hang out with kids and get a new perspective on why stuff doesn't get done — 80%+ of the time, nobody thinks they're being avoidant; whatever remains to be done has yet to be explicitly approved, is better left undone than "wrong," seems to have an undoable next step
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Replying to @webdevMason
i love talking to my teacher friends about their student woes. some (many?) smart kids will give stupid answers to boring questions if they can get away with it because it allows them to save energy for more fun and interesting stuff like playing with friends
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Replying to @visakanv
tbh, reading Holt has increasingly convinced me that most kids experience classrooms in a state of semi-unconsciousness w/ peaks of low-level terror when they're called on; whatever comes out of their mouths then is their strategy for social survival, variable between kids
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Replying to @webdevMason
i would affirm that to have been mostly true for my experience as well. i was good at improvising when called on, so not so much terror re: that. but terror re: teachers asking about homework i definitely hadn't done

2 replies 0 retweets 7 likes -
Replying to @visakanv
kids are *always* trying to balance the goals of satisfying adult expectations + maintaining their social position amongst the other kids; in some peer groups, the optimal strategy is to keep teacher expectations low + avoid looking like a nerd — very hard to break that dynamic
5 replies 0 retweets 14 likes -
Replying to @webdevMason @visakanv
imo, even in "good" schools, where all the game's points can be scored by giving "good" answers, the game is Make Teacher Praise Me, not Think Interesting Thoughts & Get Useful Feedback — I think the latter is a game that you just can't play within the parameters of most schools
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Replying to @webdevMason @visakanv
Yeah, what if the game is of asking "good" questions? Would require a fundamental rewriting of schools.
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yep — good questions require genuine curiosity & result from points of confusion within a work-in-progress model; it's very difficult to keep enough attention on one's own thoughts to do this while operating the is-teacher-happy-with-me & are-kids-accepting-me perimeter scans
3 replies 0 retweets 7 likes
I don't think it's a coincidence that the archetypal "genius" seems aloof or socially awkward/unaware; this is what happens when you completely or near-completely shut off the scans, which most people (myself included) do not and probably cannot do
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Replying to @webdevMason @visakanv
Hah, nice way to see it : being able to be academically lit is a side-effect of one's social radar malfunctioning rather than being an effect by itself. No weight holding you back + saving on resources which otherwise would be engaged in scans and pandering.
1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes -
Replying to @kunksed @webdevMason
visa is cleaning out his notes Retweeted visa is cleaning out his notes
Just found this againhttps://twitter.com/visakanv/status/998253065365942272?s=21 …
visa is cleaning out his notes added,
visa is cleaning out his notes @visakanvit's so easy to forget as adults that kids have such real, nuanced social lives. Was talking with my wife earlier about some of our the friends and I realized we knew (or thought we knew) so much about other kids, as kids the #1 activity of most humans is analyzing other humans https://twitter.com/LaZairah/status/996422606956920832 …Show this thread0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
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