Five dangerous things every school should do | Gever Tulley | TEDxKids@Vilnius
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- Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
- This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences. Gever Tulley presents an opportunity to practice the art of tinkering. There is a whole world of possibilities hidden away in the most unexpected materials. He lives the art of tinkering in his Tinekring School and share it with you!
Gever Tulley is the founder of Tinkering School, an internationally known summer program for children. He is also the founder of SF Brightworks, an innovative K-12 school in San Francisco that emphasizes experience-based, hands-on, experiential learning. As Gever notes: “I have made it my mission to re-introduce the world to children: the real world as revealed through unscripted, hands-on, meaningful learning experiences.“
Gever is an author of the book Fifty Dangerous Things (you should let your children do), the TED book Dangerism!, and the children's book The Little Girl Who Sneezed.
About TEDx, x = independently organized event In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)
I just realized that school totally killed me.
Jeah I have good grades ... The price? Totally everything I wanted to do as a kid.
Me too. I don't know what to do.
A guy came to our class in elementary and asked kids what they wanted to be when they grow up. He would always respond "well that job is not stable and you probably won't get it"
Yeah, school is basically all my identity. I wouldn't have done anything else without school though, because my parents never taught me sports or skating or things like that (except swimming and biking.)
RUclips YT I always got “that job will never pay enough be a doctor or a lawyer”
I don’t know what to do after school now. I get home and I don’t know how to relax.
When he mentioned children asking questions that aren’t related to the class, it reminded me a lot of my favorite high school teacher. He taught history, but at the beginning of class, we would always take an ungraded “general knowledge test.” It was just ten questions about random but useful things that had nothing to do with history. Like the pronunciation of often mispronounced words like “preventive.” Or maybe about the length of the Nile River, or Mark Twain’s real name. And he wouldn’t grade the tests; we students would exchange papers, and he’d tell us the correct answers. By the end of the semester, we’d all be making near 100%, but none of this would be factored into the grade for the class. It was just for fun. He’d also add random jokes and puns when giving out the answers.
These tests would take up the first 5-10 minutes of class, and then he’d go on and teach actual history. But it made the class fun and woke us up. I still remember many of those random facts to this day.
Before taking his history classes, history was my least favorite subject. But after that, it became my favorite,
Any chance his name is Mr. Crabb?
@@sajpar9765 commenting i wanna know the answer
Random fact me
@@Biosquid239 same here
Dunkin Coffee Nope.
Can this guy be the head of the department of education?
Armed Titanium amen!
I wish my education was like that. I lost all of my creativity until I started playing D&D after highschool.
I always felt from early in life id say at age 6 I felt like something was missing, too young to really figure it out, but I wanted to because it was hard for me to invest in schooling, this struggling. Then I had my first GREAT teacher that showed a side of education similar to this when I was in middle school and it clicked. Things that make us smile or things that insight Awe in a human being. These things will cause curiosity. Curiosity will birth a yearning to understand. And with motivation behind that the topics that are being taught just become a obstacle between you and this cool thing. It just works. To preface, I always struggled with English, spelling, and vocabulary. Still with spelling every now and then but the others I built not through a text book and tests. Instead through the passion for the arts and poetry. I enjoyed writing poetry and songs and as such wanting to be better and being tired of using the same words over and over, the passion for that activity led me naturally to learning new words and different ways to construct those words together. He's got my vote. A line that seems fitting from another video, "If modern education was truly about learning. F would not stand for failure. It would stand for Find another answer."
YES please
can this guy be my school's principal instead of some random lazy nun?
Some of the things we did in high school in the 1970s would not only get you permanently expelled but arrested today.
Brian Bixby true, while currently the most extreme I've ever done (grade 9 2016-2017) is neutralize sulphuric acid (watered down to roughly 1% dilute) boring and irrelevant, what if schools were like this guys school, but what if we made schools sort of like one week is math, science, etc but the next week was time to explore and create and try to understand the world we live in.
Hmm, I'm a teacher. and the most extreme things I and my mates have witnessed are possibly criminal. Throwing school furniture from the third floor, using permanent marker to graffiti the white board and even the walls, breaking windows, putting up satiric posters about teachers who are considered tyrants, Chanting slogans which would be considered foul, dancing in the bathroom with music at full blast.
Yeah, school should give some leash but there should be a limit.
T H E F L Y
That isn't the point. The reason those things happen is because kids aren't given the freedom to express what they're thinking so they do it in other ways. If we let children follow what they wanted to learn they wouldn't have to take everything out on the world.
@Lola Shields: xactly.
