Rethinking CS Education
From Viewpoints Intelligent Archive
and with that it is my honor to introduce you Ellen can work you know
okay
this is just a little preliminary warning here
because
the the internet has done in supported
criticism it's
like Gresham's law bad money drives out
the good and there's so much unsupported
criticism that good
criticism criticism that supported is
often claimed to be a rant
but this is not a rant
however it will be critical
so my first exhibit
here is a kind
of American dream so it
is the trappings of riding
the bicycle as it's
very fancy it has training wheels
the buyer of
this device would be a parent probably
and most important
thing about it is it's like frets
on a violin it happens the training
wheels actually don't help you to learn to
ride a bike in fact they help you towards the opposite
the number one skill you have to learn when
you're riding a bike is to balance and turn into
the turns and the training wheels prevent you from doing
that and so the
this
is not a joke just when I was
looking for slides for this on the internet I found amazingly
that there are a number of adult societies
that have bikes with
training wheels like this this is not a joke these people
do Turing they race everything
else because this is what they learned now of course many
children get off the training wheels at
some point but significant
numbers of adults don't
now the way you to write
a bike and this is relatively
recent compared to the training wheel phenomenon is
you what you want is to get the kids low bikes they
don't even have any pedals because that's not the
germane part if you want low bytes so they
don't fall over and they can it's kind of like a scooter and what
you do is you learn to glide and to turn
into the thing that's how you learn to ride a bike
so these two exhibits
are very germane I think
to what we're talking about today so
I think of this side as marketing
marketing is basically dealing with
what people want and that is
a large number like we want sugar we
want fat we want fantasy football
we have many many
wants and if you're interested in it you
might look at a book called human universals by
grant Brown who's an anthropologist who's identified
about 300 things
genetic things that
we are born wanting and
many of the consumer
society successes today are
technological amplifiers for those things
now the
other group of people that are interested in who people are
about we should be interested in who the user is going
to be our educators
they also study this is what we're supposed to
be doing here I want to try and differentiate
between the two and education
educators are interested in what people need
so this is requires taking a moral stance
and it's tricky because
of course we are all flawed beings
also and people who take moral stance
who are floral flawed beings often wind
up with something that resembles a religion or a cult
but still what the educators
doing is essentially chain rather
than catering and
in many cases people don't
want what they need in
fact there's a whole field called behavioral
economics came
after Anthropology got politicized
we fortunately have this branch of cognitive
psychology called behavioral economics that has
been looking at what people do not what
they say people as they are rather than
as they're supposed to be and so the
interesting question it would be really nice
if we can get people to want what they need and there
are some actual ways of doing that
and I'll mention mention a couple
so this
is mice I could not find a picture of this
proper British lady I had supper
with 30 years now in London
but Mary Poppins she was the Mary Poppins type
and we had a great conversation and drifted
into education and at some point
she said oh you Americans
have the best high school education in the world and I
said what and she said
what a pity you have to go to college to get it
now graduate school
so there
are these tests of reading the National
Assessment of Educational Progress they
have a dismal standard
for what they call proficient reading it's not
what we would call proficient but it's the main one that
has looked at that's mainly for K through 12 but
what school if you dig around on
their website you can find that they've also looked
at using the same criteria at
graduates graduates of four-year colleges
and universities and
in 1992
42 percent of
college graduates
were proficient or better
so less than half
in 2003 11 years later
when they did it was down to 31 percent
so colleges are not even guarding
the literacy so
what this says to me that on this average I mean this is
one number for 4,000 institutions
but what it says is that lump
together colleges are essentially selling
degrees we kind of know that but that's what
because the college is not actually guarding
what it means to be educated that
in some very important census they are
giving people degrees who cannot possibly be educated
so
another little preliminary idea
here is because we're we
tend to use indo-european languages
including the ones came
out of India those languages
are very noun oriented
now and
there's mostly about things the things don't
interpenetrate and
so if we think of ideas as matter
they oppose each other but we also could
ideas as being made of radiation we
got superposition now we can shine as many lights in
the same spot as we want and we don't have to resolve
them we can look at the mixtures of
them and we can consider them separately we don't
have to make a decision they're all occupying the
space and I'm offering this up as a metaphor because
even
before Design Thinking was a phrase the
number one thing about design is being able to hold
mutually incompatible things in your head for a very
very long time before you make
any commitments we
tend to commit early much too early
so things are processes nouns or
verbs here's the t-shirt for today
this is silicon valley so
this would have been you know we always make t-shirts so my
design t-shirt would show the superposition of
ideas as radiation
and can't
do a talk without a Winston Churchill story
there are so many good ones and
I'll avoid my tendency to digress to
tell you five of them but
the one that's good at this one he was at a party there
he is smoking his cigar and the
