Posts Tagged ‘Alison Gopnik’

Media Resources for Parents

Monday, February 4th, 2013

A Silicon Valley School That Doesn’t Compute By Matt Richtel, New York Times, October 22nd 2011

Parents Urged Again to Limit TV for Youngest By Benedict Carey, New York Times, October 18th 2011

Why Pre-school shouldn’t be like School By Alison Gopnik, Slate.com, March 16 2011

Want to get your kids into college? Let them play By Erika Christakis and Nicholas Christakis, CNN, December 29 2010

The Risk of Parenting While Plugged In By Julie Scelfo, New York Times, June 2010

The Revolt of the Bruppies By Jason Fagone, Philadelphia Magazine, June 2010

The Death of Handwriting By Philadelphia Magazine, July 2011

From Finland an Intriguing School Reform Model – New York Times, December 2011

What Americans keep ignoring about Finlands school success – The Atlantic, December 2011

 

Film and Podcast -

The Waldorf Way: Silicon Valley School eschews technology By Rehema Ellis, NBC News, November 30th 2011

Changing Education Paradigms By Sir Ken Robinson, TED, October 2010

The Waldorf School of Philadelphia featured on The Teacher Says with Aditi Roy on NBC10

Modern Childhood and the Brain, Psychologist Gabrielle Principe talks to Radio Times host, Marty Moss-Coane, December 2011

Why Waldorf By Paul Zehrer, The Marin County Waldorf School

Kathy Hirsh Pasek, Cognitive Developmental Research and Education

Why Pre-school Shouldn’t be like School

Monday, February 4th, 2013

New research shows that teaching kids more and more, at ever-younger ages, may backfire - By Alison Gopnik

Ours is an age of pedagogy. Anxious parents instruct their children more and more, at younger and younger ages, until they’re reading books to babies in the womb. They pressure teachers to make kindergartens and nurseries more like schools. So does the law—the 2001 No Child Left Behind Act explicitly urged more direct instruction in federally funded preschools.

There are skeptics, of course, including some parents, many preschool teachers, and even a few policy-makers. Shouldn’t very young children be allowed to explore, inquire, play, and discover, they ask? Perhaps direct instruction can help children learn specific facts and skills, but what about curiosity and creativity—abilities that are even more important for learning in the long run? Two forthcoming studies in the journal Cognitionone from a lab at MIT and one from my lab at UC-Berkeley—suggest that the doubters are on to something. While learning from a teacher may help children get to a specific answer more quickly, it also makes them less likely to discover new information about a problem and to create a new and unexpected solution.  Knowing this, it’s more important than ever to give children’s remarkable, spontaneous learning abilities free rein. That means a rich, stable, and safe world, with affectionate and supportive grown-ups, and lots of opportunities for exploration and play. Not school for babies.

First posted on Slate.com, Wednesday, March 16, 2011, at 2:15 PM ET - http://www.slate.com/id/2288402

Fast Tracking to Kindergarten

Monday, February 4th, 2013

Kate Zernike’s New York Times article explores how some parents are choosing to tutor their 3-year-old children in order to give them an edge in school.  ”Programs like Kumon are gaining from, and generating, parent’s anxiety about what kind of preparation their kids will need.”  In the article, Kumon’s North American CFO says that “age 3 is a sweet spot. But if they’re out of a diaper and can sit still with a Kumon instructor for 15 minutes, we will take them.”

“The best you can say is that they’re useless,” said Alison Gopnik, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, who compared the escalation of supplemental education with Irish elk competing to see which had the biggest antlers. “The result is that they go around tottering, unable to walk, under the enormous weight of these antlers they’ve developed,” she said. “I think it’s true of American parents from high school all the way down to preschool.”

Professor Gopnik said that “we are in a culture where education is the path to success, and it’s hard for people to recognize how deep and profound learning is when children are just playing.”

“When you’re putting blocks together, you’re learning how to be a physicist,” agreed Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, a psychologist at Temple University and an author of “Einstein Never Used Flash Cards.” “When you’re learning how to balance things and calculate how tall you can make your building, you’re learning how to be a physicist. Having your kid drill and kill and fill in worksheets at 2 and 3 and 4 to the best of our knowledge so far does not give your child a leg up on anything.”

“Yes, your child might know more of his letters than the child who spent Saturday in the sandbox,” she said. “But the people who are team players, who are creative innovators, they are the ones who are going to invent the next iPad. The kids who are just memorizing are going to be outsourced to the kids in India who have memorized the same stuff.”

Programs like Junior Kumon may not do harm, she said. But they do help push a consensus that young children need more and more structured curriculum.

For the full article visit http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/15/fashion/with-kumon-fast-tracking-to-kindergarten.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&sq=education%20pre%20school&st=cse&scp=1

For more information about Waldorf Education visit www.whywaldorfworks.org or www.phillywaldorf.com