Friday, October 11, 2019
5 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Kids so
GEVER TULLY: 5 DANGEROUS THINGS YOU SHOULD LET YOUR KIDS DO Welcome to ââ¬Å"Five Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Children Do. â⬠à I don't have children. I borrow my friends' children, soà (Laughter)à take all this advice with a grain of salt. I'm Gever Tulley. I'm a contract computer scientist by trade,à but I'm the founder of something called the Tinkering School. It's a summer program which aims to help kids to learnà how to build the things that they think of. So we build a lot of things. And I do put power tools into the hands of second-graders.So if you're thinking about sending your kid to Tinkering School,à they do come back bruised, scraped and bloody. So, you know, we live in a worldthat's subjected to ever more stringent child safety regulations. There doesn't seem to be any limit on how crazyà child safety regulations can get. We put suffocation warnings on all the ââ¬â on every piece of plastic filmà manufactured in the United States or for saleà with an item in the United States. We put warnings on coffee cups to tell usà that the contents may be hot.And we seem to think that any itemà sharper than a golf ball is too sharpà for children under the age of 10. So where does this trend stop? When we round every corner and eliminate every sharp object,à every pokey bit in the world,à then the first time that kids come in contact with anything sharpà or not made out of round plastic,à they'll hurt themselves with it. So, as the boundaries of what we determine as the safety zoneà grow ever smaller, we cut off our children from valuable opportunitiesà to learn how to interact with the world around them.And despite all of our best efforts and intentions,à kids are always going to figure outà how to do the most dangerous thing they can,à in whatever environment they can. So despite the provocative title, this presentation is really about safetyà and about some simple things that we can doà to rais e our kids to be creative, confidentà and in control of the environment around them. And what I now present to you is an excerpt from a book in progress. The book is called ââ¬Å"50 Dangerous Things. â⬠à This is five dangerous things.Thing number one ââ¬â play with fire. Learning to control one of the most elemental forces in natureà is a pivotal moment in any child's personal history. Whether we remember it or not,it's a ââ¬â it's the first time we really getà control of one of these mysterious things. These mysteries are only revealedà to those who get the opportunity to play with it. So, playing with fire. This is like one of the great things we ever discovered, fire. From playing with it, they learn some basic principles about fire,à about intake, about combustion, about exhaust.These are the three working elements of fireà that you have to have to have a good controlled fire. And you can think of the open-pit fire as a laboratory. You don't know what they're going to learn from playing with it. You know, let them fool around with it on their own terms and trust me,à they're going to learn thingsà that you can't get out of playing with Dora the Explorer toys. Number two ââ¬â own a pocketknife. Pocketknives are kind of drifting out of our cultural consciousness,à which I think is a terrible thing. Laughter)à Your first ââ¬â your first pocketknife is like the first universal tool that you're given. You know, it's a spatula, it's a pry bar,à it's a screwdriver and it's a blade. And it's a ââ¬â it's a powerful and empowering tool. And in a lot of cultures they give knives ââ¬âà like, as soon as they're toddlers they have knives. These are Inuit children cutting whale blubber. I first saw this in a Canadian Film Board film when I was 10,à and it left a lasting impression, to see babies playing with knives. And it shows that kids can develop an extended sense of selfà through a tool at a very young age. You lay down a couple of very simple rules ââ¬âà always cut away from your body, keep the blade sharp, never force ità ââ¬â and these are things kids can understand and practice with. And yeah, they're going to cut themselves. I have some terrible scars on my legs from where I stabbed myself. But you know, they're young. They heal fast. (Laughter) Number three ââ¬â throw a spear. It turns out that our brains are actually wired for throwing thingsà and, like muscles, if you don't use parts of your brain,à they tend to atrophy over time.But when you exercise them,à any given muscle adds strength to the whole systemà and that applies to your brain too. So practicing throwing things has been shown toà stimulate the frontal and parietal lobes,à which have to do with visual acuity, 3D understanding,à and structural problem solving, so it gives a sense ââ¬âà it helps develop their visualization skills and their predictive ability. And throwing is a combi nation of analytical and physical skill,à so it's very good for that kind of whole-body training. These kinds of target-based practice alsohelps kids develop attention and concentration skills.So those are great. Number four ââ¬â deconstruct appliances. There is a world of interesting things inside your dishwasher. Next time you're about to throw out an appliance, don't throw it out. Take it apart with your kid, or send him to my schoolà and we'll take it apart with them. Even if you don't know what the parts are,à puzzling out what they might be forà is a really good practice for the kidsà to get sort of the sense that they can take things apart,à and no matter how complex they are,à they can understand parts of them and that means that eventually,à they can understand all of them.It's a sense of knowability, that something is knowable. So these black boxes that we live with and take for grantedà are actually complex things made by other peopleà and you can understand them. Number five ââ¬â two-parter. Break the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. There are laws beyond safety regulationsà that attempt to limit how we can interact with the thingsà that we own ââ¬â in this case, digital media. It's a very simple exercise ââ¬â buy a song on ITunes, write it to a CD,à then rip the CD to an MP3 and play it on your very same computer. You've just broken a law. Technically the RIAA can come and persecute you.It's an important lesson for kids to understand ââ¬âà that some of these laws get broken by accidentà and that laws have to be interpreted. And it's something we often talk about with the kidsà when we're fooling around with things and breaking them openà and taking them apart and using them for other things ââ¬âà and also when we go out and drive a car. Driving a car is a ââ¬â is a really empowering act for a young child,à so this is the ultimate. For those of you who aren't comfortable actually br eaking the law,à you can drive a car with your child. This is ââ¬â this is a great stage for a kid.This happens about the same timeà that they get latched onto things like dinosaurs,à these big things in the outside worldà that they're trying to get a grip on. A car is a similar object, and they can get in a car and drive it. Andà that's a really, like ââ¬â it gives them a handle on a worldà in a way that they wouldn't ââ¬â that they don't often have access to. So ââ¬â and it's perfectly legal. Find a big empty lot, make sure there's nothing in ità and it's on private property, and let them drive your car. It's very safe actually. And it's fun for the whole family. So, let's see. I think that's it. That's number five and a half. OK.
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