Lawrence Krauss: We Need to Teach Kids Creative Thinking | Big Think.
Education is far less about a set of facts than a way of thinking, than learning how to critically think. And therefore, what I always think should be the basis of education is not answers but questions. We should teach kids how to question.
Now, having said that, of course, to be a productive adult there are certain skills that are required – reading, writing, and in the old fashioned days we used to say arithmetic. Now we say mathematics. And it’s important that we provide students those basic skills.
And in that sense, I’m in favor of a common core because I think there are certain things that most reasonable educators and most reasonable mathematicians and scientists and historians would agree are a part of what every modern literate person should have as a tool to go out and look at the outside world.
I am in favor of saying, okay, let’s get teams of educators and experts in certain disciplines to say what are the basic things that we think are an essential part of an early education for people. Put them together and create as well as possible a set of goals and tools to learn those things.
One thing I cannot understand, and people are probably going to be upset about this, is why local school boards have control over educational content. Because local school boards are inevitably made up of individuals without any training.
One of the reasons we send kids to school is to help protect them from their parents – in a good sense. I mean, most parents want their kids to learn good, but the point is the reason kids are outside the house is so they can get exposure to things that might take them beyond the biases that they learn at home.
And if we send them to school, we should take them beyond the biases that are present in local school board members. There should be standards that are based – that are determined by educators, not by people who for one reason or another run for election to a local school board.
So a common core is something I’m in favor of. What I’m not in favor of, by the way, is standardized tests, however. Testing always inevitably means you teach students to be able to do tests. And I’ve seen it at all levels, including, by the way, at graduate school.
We have many grad students, say from China, who are excellent at taking physics tests, but when they want to become researchers, just being able to regurgitate information is not what makes you a creative researcher. And I think the same is true for a young person.
Being able to know specifics to pass a test is not the same as being able to understand how to go about answering those questions.