Thursday, August 22, 2019

what's your big question?

Our minds are naturally inclined toward associative and interdisciplinary thinking.  We connect the dots in all sorts of ways, often when we don't fully comprehend the experience (and sometimes when there aren't even any dots).  

We have questions about the nature of the world: our experience of it, our place in it, our relationship to it, what lies beyond it, and everything else.  When we're young we ask questions all the time.  We are insatiably curious.  It's like somehow we intuitively understand that the more we learn the better we get at everything--including learning.  We don't worry about curricular units or standards.  We have no test anxiety.  We test ourselves all the time.  We love risk and we don't care if we fail.  It's always somebody else who's saying, "Hey, come down from there, you're going to get hurt!"* [*Often, they're right.  In any case they're probably more experienced in estimating the odds of that was fun didn't hurt vs. itchy leg cast for a month outcomes.  But sometimes you just KNOW you can do it and it's frustrating to be told you can't.  Pushing the edge is what learning is all about.** {**As a teacher/responsible adult I must explicitly remind you to do this (i.e., learn/push the edge/create new neural pathways in your brain that actually change your mind) in ways that will not break laws or harm any sentient beings-- most especially you-- or offend, irritate, annoy, upset, or anger your parents.***} <***If you think this is a lot of footnotes, or whatever we're calling the blogger's equivalent, you should read David Foster Wallace (especially Infinite Jest).  In fact, this is the perfect time for you to consider his commencement speech (which doesn't contain footnotes, but does contain the sort of wisdom that more people should hear while there's still time to do something about it.).  At any rate, if you're still following this sentence you'll do fine in this course.>}]  Not only do we love climbing learning limbs when we're young, we know it's what we're best at.  Most of us learn whole languages best between the ages of 5-12.  Our amazing brains manage the torrential inflow by creating schema



We have every incentive to accelerate and amplify our learning as we age.  Our future is increasingly complex and uncertain.  Our culture and economy favor those in the know.  Learning is increasingly your responsibility as individuals.  You're becoming more independent; in about a year you'll be heading off to college, where your professors may not know you exist and definitely won't care how you organize your binder.  As if all that isn't motivation enough for you to get your learning on, it turns out that not learning may actually be bad for you.  We form new neurons and connections in our brains when we learn.  Scientists are investigating whether the lack of new neuron formation is a cause for depression or an interfering factor in recovery.

When it comes to thinking for yourself in the traditional high school setting, though, there are constraints.  Inquiry that doesn't "fit" in the classroom is too often seen as insubordinate.   By definition, individualism and divergent thinking don't regress to the mean or conform to a one-size-fits-all syllabus.  We will have to find ways to gracefully lose arguments and compromise.  In addition, a culture of fear of punishment or embarrassment can lead the smartest and most successful learners to surrender and play the game.  When this happens, motivated learning in the presence of no opportunity dies the same death as a fire in the presence of no oxygen.  The authors of "The Creativity Crisis" say we ask about 100 questions a day as preschoolers-- and we quit asking altogether by middle school. 

In his book Orbiting the Giant Hairball, Gordon MacKenzie describes visiting schools to show students how artists sculpt steel into animals:

“I always began with the same introduction: ‘Hi My name is Gordon MacKenzie and, among other things, I am an artist... How many of you are artists?’
The pattern of responses never failed.
First grade: En mass the children leapt from their chairs, arms waving wildly, eager hands trying to reach the ceiling.  Every child was an artist.
Second grade: About half the kids raised their hands, shoulder high, no higher.  The raised hands were still.
Third grade: At best, 10 kids out of 30 would raise a hand.  Tentatively.  Self-consciously. 
And so on up through the grades.  The higher the grade, the fewer children raised their hands.  By the time I reached sixth grade, no more than one or two did so and then only ever-so-slightly—guardedly—their eyes dancing from side to side uneasily, betraying a fear of being identified by the group as a ‘closet artist.’”  

Richard Saul Werman (the man who created the TED conference) said, "In school we’re rewarded for having the answer, not for asking a good question.”  School and the way it works was designed back when things were very different and oriented around mass production; that's not the way the world works any more.  You can't just prepare for a job that may not be around by the time you graduate.  And in the age of the search engine, there is no real point in learning facts for their own sake, especially since so many of them eventually turn out not to be facts after all.  You have to develop the critical thinking, problem-solving, oppurtunity-seeking, and collaborative skills that will enable you to CREATE a role for yourself in the new economy.  (And don't worry, if you're not an entrepreneur by nature, these abilities will help you do whatever else you want to do more effectively.)

So, our first mission is to reclaim the power of the question.  Everything you ask has an interdisciplinary answer.  Show me a cup of tea and I'll show you botany, ceramics, and the history of colonialism (for starters).  Wondering why your girlfriend doesn't love you any more?  Psychology, poetry, probability... you get the idea.  And no matter what the question or the answers, you're going to have to sort the signal from the noise and determine how best to share the sense you make.

What's your Big Question?  

