yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

How can we best help students? Cultivate their love for learning. | John Hardin


3m read
·Nov 3, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

A fun exercise is to ask someone when was a time when you were really passionate, when you were just super fired up about learning. When you couldn’t stop. You stayed up late at night because you had to learn more about something. For me, the time that stands out was the first time that I did some public speaking. I didn’t want to do it. I was sort of peer pressured into it. I refused. They got me to do it, and there I am standing there with my little manuscript with hundreds of people looking at me. My hands are shaking, and I started speaking, and for me, it was this just like eureka moment. It was crazy. I loved it, and it felt natural.

And so I immediately just poured myself into how can I become a better public speaker. Or what are the opportunities to do that? What does it look like to teach? How do you get involved in teaching? I want to help to transfer information and share information with people. I asked my wife this question the other day, and her mom was a schoolteacher. And so she would have to hang out in the library while her mom was finishing up schoolwork. She was reading a magazine and came across this article about an Ebola outbreak, and she just thought it was fascinating. And so she just went on to read all these medical textbooks.

She bought the encyclopedia of communicable diseases, carried it with her everywhere, and she’s just a kid, right? It’s crazy. And she still has it. But she was so passionate about it. So if you think about for you what was that time or you ask somebody else that question, I think what we find is there are these common threads that run through it all. That it’s something that you’re passionate about. It’s something that connects with you. It’s relevant to you. It has meaning to you, and that’s where that love of learning really sparks and begins to grow.

And so the question then is how do we help our kids? I mean, as a dad, that’s one of the biggest things on my mind. It’s one of the greatest gifts I could give my kids: help them cultivate a love for learning. And to do that, what I’ve got to do is help them understand themselves. Help them connect with what they’re passionate about and then build out the experiences and the knowledge around them so that they can explore and learn more. And then I’ve got to partner with educators and teachers and others so that in our education process it’s not just me as a dad, but we’re all working together to help kids cultivate that spark, that love of learning.

Because I can’t think of much that’s better than that that we could give to our kids. It’s interesting that if you went to school in this country, if you went to school in the U.S., then it’s very, very likely that you and I went through the same sort of school process. Because for the most part, we all did. We all went in this country went through the same schooling. So then the question is, well why is that?

Well, we have to look at the history of education to understand it a little bit. Schools began to develop in the colonies in 1630 and really started in Massachusetts. By the late nineteenth century, by the end of the 1800s, you had schools that had popped up all across the country and you had this incredible diversity of philosophies and formats in education. So, of course, then one of the concerns became, well how do we ensure that every student has the same opportunity and that every student gets the same quality of education? That’s a valid concern. It’s a really important question.

The National Education Association actually convened in 1892 what’s called the Committee of Ten. It was this committee of ten leaders in education. Most of them were presidents of colleges and universities. It was chaired by Charles Eliot, who was the president of Harvard University. And the charge before this committee was to really develop or to create a sort of uniform roadmap for how to do school. So they met with subcommittees and they produced this report in 1893 that really laid out this format for school. If you think about what your school experience...

More Articles

View All
More Compute Power Doesn’t Produce AGI
The artificial general intelligence crew gets this completely wrong too. Just add more compute power and you’ll get intelligence when we don’t really know what it is underneath that makes us creative and allows us to come up with good explanations. Peopl…
Snorkeling With President Obama: How Our Photographer Got the Shot (Exclusive) | National Geographic
I’ve never photographed a president before. This was my first experience, you know, being sort of in the presence of Air Force One and all the security and Secret Service. The day that the president arrived was a perfect day—sunny, clear. I didn’t expect …
Making Custard | Live Free or Die: How to Homestead
[Music] Custard utilizes ingredients that we tend to have a lot of, so I want to teach you how to make custard. All you need is milk, eggs, and honey, and then you can add some flour or corn starch and some vanilla. Okay, all right, let’s just use up all …
Adjectives and commas | Adjectives | Khan Academy
Hey Garans, hey Paige, hi David. Hey, so Paige, I went to the grocery store yesterday and I got this apple. Okay? I put it in the fridge, uh, and this morning when I opened the fridge, the apple was all like gross and sticky and mushy. I really want to w…
Homeroom With Sal & Mayor Sam Liccardo - Wednesday, June 3
Hi everyone, welcome to the daily homeroom livestream. For those of you all who are wondering what this is, this is a series of conversations that we’ve started over the last few months. It was, I guess, catalyzed by COVID, but it’s a way of staying in co…
The vowel-shift irregular verb | The parts of speech | Grammar | Khan Academy
Hello grammarians! We’re talking about vowel shifting in irregular verbs, which is gonna sound a little weird, but bear with me. To review what a vowel is super quick, a vowel is any sound that your mouth can make while your tongue isn’t touching your li…