Wednesday, January 15, 2014

tick-tock...

Here in the blog, I tend to write about the same things over and over. My writing can be compared to that of a striker on a soccer team. Each day I'm on the same field, trying to get the same ball past the guards into the very same net and to lure a few more players onto the field.

Scientists at Harvard have been doing some experiments with a drug intended for bipolar disorder in which they've used it to make the brain more plastic for learning. Some things like language, music, and intuitive modeling capacity are better learned when the brain is in a more plastic state. This research using a drug called valproate shows that at unknown risk, we can stop a train long past the developmental station and stick on a new passenger, but wouldn't it be better to take advantage of the child's natural developmental processes? The drug has been used to give some adults perfect pitch, a thing that usually comes only after intensive engagement in music prior to age six. Spatial sense is yet another one of those things that needs to be developed in child's early life if it is to be available for success in math, and the arts. Froebel's gifts are useful in developing spatial sense, and woodworking in schools was originally intended to take Kindergarten methods to the next level.

Rather than simply repeat myself, I will ask you to revisit this earlier post about the window of develpment for hand skills.

Today in the CSS wood shop, 1st, 2nd and 3rd grade students will begin making dinosaurs. Here again I'm repeating myself. The students shown with their dinosaurs are now seniors in high school.

Make fix and create... teach others to do so.

1 comment:

  1. Doug,

    So what next after that drug? Make us bionic? That is scary stuff, but not unthinkable for those who look for a magic bullet.

    Mario

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