> I set hard lines. Weekends are for my family. I do not touch the computer unless it is an absolute emergency. When I come back on Monday, I’m refreshed and productive. The same goes for evenings. I’ve been up on stage at speaking events and said, “I have to go give my kids a bath now,” and everyone is shocked. But if I can’t have dinner with my kids, give them a bath, and read them a book before bed, something is wrong in my life.
This should be expressed more often and by a lot more people. Great to hear this from someone I already admire.
Curiosity is a hard thing to squash, but the traditional model of education manages pretty well: Listen to lectures, take notes, feed back what you learned, and then forget it all. You’re not allowed to go beyond the curriculum. Khan Academy is all about giving more breathing room. You want to go deep? Go deep. I had this to some degree at the public school I went to in Louisiana, where there were gifted programs. Every day, starting in second grade, they took me out of class for an hour, and I would go to another room, with a mixed age group. The first time I went, I thought it was the biggest racket. I walked up to Miss Rouselle’s desk, and she asked, “What do you like to do?” I was like, I’m seven years old—shouldn’t you be telling me what to do? But I said, “I like to draw. I like puzzles.” She said, “OK, have you used oil paints? Have you done Mind Benders?” Soon I looked forward to that hour more than I did to spending the night at my friend’s house. And I learned more that applies to what I do today than in the five other hours of the day combined.
In NYC, they start prepping kids for admissions testing before they are 3. By pre-K they are teaching kids to sit still for written exams. "Experts" discourage kids from learning multiple languages since some K admissions exams test vocabulary. "Experts" discourage kids from prematurely learning to read because most K admissions exams only test aural reasoning.
Salman's points about the system destroying curiosity is 100% absolutely true. I don't have a good solution other than to find a way to improve all the schools in the system. Nobody has shown how to do this yet.
All of them, even though they sit on top of empires, go deep and try to understand things themselves. They’re very hands-on. And they’re incredibly curious.
Well a great piece of advice for everyone. The more you are curious, the more you will love your job, the better you perform, more fulfilled life you live.
Being an entrepreneurial educator myself, it's so good to read about Khan's ideas and experiences. This article has inspired me to work harder and have a go at video delivery.
Hopefully I can make a positive difference in the world like Khan has.
[+] [-] gldalmaso|12 years ago|reply
This should be expressed more often and by a lot more people. Great to hear this from someone I already admire.
[+] [-] mathattack|12 years ago|reply
In NYC, they start prepping kids for admissions testing before they are 3. By pre-K they are teaching kids to sit still for written exams. "Experts" discourage kids from learning multiple languages since some K admissions exams test vocabulary. "Experts" discourage kids from prematurely learning to read because most K admissions exams only test aural reasoning.
Salman's points about the system destroying curiosity is 100% absolutely true. I don't have a good solution other than to find a way to improve all the schools in the system. Nobody has shown how to do this yet.
[+] [-] fharper1961|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ateevchopra|12 years ago|reply
Well a great piece of advice for everyone. The more you are curious, the more you will love your job, the better you perform, more fulfilled life you live.
[+] [-] pedrogrande|12 years ago|reply
Hopefully I can make a positive difference in the world like Khan has.
[+] [-] TempleOSV2|12 years ago|reply
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