Say Yes To No
 Friday, October 31, 2008
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There are so many obvious benefits and opportunities in our media world today that I hate to keep sounding the siren call for balance.  Amid all the new technology, we shouldn’t forget that kids’ brains are busy wiring in behaviors.   The wiring of a child’s brain is entirely experience dependent.  Wiring of behavioral and thinking skills will not happen automatically – it happens because of that child’s experience in his or her environment.  To have a fully rich, thinking brain, a child needs exposure to a broad range of experiences that call on him or her to exercise all their thinking skills.  Remember the “neurons that fire together, wire together.”  The ones that don’t wither away.

Now what got me started?   A new study from England landed in my email box that found that the study group of fourteen year old kids today were better at the quick-fire, instant response answers than fourteen year old kids were in 1976, but when it keep to deeper thinking, problem solving, the 1976-ers beat today’s kids hands down.

What’s changed?   Probably the most obvious is the media world our children live in.   What experiences are kids having that are wiring their brains more than anything else? - the quick fire responses of video games.   And if they do not have problem solving experiences requiring more in-depth, complex skills, then those skills will never wire into their brains.

I am not anti-video games.   What kids need though is balance.  Interactive media can take over kids’ lives and make them very skilled at quick responses.   Critical thinking skills that take deeper, more complex thinking may deteriorate if we don’t give our kids practice in these skills also.  The future will belong to creative problem solvers, not to people who deal in only superficial facts.

How do you think kids can develop more complex thinking skills?

Dr. Dave

Friday, October 31, 2008 10:05:09 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  |  Trackback
Monday, November 10, 2008 10:42:20 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
How do I think kids can develop more complex thinking skills? Have them continuously look up words in the dictionary! This past weekend, my husband and I traveled with three of our kids and our 6th grader was looking up words which she then had to describe so she could create a crossword puzzle clue. Our 6th grader was learning, I got most of them different from the dictionary (a nice way to say 'wrong'!) and my husband who all through his high school years looked up words and memorized them, even if he was glancing through Time Magazine, knew every definition and placed them in contextual sentences for us. It was a fascinating conversation in the end and gave me insight as to how he is able think through things so differently than others. :) Roberta
Roberta Johnson
Wednesday, December 03, 2008 12:39:56 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
so good!
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