@T H E F L Y: There's "crime that should be crime" and "crime that shouldn't be crime". Those are actions in the first category. The former is about behavior that across all time would be considered disruptive, immoral, etc. The second is about stuff that we restrict more and more by the nanny state.
humans are a very freedom loving species. spending 8 hours a day in a cube is not a good place for learning
Amen to that but the cube follows us long after we finish school in the form of corporate labor which is the purpose of schools to begin with. To create obedient workers, not thinkers & creators. Schools are a 16 year indoctrination into modern slavery nothing more.
Yes isn't it strange that yearning for freedom led us to making our electronics more practical and free. Phones no longer mounted on a wall or tethered to it. We have made free all these things around our life, and should be more free than we've ever been. Yet were not. At this point my view on it is "To have a life, is to relinquish it."
Freedom at its core has been an illusion that none of us have had since the creation of government!
Nihilistic pancakeface thats why i kept getting punished for fiddling and walking around.
@@djfox1555 The funny thing is my school recently banned phones
"And it has to do with algebra, which u have never done. But u dont care cus its what standing between u and burning a marshmello with sunlight, and thats worth doing so im gonna do this math." Amen to that
2 year old comment I know, but this part is so important. We shouldn't give kids a lesson and tell them they will get the reason behind it 10 years later. They should get the reason for learning the lesson, and then in 5 years time they will understand all the intricacies on their own without having been forced to do it. All major learning happens through self motivation, not from force fed information.
Daniel Kemnitz i was gonna comment this but very well said bro.
@@technorazor7328 So I'm not the only one who was randomly recommended this four year old video? Sweet. Also yes, I absolutely love how the students at his school are excited to learn about math and other stuff because they have immediate, real world things they can do with that information. I wish regular public schools taught information like that and then used it for practical functions instead of just to complete a test correctly.
Alright but like that is an absolute truth I cannot count how many times I've been like "I don't know how to do this, but I wanna do that" and then teach myself basic physics
I pick up a LOT of hobbies that way. Languages are the major focus of my attention, but I like Rubik’s cubes and knitting/crocheting or even swimming. I learned about aerodynamics by trying to figure out how to swim faster. Knitting and crocheting taught me consistency and knots/strings (I think it’s related to math, but I don’t remember) sometimes, I even watch tv shows or play games and wonder: “I could probably pull that off” and then I learn to pen spin and build my own mind palace (memorization techniques) or even launching a coin from one hand to the other DBH style (trajectory and force) I even pick up some textbooks because I am interested. If I lose interest in a day, I might pick it up later. Now that I’m in high school, I haven’t done anything. I even dropped art (my number one hobby)
Why has this not become more popular? It is something I would love to have in my school.
because it involves uncertainty
and people don't like that.
humans are all paranoid twats who can't make a decision unless they know exactly what's going to happen, it takes a certain kind of person to run a school like that, and it takes a certain type of parents to send their kids to a school like that. sadly those types of people are rare. extremely rare.
which is all the more reason for us to have more schools like these.
@Potato:3 Well there are many far more dangerous things that humans deal with all the time, and far greater uncertainties. Thus I think you drastically underestimate humans, and show a historically and geographically myopic view of things.
@mike4ty4 True, but most of these things happen when you have no other choice except certain failure. When there is the option of sending a child to a safe, curriculum-set school the parent would usually much prefer that option.
Potato:3 is right in the fact that you do need guts to send your children to a school like that, but I reckon it would pay off in the end. Certain teachers are required to teach students in this more hands-on way, otherwise the children wouldn't be learning anything useful, but just mucking around.
.....
there's a thing called outliers.
most of those things you talk of were done by a tiny portion of the people who've ever lived, under specific circumstances.
@Potato:3 Well under that theory then we don't need a lot of schools like these if only a very tiny little proportion will ever be able to benefit from them. Just a few such schools would suffice.
Headpop.
Let's put 30 kids in a room and tell them not to interact with each other
Then make them put letters in math problems. GrEaT iDeA
Katie Bug that point doesn’t make sense cuz algebra is super useful
@@christianjoseph6502 not for a child
@Christian Joseph
Well yes but they don’t specify which type of math “hmmm”
@1 MILLION PIXELS
Amazing point :)
I agree
Much yes
Very good
educating children is the last priority of schools, teachung them uniformity and compliance is the first
well how else will they obediently lick the boots of the rich when asked?
There are idealistic teachers. The administrators quickly weed them out. The primary goal of administrators is getting paid. If that means risk avoidance, so be it. if that means teaching to the test, so be it. sometimes, almost accidentally, learning happens.
Aand this is why my teachers either got along, or they'd get very ticked off and couldn't find out who to blame
We are taught to memorize, not understand.
