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Monday, March 19, 2007

Asians seeking creativity

We've heard this story before!

Students in a Loudoun County laboratory studied tiny, genetically altered plants one recent afternoon, drawing leaves and jotting data in logbooks. Meanwhile, visiting scientists studied the students.

In spiral notebooks, the visitors recorded how long the teacher waited for students to answer questions, how often the teenagers spoke up and how strongly they held to their views.

The scientists had come thousands of miles from the island nation of Singapore to the Academy of Science in Sterling in search of ways to improve their teaching. This could be considered surprising, given that Singapore's eighth-graders rank No. 1 in science and math globally and those in the United States rank ninth in science and 15th in math, according to the 2003 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study.

But rankings aren't everything -- how America teaches is admired.

In a 21st-century economy that rewards quick thinking and problem solving, many educators in Singapore and elsewhere in Asia worry they are creating a generation of scientists who can memorize facts but can't keep up. These educators want to go beyond teaching facts and concepts that appear on tests and start teaching skills that are harder to gauge.

Hungry for new scientific and technological breakthroughs, Singapore's government has been asking this question. And it is rethinking lesson plans in a public school system for a country of about 4.3 million. In an initiative known as "Teach Less, Learn More," Singapore has trimmed its curriculum in recent years to focus on quality of instruction rather than quantity and to give students more time to think. And its educators are circling the globe to hunt for new methods.

Loudoun's Academy of Science weaves together math and science concepts and stresses hands-on learning through real-world applications. Teachers use the "inquiry approach" to education, giving students tools and guidance rather than step-by-step instructions. The goal is to have more " 'Gee whiz!' and 'Holy mackerel!' " moments and "to inject a love of science in addition to the facts," Wolfe said.

"How do you measure excitement? How do you measure creativity?" asked George Wolfe, director of the two-year-old public magnet school in Loudoun. "There's so much publicity about Americans not scoring well on tests, but few people ask the question: Then why are we producing so much innovation from our scientists?"

source:
Asian Educators Looking to Loudon for an Edge


I have the answer to that question.

Number one: We're manic depressive.

Number two: Our scientists are from Asia.*


here's the real answer

In 2005, a report commissioned by the U.S. Education Department compared math teaching in the United States and Singapore. It found that U.S. texts place less emphasis on understanding math concepts in depth and that U.S. teachers are less likely to clearly understand the subject. William Schmidt, a Michigan State University education professor, said the United States could learn a lot from Singapore. He said the success of scientists here owes more to a business and cultural environment that rewards risk-taking than to the U.S. education system.
Actually, risk-taking is hypomanic behavior.

I have no idea how much the genetics of temperament has to do with it, but I do think it has an effect, and I think we know that Americans have higher rates of hypomania and bipolar disorder.

Or not.

A Hypomanic Nation?

Energy, drive, cockeyed optimism, entrepreneurial and religious zeal, Yankee ingenuity, messianism, and arrogance—these traits have long been attributed to an “American character.” But given how closely they overlap with the hypomanic profile, they might be better understood as expressions of an American temperament, shaped in large part by our rich concentration of hypomanic genes.

If a scientist wanted to design a giant petri dish with all the right nutrients to make hypomanic genius flourish, he would be hard-pressed to imagine a better natural experiment than America. A “nation of immigrants” represents a highly skewed and unusual “self-selected” population. Do men and women who risk everything to leap into a new world differ temperamentally from those who stay home? It would be surprising if they didn’t. “Immigrants are unusual people,” wrote James Jaspers in Restless Nation. Only one out of a hundred people emigrate, and they tend to be imbued “with special drive, ambition and talent.”

A small empirical literature suggests that there are elevated rates of manic-depressive disorder among immigrants, regardless of what country they are moving from or to.17 America, a nation of immigrants, has higher rates of mania than every other country studied (with the possible exception of New Zealand, which topped the United States in one study). In fact, the top three countries with the most manics—America, New Zealand, and Canada—are all nations of immigrants. Asian countries such as Taiwan and South Korea, which have absorbed very few immigrants, have the lowest rates of bipolar disorder. Europe is in the middle, in both its rate of immigrant absorption and its rate of mania.18 As expected, the percentage of immigrants in a population correlates with the percentage of manics in their gene pool.

While we have no cross-cultural studies of hypomania, we can infer that we would find increased levels of hypomania among immigrant-rich nations like America, since mania and hypomania run together in the same families. Hypomanics are ideally suited by temperament to become immigrants. If you are an impulsive, optimistic, high-energy risk taker, you are more likely to undertake a project that requires a lot of energy, entails a lot of risk, and might seem daunting if you thought about it too much. America has drawn hypomanics like a magnet. This wide-open land with seemingly infinite horizons has been a giant Rorschach on which they could project their oversized fantasies of success, an irresistible attraction for restless, ambitious people feeling hemmed in by native lands with comparatively fewer opportunities.

Alexis de Tocqueville, a Frenchman who traveled throughout America in the 1830s, was among the first to define the American character. He found us to be “restless in the midst of abundance,” and the proof was that we were always moving. Tocqueville was astonished to meet people moving from east to west and west to east. That so many people would surrender the comfort and safety of their home in pursuit of an “ideal” struck him as odd. And we are still the most voluntarily mobile people on Earth. The average American changes residences every five years—more often than the inhabitants of any other nation. We change jobs more frequently, too.19 Tocqueville “found an entire people racing full speed ahead, and we’ve kept on racing for more than three hundred years,” wrote Michael Ledeen in Tocqueville on American Character.



update from Paula

Yes, Loudoun County is on the cutting edge or so the newspapers continue to write. One of my son's former teachers said, "Loudoun County has really ramped up its way of doing things. This is no place for the average student."