hostess who is a duchess came over to
him and said mr. Churchill I'm so distressed
I just saw Earl so-and-so
over there steal one of my silver salt
shakers and
Churchill thought for a while and he went over
the Earl and on the way picked up another salt shaker and put it in
his pocket and when he got over to the Earl he took
it out and he said I think we've been noticed perhaps
we should put these back
so this is how you if you
want to get something done the way you do it is not
so much trying to convince somebody but to create
a tribe that is a conspiracy because
anthropologically that is what
we are more than any other thing we are tribal
beings and we tend to automatically oppose
things outside of our tribe even
if they're good ideas because that isn't the way we think in
fact we don't think we're not primarily
thinking animals
so this
thing about coding is
often mentioned
side by side with jobs competitiveness
diversity it's
got a million things going on with
it but I thought I'd put
up three other things that I think need
to be thought about first and one of
them is our I think
our primary duty as adults is not
to go out and get a job but to
think about the next generation
that's part of the larger picture of thing a
job is just about us and now
children are the next
generation and Marshall McLuhan said
children are the messages
we send to the future but my
retort to McLuhan was no
they they are the future we're sending to the future
they're not a message they are the future and
we've
got another duty in a
society that has created so much wealth by
a certain complicated difficult kind
of cooperation the reason
we're all here is not because we're competitive reason
we're here is because we live in a larger
structure in which competition the
hunting and gathering parts of us that
go back a couple hundred thousand years are subsumed
a larger set of cooperation that
creates all of the wealth hunting and gatherers
need fertile valleys created
by somebody else nature they
strip it dry that's the impulse and move on sounds
a little bit like business doesn't
even sound the agricultural but
in order to scale our natural
tendencies to exploit we have
something very very different and we
are the beneficiaries of that
so for thinking about education my
don't
even bother with this for a while let's
worry about what's really going on and then
there's this idea which is almost
never talked about in
our pragmatic society like ours
which is I just been calling
richness it can happen
in the context of work it
with children can happen with citizen chip
but it's basically something that is the
man does not live by bread alone idea
and I
believe that this is
a rallying point to try and understand
what the rest of education is about particularly
as it relates
to how we should think about children
in the next generation
ok so that was one I'm basically
doing five points here
before
I look at a look
at them a little more deeply I usually don't do that I don't like top-down
stuff but I figured for
this talk it would be good so the first thing had to
do with you know what what are some
of the contexts that we care about second context
is humans 101
so one part of it is
of course we're very complex but
our minds are
very theatrical the
way we respond to theater
is also the way we respond
what we like to call reality which in itself is a kind of
theater and there are a few people here who
are there are some neuro people here right I saw
anybody yes
so tell them all about it this afternoon
so these are understanding
more about what's going on
here is really important so the the theatrical
thing another one is our
minds are tiny here's George Miller one
of the inventors of cognitive psychology and fact
7 plus or minus 2 has been downgraded
7
plus or minus 2 was dealing with number sequences
and stuff and this
has been looked at and a lot and the truth is is that we're terrible
at multitasking and in fact it is
very difficult for us to sensibly deal with
multiple things even if they have been
chunked hugely so
we can think of this as like if you take these two
ideas together this is also user interface
design 101 we
have theatrical reactions to things we
need to create theater when we're creating a user interface
design and we're completely limited and
so playing those off against each other is tremendously
important we'll look at this a little bit more and then
a more controversial idea is that we are mostly not
human this is
something that is outside of the myth that human
beings like to believe in but in fact we
a lot of us is primate and a
whole lot of us is mammalian and
how that plays out against
some of the more recent additions
to our mental apparatus particularly our culture are
interesting so these three things are things that are worthwhile
holding in mind by the way these are things that computer
people just hate to think about most computer
people went into computing because they were disturb
by other human beings
and
one of the reasons that coding
programming has stayed so much
the way it is terrible set of ideas that
were almost necessary in the 40s
and 50s are still around today as
the primary ways of doing programming
because they are the most mechanical ways
that in the small they are the most understandable
reliable the problem is in the large they don't scale
at all in the large they are the least
reliable way of doing anything and it's only
by looking at tiny little places that people have any
comfort at all and so they stay with where they're
comfortable this is so
the theatrical part of this is lots bigger
than we think the limitations are much
less or smaller than we think and the
relationship we have with our
heritage is much we
are much more different than we think we are
okay now the third idea here would
go back to the first Turing Award winner
this little gnome of a man was one of the great
men of our time Alper Lowe's and
he more or less created computer
science and I thought since the
CS term is bandied about a lot it might be interesting
to see what the guy who invented the term actually meant by
it so he said this in
the early 60s and somebody said
what does that mean and he said computer science
is the science of processes I remember
science he didn't mean science as in library science