"Never let your schooling get in the way of your education" --Mark Twain. I've been living by that one since junior high...
Dang. These videos advocating for freer forms of education always get me feeling some type of way. I’ve always done well in school; I pick things up pretty quick, I’m good at taking tests, that kind of stuff. And I’ve had people tell me plenty times that I’m smart, creative, etc. I never been one to point out huge glaring problems with the education system, but then again, it’s been a long, long, time since I’ve been genuinely interested in any sort of task I’ve been given. As soon as I’m away from an environment that doesn’t demand something of me, I do nothing. I have no desire to work towards anything that won’t have some sort of immediate practical benefit. Because why should I? I’ve learned that it’s a lot easier and a lot safer to just dedicate myself to working within the lines. I’m in college now and the one thing I just really want to gain back is motivation. I want to be excited about creating like I was when I was really little. And hopefully still be able to be successful
Play Minecraft. It may sound silly, but I played Minecraft for the first time in my life in my sophmore year of college and it was first all-nighter doing ANYTHING, schoolwork, other video games that I loved, ANYTHING. The freedom and the possiblities it offered were huge and the possibilities are much greater now than then thanks to years of updates. It helped crystallize my desire to create and learn and explore. Somewhere in that game (or another sandbox like it) you may find what you really want to do and get the kick you need to pursue it.
Try to mess around with things. I don’t know, it’s probably way more difficult then it sounds, but ask yourself some weird questions, try some random stuff. Acting on something often leads to motivation. Good luck
I have the same problem, but I use art to get creativity flowing again. Even just doodling in the margines of your paper helps, and it helps to keep engaged!
Same, dude. Same.
okay
so
I'm an 8th grader at my school
and after watching this I suggested a Students Government at the school.
after a while, we had our own 'government'
with president, vice president, speaks man, elections every year, making and modifying laws in the school.
Then I was elected as the First Students President, and suggested to have a referendum.
Now.
Most of these things said in the video are implemented in our school, and we now have a City Student's Government as well. it is absolutely amazing how things like overall morale, productivity, and unity between the students and the schools have increased.
Thank you for the tips.
Brilliant
Duck Is Coming good job. I really wish our school did some of the things in the video, but the county that I'm in is terrible and they really don't want anything to change. It sucks.
Duck Is Coming
That's awesome! But for my country there's a strict curriculum that we have to follow which leaves us with pretty much no time to do extra stuff. Still, great job putting things in place in your school!
thats amazing
If it helps I started with writing a 13 point list that included everything that I wanted to implement to the government
But before all of that I tried to be cool with all the more influencial teachers (attending their competitions, trying to build a more friendly relationship with them, trying to be trusted by them) so they will accept my deamands.
And it worked. Yes it took some time but it was worth it
awesome! please consider politics as a career path :)
Schools in my town: Only do what WE say. No creativity!
Also schools in my town a few years later: now come up with a creative way to do this
My creativity has left the server.
When I was in 7th grade, my social studies teacher Mr. Gillespie would always ask the class if anyone did anything interesting over the weekend, or someone would bring up a recent event and more often than not it would start a conversation that spans half the class period about something interesting that the class wants to talk about. We'd then spend the rest of the period doing minimal notes on the unit we were doing in social studies at the time. Because of those conversations that was my favorite class in my entire school career, and this talk just helps in proving why!
my english teacher in 7th grade used to do the same :)
My 12th grade chem teacher does this :)
My grade 10 Physics teacher used to challenge us to find something he doesn't know about. Some of us would spend the whole weekend looking up the weirdest and newest Science and Technological innovations in hope of knowing something he didn't. He then spent most of the period explaining to us how this random thing works... We all loved his class.
A similar occurrence happened to me when I was a high school sophomore. What was different though is that, we, as a class re-directed the conversation often without our teacher knowing. Usually, it was because he taught our class out of the textbook, which many of us found really dull and boring. So, one of my classmates would ask a question about religion, to which our teacher would respond and get sidetracked in a whole conversation about religion that actually interested us as a class more than the lecture he planned to give us.
Did you go the brook elementary in oak park Illinois? I had a teacher by that same name and would do the same thing
In the Netherlands there’s a tradition called a dropping. A dropping is when you take a small group of kids (8-14 yeast I believe) and just drop them somewhere in the middle of nowhere between 10-12pm and the only thing they can take with them is s compass a map and one phone and they have to find their way home on their own. Almost every child in the Netherlands has done this at least once and tbh that’s one of the coolest things I ever did in my life.
Judansha
Honest questions
1) is there a time limit for the kids?
