Friday 26 March 2010

Ideas for Helping Children Learn Deep Thinking Skills – At Home

- Encourage children to self-evaluate their skills and progress they are making, whether at studies, sports or even a video game

- Have discussions where they can justify their self-beliefs. Give alternate perspectives to facilitate deeper thinking. Explain possible downstream consequences of different options.

- For these discussions think of topics that are topical, fun and interesting for your child.

- At my son’s school 10 year olds were given the topic, “Should would-be parents be asked to take an exam before they have kids – to qualify for parenthood?” We followed this with an interesting discussion at home!

- Other topics could be, “Should games be played face-to-face or against a computer”, or “How much screen time should a 12 year old be entitled to and should such screen time only include TV or also include time spent playing video games” (a topic often discussed at our home!).

- Parents should also observe if their children are only focusing on searching for information (say surfing the web for a school assignment) and regurgitating information OR are they evaluating the information, synthesizing some insights from their research and applying these insights.

- For example, are they just memorizing Newton’s laws or can they tell which law they are being subject to when they are on a roller-coaster ride.

- Or, while reading a book ask them to pause and think.

- I recall asking my son to read aloud Jeremy Strong’s book, “The 100 mile an hour dog” and wherever he laughed I asked him to pause and think why he laughed. He made a list of these points – metaphors, interesting similes, cliff-hangers, crazy situations… stuff he could then use himself in his writing.

- I am sure he learnt something. He wrote a story about this boy who wasn’t playing the Violin well in the school orchestra and was asked to leave. We, his parents, had of course suggested that the boy practiced hard and was accepted back in the orchestra. But our son’s piece was a bit different, “…the boy was asked to leave the school orchestra. So he started his own band and called it ‘Wrong Notes’, which went on to become a huge success.”

- Another time when our son had collected some money he wanted to buy a game for his Nintendo DS. Since it was HIS money he didn’t want any parental influence and selected a game from Amazon. However, on my wife’s insistence they went back to Amazon website and figured out the best selling games, games that had high user rating and discussed whether it made sense to buy a new or used game. The whole episode was a great critical thinking exercise.

- Observing your child and listening to her will help you understand how your child makes sense of the world and what thinking skills you need to foster.

- When you are doing deep thinking yourself then think out loud so that your child knows how your thinking process works (and hopefully you are a deep thinker yourself!)

- You could take topical social issues and demonstrate thinking and arguing skills to your kids. You could take one position and your spouse could take the opposite view. You could then explain what are the claims and counter-claims being made, how the issue could be looked at from different perspectives to gather evidence in support of both views, how the evidence should be analysed to see if it is based on facts or beliefs, are there any assumptions underlying the evidence, are the assumptions correct, or is the evidence based on a fallacious notion. Counter-arguments could also be presented.

- Once your child understands what critical thinking, analysis and reasoning mean and how to ‘think deep’ (look at an issue from different perspectives, role playing, what-if scenarios, downstream consequences…) then you should encourage her to participate in such discussions at home.

- You should help your child understand flaws in her thinking and how she could improve her thinking skills by offering thinking tips and techniques.

- Thinking tips and techniques include – the good old ‘5W1H’ (what, where, when, why, who and how), Venn Diagrams, Mindmaps and Flowcharts.

- For example, you could ask your child to compare (find similarities) and contrast (find differences) between ‘Horrid Henry’ and ‘Just William’ or between ‘Enid Blyton’ and ‘J K Rowling’.

- In doing this exercise you could ask them to use a Venn Diagram. The overlap between the two circles represents the similarities and the two distinct areas represent the differences. Children find it fascinating that something they learnt in Math is being used in English.

- Summarising a book in your own words is a good thinking tool. Using Mindmaps and Flowcharts makes summarizing fun.

- Summarising could be followed by extrapolating. Example, ask your child to list three take-aways from a book that he read which he can apply elsewhere. This could – an interesting character (and what makes the character interesting), plot or setting…

- For younger kids you could ask questions on books they have read. Questions that foster thinking. Like, ‘Should Goldilocks have gone to a stranger’s house?’, or based on Mouse Tales, ‘Who do you think is a friend?’

- Even for older kids this works. For example, “Do you think Harry Potter’s invisibility cloak is scientifically possible?”

- Web Quests are an interesting way to develop thinking skills. For the Harry Potter question you could ask your child to surf the web and find out if any research has been done on ‘invisibility’. Or pose a more specific question, “Do you think small mirrors, placed at different angles such that all light reflects back could create an invisibility cloak?”

- Even while playing games like Monopoly you could encourage kids to think. For example, think about ‘savings’ and ‘investments’. In Monopoly they need to save and invest prudently because if they go bankrupt they lose. Prime properties on the Monopoly board are expensive and are towards the end of the round. Thus, investing in them requires ‘delayed gratification’. Buying all ‘utilities’ vs buying all ‘prime properties’ involves strategic thinking skills.

