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SHARE Photo by Dragos Gontariu via Unsplash The TED talk with the most views—more than 70 million—is fascinating, inspiring and wrong. It features the late British educationalist, Ken Robinson, delivering a message that manages to be both grim and uplifting. Grim because he claims that schools are stultifying and kill children’s creativity; uplifting because Robinson expresses faith that all children could be brilliant, if adults would just get out of the way. Although Robinson’s argument fails, examining it can help us better understand the conditions that foster creativity, so that parents can help their children flourish. Let’s start with Robinson’s observations. He notes that young children seem insatiably curious about the world and are unafraid of making mistakes; even if they lack experience or knowledge, they are ready to give any task a try. Older children are wary of attempting new tasks for fear of failing and thus appearing stupid. Robinson suggests that schools, by emphasizing a single correct answer to every question, are to blame.