2) is something that the parents do or the schools and if schools do it do all schools it?
3) are there any safety measures for the kids?
@@personal5306 the netherlands dont do thus no more
@@personal5306 not everyone still does it but no, theres no time limit and yes there are safety measures (one person is allowed to take their phone with them) sometimes its from school and sometimes tte parends organise it
Judansha
thank you for the information
Oh.
That's really cool.
"""High Achieving""" Senior here in high school studying engineering in dual credit at UTA atm... I wish. I wish. I'm awfully tired of the numbers game I've been playing for all these years. It's numbing.
:(
This definitely one of the best ted talks I have ever seen!
Leon Winkler go watch he's other one fine dangerous things you should let your kids do or the ted talk by Eddy Yhong they are both good
You haven't seen the TEDx: Open defecation - video yet. That's the most fun you'll ever have.
Leon Winkler agreed.
Man, cool school. Wish my kids could go! It's exactly how I think of schools, and how they SHOULD be! Great job.
Troy Starkey after watching this I kinda wanna be a teacher so I could use some of these tips
Yes
My brother!
I think I would actually look foward to going to school everyday if we learned with activities and experiments instead of copying words off of the projection on the wall. This school looks so fun and I honestly wish it was in my state so my future kids could go. Hopefully schools will improve to be like this one soon.
5 years later and i cannot recall a single word I ever copied from a whiteboard.
Only thing I remember was the bagua chart used with feng shui from one of the few good teachers I actually thought was interesting
My school lives off the whole “own your education” thing but isn’t really implemented. Sure we can learn things at our own pace but class lessons are always taught at the regular, possibly slower pace from what normal schools do. We don’t do experiements much, and now they have gotten rid of our right to go to the bathroom after lunch.
In my opinion my school is worse than most public schools because they gave us the hope that we can do what we want, when we want, but instead we are allowed even less than what a normal school is allowed.
Ballistic Bee it surely depends!
Maybe you can stand up against that?
can i go to this school?
YES!
No it closed down, this man was arrested and all the children were sent to foster homes
@@iKoper Where did you get that information? I can't find anything saying his school closed down and he was arrested. In fact, I found the opposite, they actually opened another location and several workshops, and Gever Tulley released a book. If you have a way to counteract that please link me the information
@@eleventeen4759 it was a joke
@@YM-zf8mt, not a good one. Not even a funny one. I like edgy humour, but that's because they would be so ridiculous, it would be too bad to be true. His/her joke was definitely a definition of "too bad to be true", but there was no indication.
honestly, it moves me that somebody said exactly that out loud. you never really realize how bad our society, schooling and parenting has gotten over the years. it sucks that in those decades we just went with the flow and didnt try to preserve the natural beauty of the world and its limitless potential. looking back at the 13 years I spent in school, the only moments i remember werent even in this country. it was of a small, poor town called bardarski geran. those months of freedom during the short summers where the only things that stuck with me. I feel it takes less than a week to learn addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. not 4 years. don't you think that we should let brains properly mature before ramming books down their throats too?
I agree! We should really learn to trust each other.
Mr. Grogenov but what are people that have the awareness done about it?? We keep blaming and not acting on it
If learning addition, subtraction, multiplication and division is the only thing you've learned at school, the problem isn't the school system, it is you.
In addition,
A brain can learn better if it isn't matured yet.
@@femke7551 I agree with this comment but your previous one is entirely wrong because your subjecting the student to a uniform system. It's almost totalitarian no wonder the students of colleges today sympathize with socialism even in the face of today's Hong Kong demonstrations.
“And its a little bit embarrassing to be an American.” Yep he got that right
I find myself being a bit embarrassed to be an American much more often than I should be
canadian checckkk
True that.
Nathan W. Which state?
I'm in high school currently, and we have a brilliant physics teacher, who instead of talking about theory for an hour straight answers our questions, uses close to us, real life examples. I wish there were more teachers like this.
I'm 14 years old, and seeing what these children are able to do, compared to what I am able, literally made me cry.
I'm mourning in my room, watching a ted talk knowing that my life will never be like that.
I WANT THIS MAN AS THE NATIONAL LEADER OF THE US EDUCATION BOARD!!!
Daniel Nunya Bidnezz *world
Student: I want to make fireworks
Him: yeah sure just do all the research required
Student Hunts for books about fireworks
Him: also if you blow you're self up you're paying the insurance
Student also finds book about how to pay insurance
This reminds me of Anohana, for anyone who’s seen it
._. ok ill admit students need more freedom but encouraging a student to make explosives is a terrible idea.