he didn't mean sciences and social science he
actually meant science he didn't mean it as a metaphor
he meant we need to have a science of things
in process and there are a gazillion of
them that is what he meant he didn't
have an engineering definition that's something
else he said we need to understand
things in process and he
meant all processes meant mechanical processes
technological processes there's the
Constitution social processes
the guys who did the Constitution
were social
geniuses they actually put
together a system better than any computer system we've
ever done because it has millions
and millions of not terribly cooperating parts
and it is basically thrived with
some hiccups along the way for hundreds of
years think about that and the cops
Constitution I have a version of it with
me is just a tiny little book it's a meta
recipe for a
very complicated multi processing operating
system far far beyond anything we've been able to
do and of
course biology and of course mental
processes all of these processes were things
and the other thing that pearl Ellis said is
besides
looking at all processes it itself because of
what it is can serve as a representation a
kind of a mathematics for all processes so this
is a big idea this is an exciting idea
it excited me it's
like one of the greatest things I hate to see computing
and computer science water down to some
terrible kind of engineering that the Babylonians
might have failed at with
tiny conceptions of programming a computer
like munging variables with an
assignment statement that is pathetic and
I'm saying it in this strong way because
you need to realize that we're in the middle of
a complete form
of bullshit that has grown up out of
the pop culture colliding with
this power this power and wealth
in order to serve education which
i think is much more still should be about
people need rather than what they want education can't
cave in to what the pop culture
does it has to think about itself
as being about the culture that developed
culture shouldn't get rid of the pop culture cop
pop culture has incredible energy
any developed culture needs that energy
but it cannot give in to that energy there
has to be a reasonable tension there
so that was number three number four is
boy if you look at other fields like
mechanical CAD or electrical cat or biocad
now they have all these great
toys they happen to be all
implemented on computers computer-aided design
simulators and now
fab you
think it up save mechanically whatever
it is design it
simulate it now we can build it build
a flute so the idea here is
in every place except computing is
this notion of people moving
towards wanting to design and wanting to ship
the design it's
in computing that we are so far behind
we're still more
than 80 percent of the undergraduates at
UCLA a top 10 computer science
department use by terminal emulators
which itself was emulating decks
of punched cards doing
the same kind of compilation
loading and linking in
say C++ that's
their main language there as was done
50 years ago this does not
scale and yet this is what computer people are doing they
don't have anything like what more sensible
in these other fields are using computers for so
if you take these two things together take perlis
and this
notion is a programming
system yeah part of it is the functionality part
that's what you see in most
systems for let's everybody code
it's got a
most of them got numbers
maybe they got a raise they got assignment
statements all the usual suspects
there that's not even close
that is not what the put in front of people
what you need is
an environment an environment is it's about systems
it's a bit about design it's about media programming
language is a user interface as
much as it is any other thing why have
multiple ones they're altering equivalent
so what's the difference well at one end it's
some of them run faster than others another
part you might have to write
less code but another part is they should be something
that you think in terms of and they're the
idea of a user interface and giving you
ways of thinking about things starts dominating
okay last of the five ideas to
get started here is this notion of
thresholds this is critical
and I think this is an interesting
thing that in science and engineering
this is something that is understood
in a way but it's rarely
talked about and in most
educational situations it's not understood
and thus rarely talked about and
it's this idea
time
progress wiggly line
see
them in the paper all the time could be reading
scores yay
ooh yay boo
yeah meaningless
absolutely and completely meaningless same with the
stock market no matter what happens in the stock market there's
some rationalization for it even if it's just looking
at random noise
think about what thinking is thinking
is not being logical
thinking is choosing
environment that you're going to think in before
you start rationalizing so
let's put a threshold in
so my threshold name is what is
actually needed and here we
can see that this guy and this
guy are irrelevant this guy is really
relevant we got past the threshold now we're
something before we were just bullshitting around
yay we don't care
the fluctuations here are things
we're really interested in because we're guiding
this growth process now
for most things in
human society we've got this
the threshold is up here and
now none of this actually means any this is
like reading take reading
doesn't matter where it's going up or down because
it's all below threshold the children aren't really
learning to read fluently enough in so you're always getting a qualitative
gap you're basically in this zone
I call the pink zone doesn't
matter most
people don't care about it and
the idea of thresholds are actually fought
because a threshold will reveal
something is actually
wrong now
reforms or impulses
often happen down here here's
one
huge amount of effort
fizzle yay wonk
completely irrelevant
and can be in any area it
could be an education you see it all time how about the moonshot
hey we made it to the moon so
what we set back space travel more than 50 years
why because the
physics the chemistry and the mathematics
of space travel are that it just
with chemical rocketry it's