I wanted to laugh. My third grader's KUMON center is packed with kids. Asian kids. There are a few white children attending the center. I think I've seen two black kids. That is it.

Yet, Loudoun County boasts about all of its students being above average. Really?

Before enrolling my son at KUMON, I emailed Bill Quirk and he said do not tell the school I am placing my son in KUMON. Let the teachers think it is their teaching that is enhancing my son's education. Perhaps other parents as well have heeded this advice.


Singapore Math comes to Abington


* I have no idea what I'm talking about. I do know that when you look at graduate programs in math & the sciences you see a lot of foreign students. A whole lot.

17 comments:

  1. I think you're missing the point - this is actually a very efficient way of increasing our global competitiveness. Improving our own math/science is way too hard; that requires work, and actual knowledge.

    It's much, much easier to just export constructivism until the rest of the world becomes as dumb as we are.

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  2. How odd. Looking at the word "hypomanic" from a word-root perspective, I would have expected it to mean something like "under manic" or "unenergetic". Then I looked it up, and apparently it means "just slightly less than manic", or manic but not psychotic.

    Wikipedia again:
    Hypomania (literally, below mania) is a mood state characterized by persistent and pervasive elated or irritable mood, and thoughts and behaviors that are consistent with such a mood state. It is distinguished from mania by the absence of psychotic symptoms and by its lower degree of impact on functioning.

    Ooh. "In the hypomanic state, people may feel like they can't slow their mind down." I know people who used to drink because it was the only way to slow their thoughts down enough so they could get some sleep.

    Hey, to tie this with another thread, "Manic Street Preacher" is mentioned on the hypomania Wikipedia page.

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  3. Stop reading the Washington Post. You'll ruin your mind.

    Hey, when're ya gonna make the font smaller?

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  4. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  5. I'll ask Rory to cut it down....(no idea how to do it myself!)

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  6. Google Master -- yes, "hypo"manic means not full blown manic.

    A huge number of Wall Streeters & presidents are probably hypomanic.

    In fact, the Hypomanic Nation book started from the author's experience of treating Wall Streeters.

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  7. Yes, Loudoun County is on the cutting edge or so the newspapers continue to write. One of my son's former teachers said, "Loudoun County has really vamped up its way of doing things. This is no place for the average student."

    I wanted to laugh. My third grader's KUMON center is packed with kids. Asian kids. There are a few white children attending the center. I think I've seen two black kids. That is it.

    Yet, Loudoun County boasts about all of its students being above average. Really?

    Before enrolling my son at KUMON, I emailed Bill Quirk and he said do not tell the school I am placing my son in KUMON. Let the teachers think it is their teaching that is enhancing my son's education. Perhaps other parents as well have heeded this advice.


    --PaulaV

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  8. Interestingly, given the history of the 20th century in Europe and Asia, taking the massive risk of migrating to the USA or Canada or Australia or New Zealand actually turned out to be the safe option.

    (I know, Darwn in Australia and Pearl Harbour both got bombed during WWII, but nothing like the scale of warfare in Eurasia).

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  9. Interestingly, given the history of the 20th century in Europe and Asia, taking the massive risk of migrating to the USA or Canada or Australia or New Zealand actually turned out to be the safe option.

    That's funny!

    How did I miss that???

    That was Ed's reaction when he went to Russia and took a tour of the Russian countryside.

    He said his entire reaction was, "I'm so glad my ancestors got on the boat."

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  10. gosh, that makes me think of something outrageous: are hyperactive /hypomanic people less likely to start wars?

    In theory, people on the hyperactive side of the compulsive/impulsive dimension should be more likely to start a world war or two.

    Eric Hollander calls them the "warriors"; he calls people on the OCD end of the dimension "worriers."

    otoh, hyperactive people have short memories; they can forget they're mad, and they can forget whom they're mad at.

    Maybe all the short attention span theater types immigrated leaving Europe filled with people who had really long memories....

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  11. are hyperactive /hypomanic people less likely to start wars?

    The United States population as a whole is pretty good about getting over wars (consider that we mostly stopped hating Japanese pretty quickly after WWII).

    But ...

    We have been in a ton of wars. Probably more than most European nations in the last 200 years.

    Revolutionary War
    War of 1812
    Mexican American War
    Civil War
    Spanish-American War
    WW I
    WW II
    Korean War
    Vietnam War
    Gulf War I
    Gulf War II

    In addition, there were a vast number of wars against American Indian tribes.

    And we have sent marines down to South American many times.

    We "freed" the Philippines from Spain and then fought the natives who expected to stop being a colony.

    We sent troops to Russia to fight against the Bolshevik revolutionaries.

    One can argue that many of these were not started by the U.S. ... but the sheer number of actions is suspicious. Certainly starting most of the Indian wars has to be credited to the U.S. as well as the Civil War and the Revolutionary War.

    -Mark R.

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  12. hey---great!!

    You've just supported Eric's thinking (which is good---)

    Thanks!

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  13. Eric (Hollander) absolutely puts the far end of the impulsive spectrum in the "warrior" camp.

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  14. So...that would mean we're way too good at "getting over" wars!

    (THIS IS NOT POLITICAL COMMENTARY! THIS IS B*S EXTRAPOLATING FROM THE DSM!)

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