Holy Ravioli hence why they would need to find a legal and safe way to do it as stated in the video
@@holyravioli5795 that sound like someone who's overprotecting a child am i right ?
@Salivar Ravilas I really tried not to laugh at that, I swear.
I love this talk. Teaching all kids like this would build an entire country of legitimately free people who don't need the government's permission to get married or divorced.
"Dangerous things schools should do"
Trust Children
I’ve seen you before
These 8 year-olds are way smarter than me...
A fifteen year-old honors student
My life was wasted in the stupid school system.
nice, mine will too
@@helpiamsuffering603 not f you dont let it.
How old are all of you? There's no way you've consumed even half of your potential lifespan. Stop making excuses for being an absolute nobody with no general goals or directions.
Roddy It’s definitely an excuse. We never act on our ambitions, interests or passions. We blame external places and people for our own faults
@@rodbot Contradicting yourself. Nice
This talk makes me feel so conflicted, yet so happy, all in the same minute. Thank you Mr. Tulley
the problem with schools like these is that it is almost impossible to reproduce at a mass scale, we can't find a reliable way to train more educators into Gever Tulleies.
It is not about the materials. The sole purpose of this school is to practice the three simple principles mentioned by Gever Tully, which can be used in all kinds of subjects. These three principles are what drives our personal development.
@@PinkLady15 No The Problem is that you cannot get enough teachers for that style of schooling in a nation wide scale. Because 90% of ppl of our current teachers should be doing something entierly different. And many possible good teachers will end up in the "real" industry because they are great....
as a teacher I love this idea! :)
Aleksandra Kulecka do it.
Aleksandra Kulecka yay
Go be the change you want to be in the world!
Heyo. It's been two years, have you..... done something fun with or for the kids..? Just checking.
@@satyre_1 Yeah lol I wonder
The 'Summer Camp' sounds like my engineering class. We have a robotics team where we build a robot in 7 weeks and then bring it to a competition.
"And yes, it flies" that made me laugh a bit too much.
This is how a lot of my art and technology college courses are taught
it is the sad story of the dependance to the parents education because the only people who learn to enjoy this kind of things and science and learning are the kids who have parents who are doing it home, and the others are mostly lost. What a wonderful idee to create this school!!!
How did a 40 age man
Start a school
I really want to know
Naftaliten Better question: what's stopping _you?_
buca117 regulations. finances. conventions.
40 age man
Naftaliten because he believed in something that needed to be done
$$$
eleven overprotective parents disliked this video.
Caleb Birchwater no 14 but 2 in 4 weeks is really good
Not really overprotective they just want their child to have a good education
@@christianjoseph6502 are you one of the people who disliked this video
159 now
@@christianjoseph6502 I don't think so
That's an amazingly true statement! "The kids didn't know how to ask", this a real life eureka moment for me thank you sir
First thing: that is lunch with friends. Ask a question, suddenly everyone talkes about that then hops to a random topic.
I just had this pop up in my recommendations. Being someone who just finished their primary school years I cannot agree with this man more. I really do hope for this to make a change in our world. That was one of the most moving talks I’ve ever listened to
I like the way this guy thinks. He's got something here.
This hits hard for me- I went to an international private school in Sweden for a few years, staring when I was 7. Everything was incredibly free spirited, lessons were taught creatively, it was very diverse, questions were allowed, and the adults trusted the students. When I moved back to the United States, it was almost a slap in the face when test after test were shoved my direction, talking was banned, and when I got up to go to the bathroom(we didn’t need to ask at my previous school), I was shouted at and ridiculed, which seemed absurd to me at the time. Now, a few years later, I’ve eased into this harsher system and am sad today I’m used to it. Two of my three main teachers are harsher than I’ve ever had, but my third still gives me hope. She genuinely cares about us learning, not just grades and statistics and a pay raise. I’m happy to see there is still some hope for creative thinking, but I think it’s easy to say the American school system is for the most part limiting and honestly just sad.
the 12 people that disliked this video want kids to be perfect little robots
YayaAnimates probably all the nervous parents
@@gale5714 The nervous parents and normal school board executives probably
Probably my dad
Sounds like my dad.
Or just did well in school and enjoyed it. They're now either working in an office or have anxiety because life is chaotic and only rewards those who can cheat the system without being caught.
What an amazing TED Talk! I went to a Montessori school from kindergarten through middle school, and it's all about letting the kids follow their curiosity and run around and stuff. In 6th grade, we planned our own itinerary for our New York trip, subway stops and everything. This guy knows what's up, and I wish more education was like this.