about MV equals MV you're exchanging momentum
chemical processes cannot
get the velocity
of the particles you're letting out to
be high enough to actually give
you that's why the Saturn rocket is 45
stories literally have you ever seen one up close Kate
calves Romy Canaveral Museum in Florida don't
miss it they have one sideways so
this is a forty five story building hung sideways
that is one and a half football feels
and it is all high explosive
except for the little end part where there are three people
if you want a visual
explanation of the physics of
chemical rocketry no you cannot
do space travel that way and
this whole thing was
a huge effort but it was aimed at the wrong place
so you actually set up a bunch of
technologies that now had to be exploited further and you still
get anywhere and you still don't get anywhere and now everybody's
lost their taste for it
the web I'm not going
to my diatribe about the web but web browsers
everybody uses it every day it's like one of the worst ideas
ever ever
it only does a few things compared
to what it should be doing and this is hard
explain the people you heart it's hard to find people who actually
are willing to criticize the whip but
you know why so well gee you can't it
was done on a machine that already had WYSIWYG editing
after 20 years why doesn't it still have wood why
doesn't have WYSIWYG editing well they're getting to it
no he took a couple of years to do
WYSIWYG editing in the first place so
what we've got there is the ultimate Esau's
cup of soup if you know that story from the Bible Esau
came home from a hunt he was the big hairy
he-man brother the little brother jacob
was cooking some soup and he saw said
brother i'm hungry can i have some soup and
jacob said yes for your birthright and
he saw i said okay
that's humans 101 that
is what behavioral economics is all about
we are willing to sell a lot
for momentary convenience so
here are two words better and perfect do
we need to really pay heat this is
the more dangerous one better and perfect are
the two enemies of what is actually needed right
perfect as
I was talking to Mike earlier
I hope to get to this slide because he did something that
is really cool I'm gonna show you the the
abstraction of it and I hope we get to what it actually is
no better
disaster this is where incremental
progress comes from we need qualitative
progress so
you need to get there
it's the lowest thing that is
above the threshold this is the
secret you know this is something they don't teach you in design
school but it's something it's really important to
understand if you wanted if you want to invent something
that is gonna generate say 30 trillion bucks
like twenty four of us
at Xerox PARC this is how you do
it you have to find this thing and
I call this
the McCready sweet spot Paul
MacCready was the guy who did man-powered flight after 50
years of really good people failing at it he did
it in six months from the time he decided to
do it I will not use the time to tell that
story but maybe in the question and answer because it's a great story
but this guy more
than any other person I ever knew and he
wouldn't budge until he found this so
you can think of this as the
primary part of making progress is
problem finding problem fine forget
about problem solving you're probably in the wrong context
you're already in a place
where your sense of problems is probably completely wrong
so like the premise of this whole meeting is probably completely wrong
start there probably completely
but it's good because you got the people here but
just start off with the idea it's probably come me wrong
what is actually needed and what is
that and
here's something the thunders hate
like if this is Xerox PARC
this was the
ARPA community for 10 years
Xerox PARC has held up as some
miraculous Oasis and that that wasn't
true at all we were just an outgrowth of this
much larger community that in fact
hought up most of the ideas the philosophies and
we were just recent
PhDs I was the oldest person there I was
30 Butler Lampson was 27 the
guy who was set it up Bob Taylor was 38
there was all this money
that went into inventing computer
graphics and artificial intelligence and the programming
language Lisp and just every
kind of thing there and
when we went to park what we looked at is what is this
for this ARPA
dream
and once you get there
you get a whole region now you can
operate it because it's not just getting to a point
you're actually getting to a place with
a different set of ideas and all of
a sudden you're definitely above what is
actually needed and for a while you
can actually make real progress not
fake progress
and basically you think of as taking our normal
pink brains and adding a point
of view an epistemological stance a way
of looking at things that was different that makes
our week mental
operations much much more powerful I mean my slogan
for that is point of view is worth 80 IQ points
it's the number one thing that you want to do
because we're terrible at thinking and weak context
okay
don't forget that when you're thinking about things this afternoon
and we probably don't have any
funders in the room but I like to point out
hem that no invention has been more practical than
science I also
the business business is always saying well we're in business to
make money I said no you aren't really you're only trying
to make millions and billions
cience has created trillions
trillions and trillions of dollars off
almost no investment
get your head on straight invest
the right way ok
so let's quickly take
a look at a couple of these clothes here we take
a look at these any questions so far on this
claim this is not a rant because
I'm happy to justify anything that I've said
but I'm because this is an oral talk I'm
short circuiting and just making it as claims
but I'm sure you'll trust what
I'm saying here so take
these four areas let's take a look
at jobs
coding for jobs so I got
my friend Vishal here and I happened
to know him very well I think we've
known each other for years right so
so I'm gonna put I'm gonna
put something into his mouth and let's see what
he says Vishal my
my screen Vishal says I don't want my
folks cold the code the old bad ways I want them
to know how to design and think is that reasonable
100 percent right CEO of