What have you always wanted to know?  What are you thinking about now that you've been asked?  What answers would make a difference in your life, or in the community, or in the world?  What do you wish you could invent?  What problem do you want to solve?  This is not a trick and there are no limits.  Please comment to this post with your question and post it to your course blog (title: MY BIG QUESTION).  You can always change your question or ask another.  If you need some inspiration, check out a previous year's Eng 3 Big Questions here.

46 comments:

  1. Do we ever really know people? Do we really know people, or do we only know the version of them that they wish to show us? A girls' mother knows her differently than her sister, and she sees her best friend in a different light than his girlfriend sees him.

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  2. Why do we pay for water when water should be free?

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  3. What I’ve always wanted to know was what happens after death? I know we all have different beliefs but I want to know the truth about what happens after death.

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  4. Why is my immune system weak even if i drank all my vitamins when i was a kid?

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  5. Why can't society stop judging? Whats so good about judging others??

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  6. How are we capable of loving someone one day and the next day act like they're someone you've never met before?

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  7. In regards to myself, my big question is why are we obliged to study every subject in school? Even though, there are some subjects that are irrelevant to our interest in profession and or major we want to pursue.

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  8. What is the meaning/definition of true beauty? Not the textbook definition. Also Why has society changed that meaning/definition so much.

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  10. don't come at me. is anything real? Like how we do know that were even real? How do you know that were even alive. What if were crazy and this is all a figment of our imagination.

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  11. When will we reach inter dimensional travel? Portals? How long til then? Where to first? Will it use dark matter? or something else? 20XX? or 30XX?

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  12. Why does religion have to exist? If religion didn't exist there would less violence and over all bring people closer together.

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  13. Why isn't climate change the number one talk all around the world but more specifically why isn't it the #1 discussion with all politicians since it is the one problem that affects EVERYBODY(both the rich and the poor, some more than others). Also how do people still not believe climate change is real.

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  14. why do we have to pay to be educated when everyone can be educated for free and do amazing things for the world.

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  15. Are we going to be able to travel all of the galaxy in the next thousands of years?

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  16. One thing that's always bugged me or came up in life, is if there was ever really a true answer? Everyone has different beliefs like religion or politics and everyone claims to be right but is there a really a right answer? A right religious belief or a right a political stance/view?

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  17. What I've always wanted to know is what the future holds for me ?

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  18. Why do I have to learn all these subjects in school when I already know that I want to become a doctor? Would many of the things that learn in school actually be helpful in the future? How would it benefit me?

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  19. Why does having an extra 5 or 10 minutes of sleep in the morning make us feel happy?

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  20. Why Hasn't anyone gone back to the moon since 1972?

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  21. I've always wanted to know why society is the way it is. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer, in some cases the poor suddenly get rich for no reason. Everyone is the same: something goes viral and now suddenly everyone is participating. I guess the big question WHY? Why is everything and everyone the way they are?

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  23. Why does the voice inside our head sound different then our real voice?

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  24. This just in from Juan Ramirez: Is time travel real? Also, is the mandela effect real?

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  26. what is humanity's purpose? Why are we here? How did we come to be?

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  27. Why can't we know what's in area 51?

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  29. I want to know why labels even exists and why we keep bringing them up or keep using them if everyone wants to be seen as equal (same) in gender, society, and race. I wish to invent tools to make this world a better place or find new ways to use our resources to help our community without harming anyone else's life or affecting them in any way. For instance, we have robots that help harvest or do a few labor jobs but it affects the people that will loose that job.
    I am also starting to wonder if there is going to be a day when all questions are acceptable. When are all questions going to be answered? And when is everyone going to be confident with themselves to be their true selves?

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  30. This just in from Carson: How was Earth made?

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  31. Why do innocent activists "disappear" after they have challenged the government system?

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  32. Why do people think the world is flat? People would of fell of the edge by nw

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  33. Why is everything bought in this world?
    Why do we go by what everyone goes by? For instance, gender and thought wise... don't come at me but, gender because since everyone is "straight" everyone thinks we're suddenly the same, when we truly aren't. Thought wise because if it appears like we don't agree with what someone thinks, its bad.

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  35. Why do we often lose our train of thought?

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  36. Why do field wrokers get paid less then what the product is actually being sold for? for example strawberries why are they more expensive in stores but field workers only get paid a certain amount yet work for more then 6 hours.

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  37. Why are men constantly considered the bad guy in a relationship when women are as bad or worst?

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  38. Something that has always pestered me in my mind is why we always have to please others? Why can't we just do nice things for ourselves once in awhile? Does the thought of society labeling us as 'selfish' get in the way of this?

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  39. Why do people have the need to feel superior if it never really turns out well?

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  40. Why is it so important to be recognised?

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  42. Why is it that when you have nothing to do time seems to go slower, but as soon as you have things you need to do there's not enough time.

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  43. Why do humans not care and take for granted what is given to us?

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  44. Why can't kids who are 14 years younger testify during child custody?

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LAST POST FOR THE SCHOOL YEAR/ june 3 w online meeting #50

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