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Throwback Thursday: Cultivate the Scientist in Every Child

1/24/2015

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It is hard to believe that it has been two years since the exhibit Cultivate the Scientist in Every Child: The Philosophy of Frances and David Hawkins opened. In the interim, the exhibit has traveled from Boulder to Wyoming, Denver, New Mexico, Nebraska, and Illinois. It is scheduled to continue its journey to Wisconsin, Tennessee, Massachusetts, and a few more places we'll announce as we get the venues secured. 

For now, we wanted to share this reflection from the original opening, held at the University of Colorado Boulder.

Eddie Goldstein, friend of the Hawkins and currently the Denver Museum of Nature and Science's  (DMNS) senior space science educator, shared this reflection with DMNS Galaxy Guides after attending the opening:

Hi Museum Galaxy Guides,

This past week I went to an opening of an exhibit at the University of Colorado Natural History Museum about the work of David and Frances Hawkins.  In their day, they were quite well known and internationally respected science educators.

Although they lived in Boulder, I met them when I was working at the Capital Children's Museum in Washington, DC in the 1980s.  They had a great understanding of how to communicate, not only the facts of science, but a love for science.  So, although I didn't know them that well, I clearly remember the several times we met.

One thing that has always stuck with me is when David said, "Science is not only about making the strange familiar, but also about making the familiar strange."  The "strange familiar" part I got.  That's about explaining what black holes are.  Or how spectroscopy works.  Or the latest information from the rovers on Mars.  But, "making the familiar strange."  That was new to me.  That is about filling people with a sense of wonder about things they thought they already knew but hadn't really thought about.  Did you ever wonder why you can't tickle yourself?  Did you ever wonder why, when you're driving at night in the rain, the streets look darker than when it's dry?  Did you ever wonder how the cell phone system can find your phone no matter where in the world you are?  In addition to bringing wonder into the world, it extends "scientific thinking" from something that is just done in a lab or observatory into the tools you can use to figure out things you are curious about in everyday life.

David also had a way of making comments that would really make you think.  He told a story about when he was helping his next door neighbor girls build a doll house, which they were doing from scratch.  At one point he said to one of the little girls, "What this doll house needs is a little doll house inside of it."  The little girl thought for a minute and said, "And, that little doll house should have a teeny tiny doll house inside of it!"  In a flash, she had caught a glimpse of infinity.  That's what David's seemingly off-handed comment was really all about.

The real theme of the exhibit, and an underlying theme of much of the Hawkins' work, was how they believed that teachers and students should be shared learners.  Finding something that you and a visitor are BOTH curious about can lead to some of the most powerful learning experiences.  For both of you.  In the exhibit they ask, "In what ways do you consider yourself to be an active learner?  How are your learning pursuits inspired by the children in your life?"  

To that I'll add: When was the last time that a visitor asked you a question that piqued YOUR curiosity, so much so that you and the visitor stopped and tried to figure out the answer to that question?  Either by grabbing a computer and looking it up, or trying an experiment right then and there in Space Odyssey.

If we want to encourage a love of science, these are good ways to start.

- - Eddie


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Eddie Goldstein with Alex Cruickshank, member of the Cultivate the Scientist team, and her daughter Zen Rose.
Thank you, Eddie, for sharing this wonderful reflection with your team and with us. Thank you for sharing your memories of Frances and David. 

And thank you to everyone who has been a part of the exhibit over these two years: coordinators who have helped the exhibit to travel, participants who have brought their wisdom to the workshops, visitors who have helped the ideas of Frances and David to continue. 

Happy New Year!


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Gathering in Chicago

7/3/2014

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A participant messes about with magnification in Chicago
Our dear friends at Cultivating the Early Years Professional Network, based in Chicago, have just finished hosting a gathering in preparation of the arrival of the Hawkins exhibit (scheduled Fall 2014)! 


Educators gathered to mess about with materials and ideas. They worked with materials and had great conversations!


Check out their facebook page to see some enchanting pictures of their time together. 


Check out their website to join their network and get updates.
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A New Adventure...

4/6/2014

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This past fall, we offered a four-part workshop series to accompany the exhibit's Denver stay. Each Saturday focused on a different big idea from the exhibit. We had seven core members who attended each workshop, and a few people who attended one or two. 


Each workshop allowed us time to participate in all three phases of messing about... 
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And time to collaborate, find shared interests, and develop an It for our I's and Thou's....
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And as we grew and learned as teachers, we laughed together, and sometimes cried together. We challenged each other and complemented each other. 
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Each workshop offered us time to explore the resources around us - materials and interests (eolithism)....
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And when the workshops were all done we realized we missed each other. 