a company that has a hundred and eighty thousand people and
it depends on programming
the problem is teaching people
to code in the way most of this is being done it's not
going to get you there it's just dicking around underneath
the threshold so for
even going to worry about jobs for three nanoseconds
we need something qualitatively different let's
take a look at next generation
there's so many things we could say here but one is
we have decided
in our society we're going to teach reading and writing to every child regardless
of whether they want to or not right
it is not their choice so this
violates Einstein who said love
is a better teacher than duty I
happen to agree with this idea
because I think it's the duty of
this society to do something about
instilling the strongest parts of
the culture in the next generation and so we're just taking
that even though in many ways it's going
to be problematic Thoreau has said without books
history is silent literature dumb science
crippled thought and speculation at a standstill
so
we're just doing it
high school
is way too late I don't even know why you're bothering with it here
period
this does I
mean it's okay if you got spare time
but if you're gonna take a subject
seriously like reading and writing
like thinking
and whatever the
part that computing might have to play and thinking
in the future and I think it's a big part I'm
going to take it serious forget about high school
we're talking about something that
has to be begin early
and this
has been a tough sell because the way America
looks at it we have jobs problems and if we
them you know we can get no
that's disaster that's like quarter-to-quarter
thinking done on a national scale it
is just bad so
we have to think earlier now if
you have good thoughts for children
an interesting thing is that those are not
pet for tossing
into high school as long as you don't take them too seriously like
the user-interface that everybody uses it today
the GUI that was my invention and I originally
for children and I designed it that way because
we had far more important things that we wanted them to learn that
interface is not a good user interface for adults
but in fact it's the
one that adults wound up using because we
made it easier for children to learn same thing
the iPad the iPad is good for two year olds and ninety two
in between it's
a terrible user interface and hardly anybody knows it
think about it and Apple finally realized
oh maybe we should put
ools in there like maybe a pencil maybe a keyboard
reminds me of a idea
from the 60s they'll
get there eventually okay
so the relationship
here with what vishal wants
we have to take a bit of a long view it's not I
mean K through 12 is 13 years how long
is how long does it take to even get going how long does it take
to deploy that's what
we have to be thinking about
five years from now today's
kindergartners will be in fifth grade and we know a lot about
what to do with fifth graders and we know a bit
about what to do with younger children the
logistics are enormous for
doing any kind of deployment we'll
talk about that on a bit
biggest barrier for children
all the adults around them
this
this happens to be a
it's a parliament in a country
we regard as eminently civilized
this on this particular day
they lost it and it wasn't the only time
but that's not that's
just the symptom the
problem is because
adults are trying to recapitulate the children
into themselves if they aren't
at the tippy-top of the of
the century that they're living in they're recapitulating
children into the past this is
the Montessori pointed out in her first book she said
the biggest problem she
said children are driven by nature to
learn the environment around them they don't know where they're being born
into by the way she was the one of the top three people
in anthropology in in
Italy
at this
urged today digress and this is a good story so
Montessori undergraduate degree was in
engineering that's
what she wanted to get a PhD in they wouldn't let her
this is 19th century Italy and
so she put up a fuss and finally
the University of Rome said they'd admit her for a medical
degree if she could pass this test they were sure she couldn't
pass but think about Maria Montessori she was just much
much smarter than any of us in this room she
was a first-class intellect she aced
this test and became the first woman physician
in Italy and
not having had a calling for it she decided
medicine and it was through the slum medicine that she
saw the children she started picking up ideas for them
eanwhile she was studying anthropology and the
number one principle she had is children
don't know what society they're being born
into and yet they learn it therefore
we need to set up the society we
want them to acclimate to and
if we can't do it in home then we should you
make Google embody the idea it's not a question of
telling the children about the century
question of putting them in this entry instead
of living land this is an idea that Seymour Papert use
very strong in his metaphor for math land
want to go learn French go to France want
to go learn math go to a math land except
we don't have a math land make what
so
is a big idea and I think this is the number one thing
that should be thought about if we're doing design this afternoon
is this idea of hey what
children were brought up in the future there are some interesting
efforts
there was an extended Montessori
effort done by the
British between the two world
wars called the British infant school system anybody here
ever hear of that yeah so
this is so basically the reasoning there was we created
the stewards of the British Empire
in the boarding schools Eton
and Harrow we took the children away from this plate
of Plato's Republic 101 right take the children
away from their parents train them make them
into the kind of Brits
the official Brit that's the job of
Eton and Harrow we'll create all
these administrators and the Reformers
in the 20s said yeah that's a really good
idea we can't build
such schools for the working class
but what we can do is take the children away from their parents for
all of their waking hours this is the British infant school
system they fed them children were in these schools
for about 12 hours a day and what
