Archive for September, 2009

Life saving power of the hunch

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

The US military are using the same ‘weapons’ as artists.

Soldiers on patrol in Korengal Valley, Afganistan

Soldiers on patrol in Korengal Valley, Afganistan

Artists learn to make decisions on the basis of what feels ‘right’. ‘Intuition’ determines the way that things are put together. It’s one of those elusive abilities which is hard to measure and therefore tends to be under-rated.

Soldiers are using this same skill when they notice something ‘not right’. In Iraq and Afghanistan it helps them navigate the endless booby traps of a guerilla war.

The Learning Connexion has been paying attention to intuition ever since the school began in 1988. In the early days of TLC about 90% of our students showed an ‘intuitive’ preference compared to the general population average of 25% based on psychometric tests). This led us to believe that the school system as a whole may have a blind spot for intuition.

Possibly intuition has a hard time because it gets no credit in conventional assessments and is therefore off the radar. The main areas where it can flourish are the arts and sport. Outside of school you can add politics, parenting and business to the list. Perhaps this is one of the reasons why success in business doesn’t correlate closely with academic success.

The US Army, which pays attention to survival, is working hard to quantify intuitive skills and to train people to be intuitive. The fact is that intuition is an aspect of perception and it improves by being used. It was given plenty of practice in the distant days when we had to be constantly aware of predators and enemies. In the modern world intuition gets less of a workout. Ironically war zones come close to duplicating the situations in which intuition made the difference between who lived and who died.

There are several ways to improve your intuition. The first step is awareness. If you have a feeling that friends are suddenly going to arrive – and then they do – pay attention. After many such events you’ll get better at distinguishing real perception from fears and wishes.

In art, students gradually discover that their intuitive decisions get stronger results than ‘painting by numbers’. Their art ‘works’ better.

TLC Student

Parents learn to distinguish very subtle clues about whether their children are OK. Very young children are great trainers because all their communication is non-verbal and they force adults out of their usual ways of thinking.

The US Army is testing and training by using some fairly old-fashioned techniques, such as spotting a hidden item in a picture. The catch with this approach is that it’s boring, whereas a real-life battle situation has all senses on heightened alert. I believe they could improve their training by using art. The New Zealand Army took a tentative step in this direction when it hired TLC to do some leadership training back in the 90s. One of the early findings was that army officers had a considerably lower intuitive preference than art students. I suspect the project could have been taken further.

Academic researchers are gradually building a case that fuzzy attributes like emotions and intuition are intimately connected with rational thinking. Dr Antonio Damasio*, director of the Brain and Creativity Institute at the University of Southern California, says: “We understand emotions as practical action programs that work to solve a problem, often before we’re conscious of it. These processes are at work continually, in pilots, leaders of expeditions, parents, all of us.”*

There are big implications for education. In difficult economic times it’s all too easy to over-ride the value of intuition and put all our resources into building a nation of half-wits.

* New York Times.

Paint the Town Red – Daniel Mills

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Dan Mills and Welcome to Naenae- resized

TLC graduate Dan Mills has literally painted a town, well more of a suburb -- Naenae is a major suburb in the city of Lower Hutt, New Zealand. Naenae has an interesting history: the name can be translated from Maori to ‘mosquito’ or ‘sandfly’, recalling a time prior to the draining of the area when the mosquito population predominated.
After WWII ended in 1945 the Lower Hutt region expanded, and there was an urgent need to build houses for new families. Renowed Austrian Architect/Town-planner Ernst Plischke was called upon to design a utopia of sorts, a suburb where the nuclear family can settle in and grow. Many people believe his inspiration for Naenae was from Piazza San Marco (St. Mark’s Square) in Venice. He believed if you design a town around a public space that people would animate the town.

Dan Mills with Boxing Rock
Dan Mills was called on by the charismatic Billy Graham (a former New Zealand and Australasian light welterweight boxing champion). Billy is a motivational speaker and he also runs the Naenae Boxing Academy. Billy had a whole lotta rocks on his hands and he asked Dan to paint a series of all the heavyweight boxing champions in the world on the face of the rocks. These now sit surrounding the Boxing Academy.

Naenae Dentist
Dan’s murals have also graced the subway tunnel, the Naenae Dentist, Naenae Primary School, Rata Street School, Naenae Basketball Court, the olympic sized Swimming Pool and the Pacific Health Centre all in Naenae… so in the words of Billy Graham: ‘He’s a Naenae man now’.

Dan’s YouTube Channel
Dan’s Website

Watch our Clip of Dan Mills talking about his Murals in Naenae.

Before art, life sucked

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Zalina Barrington is a student in TLC’s unique art and creativity course which has been adapted to fit the needs of Deaf and hearing impaired people. She says, “Being Deaf makes it easy to be really cut off from other people, especially since I don’t know any sign language. One tends to become introverted and very unsociable. I was.”

Zalina L-A Barrington

But she confronted her fears and the result is a vastly increased sense of self-confidence. “Before I knew about The Learning Connexion and the possibility of being able to go to art school, I’d just been waiting around to die. I was 55 years old and life sucked. Since starting at TLC, I’ve begun to change my life around. I’m gathering the energy to fight my way back to having a life – one that is what I want, not what others think I should have!”

Zalina dreams of becoming a successful author, illustrator and artist. She also wants to continue her studies beyond TLC and become an art teacher. TLC, she believes, has given her new life and she wants to share the message. “I recommend TLC to anyone” she says, “whether Deaf, hearing impaired and hearing alike. Art helps a person to heal their life.”

Zalina is currently working on two water-colour paintings which will be included in this year’s Deaf exhibition ‘Expressions’.

TLC has pioneered an approach to learning which makes art and creativity accessible to adults anywhere in New Zealand and overseas. The personalized nature of the programme makes it relatively easy to adapt so that Deaf and hard of hearing people can be included.

For general inquiries email info@tlc.ac.nz and for Deaf/hearing impaired study options contact theDteam@tlc.ac.nz . Check www.tlc.ac.nz for further information.

SeaShells

Zalina Barrington - angel mouse