Alison Gopnik
Autore di Tuo figlio è un genio: le straordinarie scoperte sulla mente infantile
Sull'Autore
Opere di Alison Gopnik
The Philosophical Baby: What Children's Minds Tell Us About Truth, Love, and the Meaning of Life (2009) 341 copie
The Gardener and the Carpenter: What the New Science of Child Development Tells Us About the Relationship Between… (2016) 188 copie
Causal Learning: Psychology, Philosophy, and Computation (Oxford Series in Cognitive Development) (2007) 23 copie
Essere genitori non è un mestiere: Cosa dice la scienza sulle relazioni tra genitori e figli (2017) 1 copia
Dziecko filozofem : co dziecięce umysły mówią nam o prawdzie, miłości oraz sensie życia (2010) 1 copia
El filosofo entre panales 1 copia
De Opvoedparadox 1 copia
Opere correlate
What Is Your Dangerous Idea? Today's Leading Thinkers on the Unthinkable (1914) — Collaboratore — 633 copie
I prossimi cinquant'anni: i grandi scienziati contemporanei riflettono sul futuro (2002) — Collaboratore — 386 copie
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Sesso
- female
- Nazionalità
- USA
- Luogo di nascita
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
- Luogo di residenza
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Canada - Istruzione
- McGill University, Montreal, Canada (BA)
Oxford University - Attività lavorative
- professor of psychology
- Relazioni
- Gopnik, Adam (brother)
Gopnik, Myrna (mother)
Gopnik, Blake (brother) - Organizzazioni
- University of Toronto
University of California, Berkeley - Premi e riconoscimenti
- Carl Sagan Prize for Science Popularization (2021)
Utenti
Recensioni
Premi e riconoscimenti
Potrebbero anche piacerti
Autori correlati
Statistiche
- Opere
- 16
- Opere correlate
- 2
- Utenti
- 1,003
- Popolarità
- #25,717
- Voto
- 3.8
- Recensioni
- 23
- ISBN
- 54
- Lingue
- 10
Humans have a long period of childhood relative to most animals. This childhood provides a chance for a long period of exploration, learning, and variability. Parents transmit their cultural and technological knowledge to children and children take that and shape their knowledge so that eventually they can shape the world themselves.
However, learning generally does not happen through the intentional education that we provide when we set out to provide enriching experiences to our children. It does not come from flash cards, educational videos, tutoring, or any of the many other aids that we provide to help train children how to perform well on tests. Instead, children learn most effectively through observation and conversation. Children imitate adults in very intentional ways. They do not merely copy behavior. Instead, even from an early age, children work on inferring the goal and knowledge level of the person they are watching and will explore and vary their imitation to try to accomplish the goal more effectively. Children also ask questions quite intentionally. When children form endless chains of whys, the questions generally work to strengthen their ability to predict how the world works. '
Children learn best through play. That does not mean that unstructured environments are the best for learning (although they are likely better than overly structured environments). Rather, what works best is when adults provide scaffolding: rich environments which trigger curiosity about interesting topics, pointers for when children want to learn more, and perhaps most importantly, a playmate. Play is delicate though. As soon as play starts to feel required or like work, it will stop being play and learning will grind to a halt.
Young children are focused on the broad, messy process of exploration. As children get older, they work more on developing their ability to exploit the knowledge they have. Older children work on refining the skills they have until they can perform them with ease. Older children are more sober and reliable, in many ways, than teenagers. During the teenage years the brain once again prioritizes exploration, this time exploration into the world of independence. It is commonly believed that the teenage brain is quite immature and as a consequence that, perhaps, we should give teens less rights and responsibilities until they are older. However, this model is wrong in a small but important way. The teenage brain is immature, but the prefrontal cortex control that will make a teenage brain into a sober adult brain does not develop at a certain age. It develops through use. Thus, instead of giving teens less responsibility and then throwing them out into the world as adults, we should be giving them more responsibility sooner -- but in an environment where the consequences of their actions ramp up slowly.
Parents are often concerned about the affect of technology on children. Gopnik points out that as much as we are seeing change now, past technologies like reading, trains, and telegraphs caused at least as much societal change as the internet. Yet now we barely think of these as technologies anymore. Technology is disorienting when it is introduced to adults because we no longer explore playfully (partially because our brains are less plastic, but also because we do not let ourselves). Our children will develop new techniques and new norms for dealing with technology. This does not mean that technology doesn't have an impact. Written text, fast travel, and instant communication have changed the course of human existence -- and not always for the better. New technologies such as the internet continue to do so. However, what we do not need to worry about is that our children will be adrift on the technologies of today. They will see them as natural.
As an aside, one of the interesting things about reading is that readers have significant portions of their brain that are specialized for reading. This is despite the fact that reading has happened much more recently than could have been accounted for by biological evolution. The reading brain co-opted processing centers, such as visual centers which detect edges, to become so efficient that reading is both fluid and involuntary. The mind is incredibly adaptable.
Gopnik ends on a chapter about how we value children. Having a child is choosing to take part in a special relationship that will change a person forever. Parents, in a very real well, do not just consider their children's interests as important as their own. Parents seem to literally treat the interests of their young children, as their own interests. Yet raising children also has traditionally been a community task. Care takers throughout a community have had roles in making sure that children have both the material and social resources they need to thrive. This is something we have lost in our industrial and postindustrial society. Figuring out how to modernize this sort of community care which is not based in generics but in specific relationships is a pressing problem of our time. Gopnik also points out that taking care of parents as they age is a similar problem. As a society, we tend to treat it as a problem each family needs to solve individually, but we could structure our society to value care taking and provide better support for care takers.
Anyone who cares about children, whether or not they have or plan to have their own, should read this book.… (altro)