they did was to extend Montessori ideas in
very powerful ways so if you're interested in this
way of see
everybody gets that
this is one of the ways you get people to want what they need
right because
we don't think about whether we want to learn our culture
we just learn
it nobody
tells we're in this thing it's
seamless
Steve
Jobs this is
his big brother photograph from 1984
everybody should learn how to code it teaches you how to think
well teaching you how to think badly
this is I mean
Steve didn't even code so
yeah no idea
what he was taught this is just complete bullshit
and
just empirically if you look at
where maybe
anecdotally but it'd be great to do you know just look
at the last 300
computer people you looked at and
maybe encountered on the internet or
and there's no evidence that they can think at all
they can do a few little things but in fact
they don't even know what thinking is because thinking
is not actually
logic that
was the mistake that the Greeks made and that was the mistake
that st. Thomas Aquinas made was the major
mistake of Middle Ages it was also the major mistake
of post-modernism that isn't what it is
so
programming but it's for different bigger more
important reasons
but don't don't be led astray just because
guy was successful in the pop culture I knew
him very well Steve and I were friends to the extent that he
could have a friend I was the guy
who set up the Pixar deal for him besides having
a fair amount to do with the Mac
very well he's
one of the great salesmen of all times
okay so
citizenship so
the simple one here I think is just
Jefferson's
basically the path the ultimate powers reside
people if we think them not alight did not let's not take it away
from them but you better inform their discretion through
education period that is why public education is set
up in this country I'm not going to be labor at this point
but you could hardly find that this is the fact when
you go to any school they
teach dates here and there but I've
never found a public school that actually teaches the children
how the country works what was the
whole point of setting it up that particular way
and why has it worked as well as it has
so the question here
is we have to ask what is enlightened enough mean for this
century what does that mean
now I'm just pointing this out because if we don't
take care of things like this it's moot
whether children learn how to program regardless of
whether it's we have perfect participation by every
ethnic group and every gender and every it's
this moot we have to take
care of the larger ideas and education
okay so richness so
this
is a diagram I like that we
have the systems of the natural world we have the social systems we
have technological systems and we have ourselves as many
systems and richness
for most people comes out of different aspects of
this we could also turn it around and
going to do an education for the 21st century it
is precisely this that we should
look at and by the way there's an underlying unifying
way of thinking about things and that
is as terms of systems these things are abstractly
similar as systems even though they ramify
in many different ways that could be a different way
of getting rid of the stovepiping
that education is mired in
right now okay so we need to
deal with the ineffable and so this whole passel
of things is kind of a minimum
set I could come up with it would fit into 10 or
15 minutes as part of this talk that
needs to be kind of thought about when you're trying to think
about something you want every child to learn
and maybe you start with the children go
to richness come back on citizenship maybe
you start with richness go to the children come over
to citizenship in all cases jobs
winds up being the last thing because
jobs come primarily out of
having wealth to do something
with and wealth here I mean is the potential
wealth is like having energy resources
wealth is like inventing personal computing
and then in the internet these are the potential for
doing things those are the things that have to be invented
okay so mr. Spock here is
always shocked when anybody
pays any attention to human beings especially
technical people so
here's a couple of ideas simple
metaphor from the 19th century about human
memory it's like an erosion gully water
comes down in some random place if it gets
that channel is a little more efficient pretty
soon you've got one of these and then pretty soon you've got the
Grand Canyon is an erosion gully if
you've ever been there it's a hell of a one and in
fact when you're in here
it's hard to even imagine that you could
get out I suppose you were born in there
you might not even know that this is sort
of pinkish it's the only color there
is so this is a way of thinking
context that we like to call reality we're
just in an erosion gully the reason
we fight everybody else in the world is they're in a different inner ocean gully
none of these things are real they're
all made up of stories and beliefs
so here's a thing that's fun if
we had time we could do a few more of them but
quarters I like
oranges
whole one so it's twice as far away as
the other and on a retina
as they
cart found out the cart found out
by getting an ox eye and peeling the back off and that great
the ox was dead but
he was curious as to whether a biological lens
worked like a glass one and it did
so the one that's twice as far away comes
out half the size we can't see it that
way because we've got this pachinko
machine called the brain the
processes that the brain give rise to some of them
we can call our beliefs this big pink thing it's like the
Grand Canyon and we've got a real-time
version of it called the waking dream and
as our neuro folks here will say
yeah the difference between the waking dream and the sleeping
dream has a lot to do with just being
able to check out references every
few seconds right isolation tanks are
making a comeback if you have never tried
one this is a thing from the 60s you put
on a wetsuit you're in a blood temperature
high saline bath plugged
ears plugged eyes you can't feel a thing you
can't hear a thing about ten
minutes you start going on an LSD trip except you don't need
any LSD because
the references that
are normally used here to keep this waking dream were less on