Exactly my girls went to Montessori this set them up for life
This subject is the reason why if I ever had a child I would be terrified of sending them to traditional schools. I survived school with my child-like creativity intact. I'm not afraid to try fixing something I know next to nothing about or even trying to build something I know next to nothing about; usually works out well after enough study and experimentation. My greatest fear is that I will have children and be forced by the legal system to either send them to school or teach them the subjects they pick. I agree that grammar, history, mathematics and hard skills need to be taught early during school years; however a lot of subjects I was forced to fail through have had absolutely no impact on my life despite trying hard to think of any situation in my life where knowledge of those subjects would have helped me at all. So I would have less time to teach said child things that are actually useful: repairing machines, building furniture, designing and repairing electronics, repairing and remodeling homes, chemical properties that are useful and ones that are dangerous, and any number of things I've had to learn on my own or from my father because school failed to teach me these things I actually want to do with my life.
You have to open your eyes to see just how dangerous this system is and why it's so monumentally horrific. Because I failed in those unimportant subjects that were not essential for me to develop into a productive member of society. My grade point average was below what was required to get certain grants and scholarships that would have paid for further, more specific education. What if whether or not you got into college was determined by a grade in a class about computer programming, or hair styling, or baking or any number of good but not required skills. That's what I faced and had to suffer for.
I only had the weekends to partake in learning all of the skills I actually rely on. I would have loved the 70ish days worth of PE to have been spent on building stuff with my dad's tablesaws, drill presses, welders, grinders, lathes and hand tools. Probably would have given me the better start I needed into adulthood to actually utilize those skills toward a good life where I'm doing something I enjoy and making money doing it. Instead I'm sitting here without a job trying hard to determine how to take this hack saw, old grinder motor, washing machine motor and whatever wood I can salvage from demolished houses in the area to make the tools I need to break out of wage slave work and do something productive. I'd like to see any of my "teachers" in school design the belt drive that can handle multiple large tools on a single powerful motor with decoupling capabilities to free up power for specific tools when tough materials are used, because I have exactly that worked out on paper and it actually looks like a sound system.
Alan Hunter holy shit you wrote a fucking essay
@Alan Hunter: It also depends though on having access to those kinds of resources. Sounds like your family had a fair bit of _owned wealth_ (especially in more general senses of the term "wealth" than just its naive sense). Whereas in my case, I never had that. Homeless even at one point. No formal schooling here either.
He might be one of the best human being I have ever seen. He is the root for good. Thank Gawd people can be good.
Ms. Friz: "FIELD TRIP EVERYBODY!" (This reminds me of the magic school bus.)
Magic school bus was my favorite thing ever from when I was about 3 to when I was about 10. I think that series is what made me interested in learning, well, everything. I had a magic school bus book on electromagnetism, a MS VHS of the show on rollercoasters, a MS game about the solar system, and one about the dinosaurs. No topic was too much or too complicated for them to tackle, but they always made it kid friendly and FUN.
I wish there was a college like this, I wouldn't have dropped out and I'd be a lot happier and more engaged with life in general and in a more interesting world with more interesting people I could relate to
honeslty...
Well, what are you doing now? Go and do something you've always wanted to do, now that you have the freedom!
RUclips algorithm brought me here in 2019
As a kid...i wish i could go to his school...my school is so miserable... this was severely depressing to me....
If this was schoo, I would definitely be a more different person than I am today, but I know I would have loved that person, I love this....
I did not know Bruce Willis gave inspirational talks!
The only cheating I condone: Cheating the government system so you don't get in trouble for teaching kids the right way. :P
Btw, I now have an idea for something I want to make. I'll be back in a few weeks with my PVC pipe and canvas sheet contraption.
HauntedShadowsLegacy Did your invention turn out well?
Ya back yet?
Guys i think he forgot to look up how to do his project safely and legally
literally how do we make all schools be like this i support this with my bones and my body and my soul im shaking i will do anything to make this happen
i wish more people thought like this, i always think about how school robs you of your creativity and i feel like it is shaping us into people that cant think for themselves and that you are "wrong" or "stupid" if you think differently or outside the box, and its valuable time that we wont get back and we have no say in it. I really hope that we can make a change as soon as possible
This guy needs to be Head of Education Everywhere
As a kid I hated having to wait a lot of years just doing what I wanted to do. I hated to do 'fun' things once in a while like drawing and swinging on some ropes. I always wanted to create all sorts of things myself.
Fantastic talk. I was a child of the late 70's and 80's. My brother is 3 years older than I. While in grade school, I recall that in his class, the students got to 1) engineer the best vehicle for an egg drop and drop it from the roof of the school. 2) Build model rockets and shoot them off. 3) build hot air balloons using tissue paper and tea candles. I remember thinking, "I cant wait until I'm old enough to do these at school". We never did. It became too dangerous. ;(
Because I saw these things my brother and his class did (but didn't get to do myself), I still became an engineer. These things fascinated me.