- Savings, investments, delayed gratification – these are the building blocks of financial literacy. So Monopoly can be used to teach thinking skills as also financial skills.

- I personally think that we need a new financial game for kids. Monopoly is a wrong form of business in today’s world. You get into anti-trust lawsuits! More importantly, in the 21st century new business models are possible – collaborative ventures, self-organising structures, ‘freemium’ economy, economics of abundance, long tail and more. Games should be built around these concepts. Making them online can make them massively collaborative.

- Such collaborative games can also be used for sensitizing young audience about global issues like poverty, climate change and diversity.

- I am not a fan of Farmville and Mafia Wars but I am sure that a thinking layer could be created on top of these games such that important life skills are learnt while playing popular games.

- You need to put on your own Deep Thinking Cap and I am sure you will come up with tons of ideas on how you can foster deep thinking skills in your children.

Wednesday 17 March 2010

Introduction

Introduction

Critical Thinking Skills are essential for success in the 21st century. This 60 minute multimedia learning content introduces basics of Critical Thinking skills.

Monday 15 March 2010

Visual Fluency Skills & Problem Solving

LIST OF GOOD LEARNING RESOURCES FOR 21ST CENTURY TRAINERS AND LEARNERS

I will share resources that are relevant for 21st century skills and will keep adding to my list.

1. Solving Problems with Pictures – Books by Dan Roam

  • 21st century skill covered: Visual Communication , Problem Solving
  • Books: The Back of the Napkin, Unfolding the Napkin
  • Website: http://www.thebackofthenapkin.com
  • Lectures: Authors@Google: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuA_yz7aTo0
According to Dan the overall Visual Thinking Process = Look > See > Imagine > Show

The Visual Thinking Toolkit suggested by Dan:

- Defining the Problem through “Who/What, Where, When, How, How Much, Why" Analysis

- Representing these visually:
  • Who/What = Portrait
  • Where = Map
  • When = Timeline
  • How = FlowChart
  • How Much = Bar/Pie Chart
  • Why = Multivariate Diagram
- Doing the SQUID analysis:
  • Simple or Elaborate
  • Qualitative or Quantitative
  • Vision or Execution
  • Individual or Comparison
  • Change or Status Quo

Visually all the above is much more simple and interesting than what I have made it appear in text description!


My recommended steps:

1. See Dan’s Authors@Google video first (http://www.thebackofthenapkin.com)


2. Then visit the book website

  • See the videos on the home page (animated walk-through)
  • See more video clips ‘Napkin Cam’ (http://www.thebackofthenapkin.com/botn.php)
  • See sample pages and exercises from the book ‘Unfolding the Napkin’
  • Visit the Dan’s Blog on the website
Happy reading (and watching)...

Monday 8 March 2010

20th vs 21st Century Education – The Difference

20th century education was focused on providing basic cognitive skills and a stockpile of knowledge. You chose an area where job possibilities were bright, gathered knowledge and were set for life.

Today you don’t change several jobs you change several careers!

21st century education needs to be different because rate of change is so rapid that just keeping up-to-date in any domain is a challenge. You also need to make sure that your skills don’t become obsolete and that you are able to make the most of new opportunities.

Thus, focus of education today has to be on acquiring fundamental life skills like yearning-to-learn, learning-to-self-learn, learning-to-think and learning-to-be, that help you reinvent yourself.

With these life skills you can discover what is it you are passionate about. Use self-learning and thinking skills to gain knowledge about that domain. And, keep yourself up-do-date through participation in knowledge networks and communities of practice.

Even if the area you are deeply interested in is a very niche area, chances are that you can still make it a financially viable proposition. Technology will help you consolidate a fragmented or dispersed market. Say, you like to write on a topic which is not very popular. You can still have a good fan following because internet and content aggregation sites will help you reach out to a global audience and consolidate your reader-base.

Acquiring new knowledge is easier today because abundant content is available. Distance learning through electronic means makes learning easy and cost-effective. You can also participate in knowledge networks where, by listening you can keep up-to-date and by contributing you can deepen your understanding.

21st century skills like deriving insight from information can also help you spot threats and opportunities earlier and give you time for course correction.

Say due to external factors like financial crisis, outsourcing or obsolescence of your skills because of automation you lose your job. Or you realize that better opportunities exist in another domain. Or a new domain comes up. In all these situations too life skills like self-learning and thinking skills can be used to reinvent your self.

Tuesday 2 March 2010

Ideas for Enriching eLearning Experiences

Best practices can be derived from game-design, story-telling and all other things addictive to make learning experiences rich, interesting and effective. I share my thoughts on insights that can be derived from games, stories and social learning to create engaging learning experiences and welcome your comments.

Monday 1 March 2010

Saber Tooth Curriculum



A 1.25 mts audio-visual sum-up of the book 'The Saber Tooth Curriculum' by J Abner Peddiwell.

The story highlights why it is essential to acquire new skills when the context or the conditions change, but how we resist change because it is difficult to change our mindset.