track are no longer there and you start generating
even while you're awake everybody should do this
so what happens with the quarters
is we believe that they
are the same size and the
combination of that with what we get from our retina
interestingly enough our retina doesn't
win our beliefs Trump the thing and
the further away guys about 80% to size subjectively
this is called size constancy
it's one of many many illusions
how to the extent that we are disconnected
actually from what our senses
McLuhan said until I believe it I can't
see it that's a good one
and Vishal's
favors we cannot learn to see until we admit we are blind
that's what happened when we invented science
that was the first time the human race really admitted that
it's common sense ways of dealing with the world
as what it seems were not valid
so you have to do some work to get
his so here's something it happened right outside my hotel
room in May there
was a guy with a hammer and
you'd attack
some people the day before further
south this is like 8th Avenue
and 43rd Street and
here's what people who
saw this attacked said oh mrs. O'Grady
said he was in flight when he
was shot he looked like he was trying to get away from the officers we've
heard that recently and other incidents
ms
khalsa said and I'm sorry maybe I'm crazy but
I saw a man who is handcuffed being shot
so this is seconds
after this incident now fortunately
I heard the shots I was
in my hotel room fortunately
they had a camera surveillance camera so here's
what the surveillance camera take a look at the upper right hand corner
there's the
guy chasing the female cop there's
the male cop shooting him wasn't
handcuffed he wasn't running away wasn't
doing any of the things the eyewitnesses saw a few seconds
ago they couldn't see
what was on their retina
don't
ever get in court don't ever go to a jury
trial don't ever do anything that
relies on witnesses
because the you know the prosecutors have no
idea of any of this stuff they just want to convict
good as you know we're here today to honor
mrs. flexor who you all know as your
first-grade teacher she'll be here in just a minute
okay
what's
that look
what does that look yeah
that's okay she's frightened out of her mind that
is the number one I just
got this off the internet there are zillions of surprise party
have been caught so this is a gold mine if you're
interested in
people have done so the Internet
has captured enough of these some people have died of heart attacks
from a surprise party
a couple
of minutes later a release
in tears a couple of minutes later
and her report
on this is this was the happiest day of her life despite
the fact that she had been almost frightened out of her
wits so
Daniel Kahneman would call this first
reaction the fast reaction system one and
he called system one it's said well it's not really
a system it's this is an expository fiction this
is putting together a lot of complicated
things into one gloss
on fast reactions
things reactions are not
what we would call thoughtful reactions they
are more like reflexes now
notice that misses call misses flexor here
knew everything about surprise parties
why was she surprised well
seven plus or minus two she
about it but it wasn't in her current context
her thinking thing
condiment system two took
a while and figured out everything safe
now we should ask you
so besides adrenaline whatever else
happens when you get one of these surprise reactions
what so
many things like dopamine and serotonin
why well if you have to
fight you don't want to feel any pain
so what happens is your brain dopes your
entire body up so you cannot feel pain when
you're in a survival situation and
guess what happens when she didn't have to fight
she was completely alert and coped
to the gills on her own dope
you
have to understand this stuff
so here's
an old book that's still good it has about 40 different ways
of looking at the mind I put
that up there just so you realize that there are dozens
of perspectives here they're not all the
last word some of them are compatible with each
other look at these kids
these kids did
not get on this roller coaster expecting to die
nobody does
and yet and
they're presumably very happy at the end
piccaboo works over and over
and over again and the reason is is that system
one can't be talked out of it so one
a test that you do go next to a door and
you watch me I'll slam that door and
you'll get this even though you you
know every single thing about it doesn't matter
so it's important to realize
that there is a heck of a lot of mechanism
in there that deals with real time reactions
to things and the important
thing here is to understand that this fast
guy is also dealing
with what you might call the atoms of
thought for the slow thinking
I'll just let that idea sit
for a second learning
okay
you got your turn signal on all
okay
everybody remember that
you can't your parent
is trying to give you if I can't hear what they're saying
stop signs over here you can
barely see what's going so if you tried to drive with
system two you're gonna
miss most everything what happens is you
start training these real-time you
get real trying modules that get trained at being able to do
all of these things and no for a musical instrument might
take a couple of years McCarthy pointed out
programming is somewhere between learning to
drive and flying a plane
so whenever we set
up something it's not always just
a cognitive thing this is one of the problems of some
approaches we took in the past as we would tend
to say hey the drill and practice thing is a
bad well it is a bad idea that is not the way to get
the repetitions the train system won but
the thing is the cognitive approach actually gives you something
that is much more like this
driving situation and it's not enough context
to do the kinds of thinking that you need this implies
that the pedagogy and the approach is
going to be very very different that
somehow you have to do the atoms
of thinking in any thoughtful
thing without losing the larger context
so music you get it by having the
children play really great music and you're willing to
sacrifice everything else in order to get that
happen but you have to stay on it long and I used to teach
guitar you have to stay on it long