Greed: Ruining everything since the dawn of time
Shoutouts to the guys making the translations for these talks. You are awesome.
at some point of this Video I realized that I was smiling...
This guy gets my imagination going as to what a good school would be like. I long for an education like the one he describes, but alas I live in the USA with the horrid education-in-a-box system it, and many other countries, have. I once had a teacher who had a classroom that, although not having quite the amount of freedom as desired, it still had enough to make it one of the most favorite classrooms in the school, practically unanimously. All-in-all, school needs freedom. School needs a rework.
No one:
Schools: straight a’s or the highway
I choose the highway it's less painfull
I had a Geometry teacher this year and we would often have conversations in the class and I learned more in those conversations than anything I’ve ever learned in school.And that was the most that most of my classmates have ever heard of me. I’m gonna miss that class and I’m sad I didn’t get to finish it.
Best talk ever on education system with real solutions.
One of the best Ted talk on education.
I love this man and his ideals
I am very glad we have free thinking hippies like this in our country. I'm also glad we don't have an over abundance of them.
Randall P Hey Randall, I’m curious as to what you mean by that?
This made me cry, I don't know why
Julia Michelle Cuz the government wasted your most important part of life with useless things maybe.
Oh that's it thx
No problem
Or maybe you are moved, because the future does hold hope after all. And maybe you didn't have the perfect childhood, but people can be good, and you can help them be good, and the world is always changing.
Michelle Ziems same here. I think it's cuz my country would never have something like this, for me or my future children (if I have any)
is it ironic that i watch this in school?
hans Jøingsli No, that is not irony.
It is destiny
No it's not
8 year old me: Can I drive the car?
Mom: YES!
where is this school so I and my children can attend
As a tenth grader doing eleven math in Canada, this would make everything sooooo much easier
"Let children be co-authors of their education"
I wish someone would tell my mother this. I have been going to this private for the past 5 years. And i must say they have been the most miserable of my my entire life. I am a very passionate person with big dreams but i can find the motivation to do things. I feel like this school is like a ball and chain attacked to my foot holding me back. I've tried to motivate myself but then i remember that i have school tomorrow and everything I've worked on i suddenly just cant anymore the creative spark is snuffed out. This past week that our school has been out I've been the most motivated inspired and happiest i have in a while.
Many times i have begged my mom to let me transfer even to the point of tears (and i never cry so that's saying something) but i cant have any say in where or what i learn. I wish she would at least listen to me and try to understand how this school makes me feel but apparently mother knows best and my opinion means nothing
1. I wish I focused more on history and English and less on math and science, but schools don’t like children having choices
2. I wish they fixed bullying, but they don’t
3. I wish they focused more on things I will 100% use, not 2% (taxes, insurance)
Great great talk. Beautiful impressive amazing inspiring soul. Thank you, bless you. All your dreams come true.
I just asked my mom if we can move to go to this guys school. Fingers crossed 🤞
This reminds me of a summer camp I go to we’re me a kindergartener was tought how to shoot a bow and carve tools. I was able to make my own perfectly working bow by the end of the week with arrows I built my self. Like that was more knowledge then I we’ll ever get in my entire years of elements
My principal is one of the 112 people that disliked this.
Shout out to my high school English teacher because he also understands the importance of freedom in education. He’s always encouraging us to bring ideas to the class. Unfortunately the school system won’t allow him to do much of it.
Psst, in the description you put Tinekring School instead of Tinkering School.
Your idea of school might have some problems but anything is better than our current education system and I'd love to see this idea become more common place.
The idea of doing a project a fun project without the condition that you'd be graded on it would be a blessing.
I wish I still had that childlike wonder if I'm, not being forced to do something then I just do nothing.
9:58 The curve made by a piece of material with evenly distributed mass is actually exp(x)+exp(-x), not x^2, which was for a long time the best approximation known.
Has anyone see that school that has no rules at break time? It's amazing.
And after break time the kids all concentrate 100% because they've done exactly what they needed to do.
It's on RUclips somewhere!
I recommend watching it
I want to go to that summer camp.
I've ALWAYS had something else that took my interest when I was little, either physics, or art, or how things work but since it was not about class I was told to keep them for home, I was tired by the time I ended my homework, every word he said seems like a dream, being told yes, not having to be where someone wanted me to be and being trusted? irreal
Wish I could've had a camp like that.
This man needs to become the head of education because we need better education. My school is the absolute worst, everybody hates it.