So we decided to do it again...


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Exhibit Opening, Santa Fe Children’s Museum, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1/10/2014

3/5/2014

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"There was one kind of development I must mention, a subjective one, which took place in parallel with the technical work of weapon development.... Everyone's life was being changed, changed radically I think, and irreversibly.... We all did know we were involved in something which would alter the nature of the world." 
David Hawkins, qtd in Inventing Los Alamos: The Growth of an Atomic Community, Jon Hunner

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"MESSING ABOUT WITH TEACHING" - SANTA FE CHILDREN'S MUSEUM

1/13/2014

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What is the role of this type of 
teaching and learning 
in 
today's educational culture?

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Set in the stimulating and rich environment of the Santa Fe Children's Museum, workshop participants from schools in and around Santa Fe, as well as members of the Santa Fe Science Initiative, took part in a day of messing about with materials and ideas inspired by the philosophy of Frances and David Hawkins.


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Exhibit Opening, Richland Academy, Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada, 10/25/2013

10/25/2013

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Exhibit Opening, University of Colorado, Denver 10/23/2013

10/23/2013

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How do we maintain focus on open-ended, curiosity-based learning in our current political atmosphere?

As part 2 of the University of Colorado, Denver collaboration with RAFT and HCoL, the exhibit moved to the Downtown Denver Lawrence Street Building of the UCD. Here, among professors and politicians we used the panels and the Hawkins' philosophy as a platform to provoke thoughts about our school systems.
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Exhibit Opening, Resource Area for Teaching (RAFT), Denver, Colorado, 7/31/2013

7/31/2013

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When the exhibit opened at the Resource Area For Teaching (RAFT), we returned to the living room feeling of good solid conversation. Hosted in the luxurious surroundings of recycled materials and open-ended possibilities as far as the eye could see, we all found ourselves stimulated and excited to talk and plan and dream.
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Discussion panel- (from left) Patti McKinnell, Logan School, Amy Turino, RAFT, Lori Ryan, UCD; Alex Cruickshank, Boulder Journey School; John Hanover, Roots Elementary; Stephanie Welsh, RAFT.

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Exhibit Opening, University of Wyoming, Berry Biodiversity Conservation Center, Laramie, Wyoming- 6/18/13

6/18/2013

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The exhibit's move to Wyoming marked the first time the exhibit left Colorado and the management of Hawkins Centers of Learning. We could not have asked for a more perfect host!
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The vision of the University of Wyoming Biodiversity Institute is to, "foster the understanding, appreciation and conservation of biological diversity through innovative research, education, outreach, and by engaging a broad audience in the scientific process." It is housed in the beautiful Berry Center, a new Green Building which is home to cross-disciplinary studies including ecology, genetics, biology, philosophy, education, and art. The Center and Institute would surely hold a dear place in David's heart, following his own beliefs about the inherent integration of science and daily life.


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NCAR opening - March 8, 2013

3/8/2013

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On March 8th, the exhibit moved to the National Center for Atmospheric Resources (NCAR).

The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) is a federally funded research and development center devoted to service, research and education in the atmospheric and related sciences. NCAR’s mission is to understand the behavior of the atmosphere and related physical, biological and social systems; to support, enhance and extend the capabilities of the university community and the broader scientific community – nationally and internationally; and to foster transfer of knowledge and technology for the betterment of life on Earth. The National Science Foundation is NCAR's primary sponsor, with significant additional support provided by other U.S. government agencies, other national governments and the private sector.

In addition to feeling a connection with the mission statement of NCAR, and being enamored with the beautiful building overlooking the entire Boulder Valley

In 1998, NCAR hosted Reggio Children’s exhibit The Hundred Languages of Children, and in 2008 they hosted the next edition of the exhibit The Wonder of Learning.  We were honored, therefore, to announce that NCAR would be hosting Cultivate the Scientist in Every Child: The Philosophy of Frances and David Hawkins.

 

It felt fitting to use this time to focus on the panel of the exhibit that highlighted the relationship between David Hawkins and Loris Malaguzzi. The two men shared a mutual admiration for each other’s work and referenced each other in building their philosophies. For more information about the meeting of these two great thinkers, read the chapter Meeting of Minds in Insights and Inspirations from Reggio Emilia.



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    Hawkins Centers of Learning (HCoL), a 501C3 chartered in 2005, serves the educational community by preserving, articulating, and translating into practice the ideas of Frances and David Hawkins.

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