enough so that they actually start developing the system one
that can handle all the real-time demands
okay there are zillions of these I
just went on the internet I found 20
on the internet but then it wound up adding some
more these are all biases that have been found well
known you can think
of many of them are aspects of this Grand Canyon
idea many
of them are seven plus
or minus two here's one that I wasn't
internet thing but it's something we should look at here
thing we do all the time is perfect reasoning
from wrong premises because if we're in the
wrong context and we reason brilliantly we're not going
to get anywhere the Greeks were graded the st. Thomas Aquinas was great
at it didn't get anywhere because the context
was wrong so
rationalization rationalizing
rational thought all of these things are secondary to
something stronger looking
for the lamppost for the lost keys that's
a version of Esau on the cup
of soup giving up something really important for convenience
like finding the keys linear
scaling well hardly anything
that's interesting is linear and
so we can't give in to our nervous system I'm looking
at scaling and this has been really disastrous in programming
because programming is taught as though the program's
don't turn into systems and the systems
turn into something large and so there isn't an internet
and so forth this is getting
completely miss taking simple chemistry
for biology they're just not in
the same ballpark so
Francis Bacon so
here's the row again one of the advantages of reading a lot is
hardly any
of us certainly me all
my ideas are derivative
just because I've read thousands
of books I didn't have to puzzle this out
because bacon wrote a book called the
Novum organum in 1620 where
he said hey look our brains are messed up we
have bad brains he called the
ways of messing up idols so
we have we get serious errors because of our genetics
we get serious errors because of the culture we're in we
get serious errors because of the languages we use they don't
represent what's actually out there we get serious
it errors from the way academia hangs on
to bad ideas and teaches them over again these are his four
idols anybody ever read bacon he
said we need something to
get around our bad brains a set of
heuristics is the term we'd used today and
what
he called for was what he called for science because
that's what Novum organum the rest of the title
was a new way of
dealing with knowledge
and science
is not the knowledge right because
the knowledge is is in this context
what science is is the negotiation
between what's out there and what we can represent
this is the big idea this is the idea
in school this is the idea we should be teaching it's
one of the biggest ideas of all time it
isn't the knowledge it's the relationship because what's
out there is only knowable
by phenomena that is being filtered in
every possible way and we
don't know whether our brain is even capable of representing
the stuff and so to
think about science as the truth is completely
wrong it's not the
right way to look at it but if you think about
is the negotiation between the best
you can do right now and stuff that's out there that where
completely sure you're in a very strong position
science has been the most powerful
thought system
human beings have ever invented because
it gave up the idea of truth and it
substituted for a thousand variations
of false some of which are incredibly
powerful right this is the big
idea so we're gonna think about computing
this is one way and I've
Seymour Papert thought about it in a different way but
this is one way of thinking about
Wow computers they are representatives
about representations can simulate
ideas we get a very good much better
sense of dealing
with thinking about these complexities okay
so
maybe one I think we're
one last
part of this pep talk and then I'll turn it over to V
Shaw so let's go back to the pink plane
here and
let's see we're at a place
on the pink plane and we have a goal so we're
we're at a we
only are looking in that direction because that's
where we're going we see B we say let's plot a course
to B but guess what
the world is nonlinear so we're really in that
because we didn't think about all the dimensions okay
so we can explore we
can tinker away around it that's better if
that was good we can engineer a superhighway and if
we're really adventurous we can invent the airplane
forget about land travel let's just fly over
that mountain and here's the big idea once we decide
to take off from land travel
we not only are in
a different world we're not we
discover we're in a blue world and the blue world has
a much better destination than than B
so I've submit this as a metaphor that can
be used in many different areas
like simple one often
you have to go away from your goal to get to you go
that is a toughy remember we're
primates the way they catch monkeys in Burma
everybody know this Oh everybody
should know this okay so
monkeys are primates like us and what they do is they
they just fasten jars and
they put a big nut
the monkeys reach in to get that nut
they can't get
there aren't handout okay
now that monkey could
escape anytime by just letting go of this nut but
hey don't let goes and nothing that sound
like any human activity you've ever heard they
can't let go than that so
in the morning they just
come around and so that I like monkey brains and Burma
so they come around just collect these monkeys
that could get away anytime they wanted that
isn't us I don't know what it is
so being able to go away from
the goal this is a heart like NSF
is completely blown it in computing
because they've given up on problem finding in
doing stuff that really doesn't have a goal
in the proposal for example goal
should be to find the goal somebody needs
to pay for that the
engineering as a refinement of something
that's more like tinkling or bricolage see more used to kala
then this idea that hey maybe surface
travel isn't the deal at all let's do
something qualitatively different and start flying
and once you've made that effort
to qualitatively change
suddenly you have the possibility of scaping from this whole
context which was actually holding you back ok
I'll leave you with that thank you very much for listening