Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Putting Some "Farm" Into our Kids

Pulitzer Prize winning author Thomas Friedman has said when he was a child his parents told him to finish his vegetables because there were kids in China and India who were starving. Today, Friedman tells his own kids to finish their math and science homework because there are kids in China and India who are starving for their jobs.

1 comment:

  1. Julie, along with more rigorous math and science our educational system should include more emphasis on the arts - music, visual and theatre. Please read the following from one of my art list serves:

    Has anyone heard of the work of Dr. Victoria Stevens on neuroscience, brain research and arts education?
    I mention this, because I recently listened to an hour long vod cast in which she talks about how the arts
    can stimulate holistic brain development and noble, socially productive behaviors such as empathy, tolerance, compassion,
    meaning, purpose, etc. that can eventually lead to less violent, more cooperative, less aggressive behavior. She also talks
    about the arts as being an essential part of a major paradigm shift in the way that we think about the nature of
    learning. The left brain is good, but the right side gives the entire mind its reason for even thinking in the first place.

    Kathy
    Douglass mentioned that she noticed how everyone has described a
    different artistic process on the list. Dr. Stevens would say that the
    arts
    bring out diversity and because of this we are more open to
    differences in others, less rigid, more tolerant, etc. She indicates
    this
    is a function of brain development and if children grow up
    participating in the arts, the brain develops differently. So
    apparently
    our civilization has been starving the mind. This is
    probably not earth shaking to us artists, but the scientific community
    is rapidly
    coming around to the arts way of thinking. Unfortunately, this research has had little effect on education.

    Sounds
    like the arts can greatly humanize the world and there is now brain
    research that indicates this is so. So if we can transform our
    culture to an arts education culture, then scientifically we can live in greater harmony. Is this too good to be true?

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