Teaching and learning from preschoolers
Human beings, it turns out, are ultra social learning machines. We're born to learn, to bond and to play. Maybe it's not so strange, then, that blushing is the only human expression that's uniquely human. blushing, after all, is quintessentially social -- it's people showing they care what others think, which fosters trust and enables cooperation.
That we need one another in order to take advantage of our great big brains, shouldn't surprise any early childhood educators.
Other research, and most significantly, the Perry School Project, the longest running study of the impact of high quality preschool on the lives of children, finds that far more important than anything that can be measured by standardized testing, the traits most linked to children going on to live "successful" lives are the development of traits like "self-motivation, the ability to work well with others, and sociability." And the key thing that makes a preschool "high quality" is programs that foster trust and enable cooperation.
Too much of what passes for education today, is about the individual, about shoehorning various kinds of trivia into their brains, then patting ourselves on the back when they can regurgitate it on a test. This is why so many non-educators seem to be shrugging their shoulders about the impact of physical distancing and remote "learning": they can still continue to shoehorn so what's all the fuss? Weren't kids supposed to be sitting at their own desks, eyes forward, lips zipped anyway? I've even heard some technophilic types insisting that now is an opportunity to really figure out what kinds of shoehorning works "best" without the data being "tainted" by the distractions of social interactions.
But without one another, without being able to see other people blush, without the ability to look into one another's eyes, without the information embedded in our subtle smiles, flared nostrils, or tensed muscles, we learn no better than apes. Screens are very limited in what they can convey. They make trust and cooperation far more difficult. The same for physical distancing. No wonder we're all so tired right now. We're working overtime to gather the social information we need in order to learn at full capacity.
Whether we know it or not, this is why "school" isn't working very well right now. We tend to think of our schools as places for shoehorning the old reading, writing, and 'rithmatic into their little heads, but its real value (beyond the economic value of child care) has always been the opportunity for children simply be together, to learn from one another, to practice being sociable, to cooperate, to develop the habits of working with others, to play, and to grow the trust necessary for their brains to develop to their highest potential. This is where or focus ought to be right now . . . and always.
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