I am too shy, I can barley even bring myself to ask somebody for a pencil.
If this was what school was like, then I have no doubt that I would be able to start up conversations with people, and be confident to do so many more things.
I wish I could go to whatever that school is.
I’m only in year eight. I know, that compared to my creativity, in say year one, it is much less creative than what it was. Although, I think I am still creative as others my age, as I read so many books.
This was very inspiring.
I wish i went to that school
I helped raise my sister. She was born 3 and half months premature at 1 pound and 11 ounces. She was delicate, but tough. To this day she thanks me for making everything fun. Chores, work and fun were treated alike and we found a way to make work play. I had an active imagination and most of what we did was make believe, and maybe take a few risks Momma wouldn't have let us. Children need to be challenged in healthy ways and parents need to learn to breathe. Realizing that they survived the dangerous fun from their own childhoods.
Well done Sir! God bless you and your endeavors.
That like to dislike ratio explains this entire video, 349 : 0
Revolutionary idea.
As much as I like the idea, the problem is that his model doesn't scale up at all. There are 63 students in the entire school (K-12) and a student-teacher ratio of 2:1. This model just can't be scaled up for all of the roughly 60 million students enrolled in schools across the US every year unless half the population becomes teachers.
Now you see what good happens there's plenty of people who need jobs that have skills in many different aspects of life. To put it simply "It takes a village"
Watching this really opened my eyes to how many questions I’ve had that were left unanswered. I’m still very young (in eighth grade, in fact), and now that I look back, I realize that yeah, I would have appreciated a teacher like him, and I still would. Someone who will answer my questions, no matter how unrelated, and turn it into a fun and engaging learning experience. It’s much better than sitting in the same spot all day, listening to your teacher droning on about some topic you know you won’t remember, until you study for the test and forget everything the day after.
The education system baffles me. I am in a specialized program that is project-based, so we’re frequently getting new things to do. Yet, these projects are oftentimes extremely boring, and mainly just have us do some limited research on this specific place or topic, and create a slideshow, poster, document or cardboard/paper model and leaving it at that. Any burning questions we may have are not dismissed, but rather, ignored. These projects often don’t help us to learn anything anyways, as whatever information we may have collected instantly disappears once we’re finished.
I believe that if we were to do projects that didn’t reinforce what we’ve already learned, but instead, expanded upon it in a way that makes it interesting and memorable, then that would be the best way to teach. Not only would we gain an experience we may never get to repeat, we’d also learn something along the way.
Most of us in the program tend to learn best by experience (but that doesn’t mean we’re kinaesthetic learners), and some of the key things I remember were from my class and I fooling around during a lunch break in our class and jokingly memorizing the order of some cards. I still remember that order to this day. Not because we had someone constantly repeat it over and over again (although that did happen), it was mainly because I remember us laughing and teasing each other over how we messed up one thing, or how absolutely ridiculous the entire thing was. Sure, it wasn’t educational, but I’d like to think that because we had fun and were motivated by that, we picked it up better.
Here’s to hoping that the education system will improve, even if it’s only by a little.
9:55 Actually the shape a rope makes when you hang it is called a Catenary not a parabola
What's a catenary? And what's the difference with a parabola ?
@@figuringouthowtolife A catenary is the shape made when you hang a material between two points, it's equation is in the form of y = a cosh(x/a). A parabola on the other hand is the shape formed when you throw something into the air, its equation is in the form of y = ax^2 + bx + c.
@@bradthomson3758 oh alright do you know by any chance what is catenary in french
@@figuringouthowtolife I don't speak french, but going off google translate its caténaire.
I'd like him to become the head of the education department. It's probably too late for me, as I'll finish education in 3 years, but at least the younger kids will have it better. Because honestly? Bad teachers can easily kill one's desire to learn. And desire to learn is key to actually learning stuff for longer than until next test
Aw man, I remember running into the woods with a machete and my brother when I was about 12 for hours on end and just being in the woods.
Wait, a machete?
"Let's trust children more."
I put my hands together and I cried. I cried because it feels like the school doesn't trust us that we're studying and are constantly asking us "Are you in class?" "Are you just logged in and have wandered off?"
Please, if the subject you're teaching is worth paying attention for, why would we wander off? Or better yet, why ruin the subjects and make us look at them as monsters of knowledge instead of making them interesting facts we WANT to learn about?
"What if that burning question started a conversation?" So my 4th grade english class?
Thank you , Gever. Seems you like kids as much as I. Only wish I had you I my school or better yet as my teacher. I had a few really great teachers somewhat like you, I’d say maybe 4 from grade 1-12. That was 1974-1986.