over the years this event has been held students typically like to gather around and see how much money they made, see what kind of candy they got and how many diseases they caught.

This year’s hunt will be held during common hour Wednesday, Apr. 3 which is a few days after Easter and explains why the eggs are all rotten.

Aten wants students to have “an understanding about non- monogamous sexual encounters where you may encounter some- one who you’re attracted to but you don’t know a whole lot about them. That happens, particularly with college students, they don’t have a long relationship with that person but they still may have a sexual encounter with that person and if that’s the case then they should protect themselves. They should take precautions.”

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    Issue 17 (1/7/2013)
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    Issue 19 (1/21/2013)
    Issue 20 (1/29/2013)
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    Issue 23 (2/18/2013)
    Issue 24 (2/25/2012)
    Issue 25 (3/11/2013)
    Issue 26 (3/18/2013)
    Issue 27 (3/25/2013)
    Issue 28 (4/1/2013)
    Issue 2 (9/4/2012)
    Issue 29 (4/8/2013)
    Issue 30 (4/15/2013)
    Issue 31 (4/22/2013)
    Issue 32 (4/29/2013)
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    Issue 4 (9/17/2012)
    Issue 5 (9/24/2012)
    Issue 6 (10/1/2012)
    Issue 7 (10/8/2012)
    Issue 8 (10/15/2012)
    Issue 9 (10/22/2012)

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