The
“banking concept,” as termed by Paolo Freire, is essentially an act that
hinders the intellectual growth of students by turning them into, figuratively
speaking, comatose “receptors” and “collectors” of information that have no
real connection to their lives. (http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/171/re-envisioning-paulo-freires-banking-concept-of-education)
Freire’s description of a child as an
empty vessel waiting to be “filled” with information from the teacher portrays
a really a dated version of teaching, yet the reality is that when visiting
schools, one might still find children in rows memorizing facts and rules. Similarly
Duckworth (1972) demonstrates a concern for the stunting of children’s
intellectual development. Duckworth asks, “What happens to children’s curiosity
and resourcefulness later in their childhood? Why do so few continue to have
their own wonderful ideas?” Duckworth
contributes this stunting to the following two reasons:
1.
Student’s
intellectual breakthroughs come to be less and less valued in educational
settings. By discouraging children from exploring their own ideas and to make
them feel that they have no important ideas of their own.
2.
Wonderful
ideas do not spring out of nothing. They
build on a foundation of other ideas. If children are sitting in rows
memorizing facts and formulas how are they building the foundation?
Something within the institution of schooling teaches
children to shut off their creativity and stop building the foundations
necessary to build wonderful ideas.
With the onset of new creatively designed products like
MaKey MaKey, it is my hope that more teachers will begin to value the process
over the product and allow children to tinker with learning, creativity, and
designing. This would provide the
“foundation” that Duckworth (1972) called for.
This week I was able to take home the MaKey MaKey kit from
the SOE Mill space. It became a
wonderful tool for me to uncover new learning about ways that circuits work
while tinkering and working through frustrating set backs. David Hawkins (as
cited by Duckworth, 1972) wrote, “You don’t want to cover a subject: you want
to uncover it.” This is exactly what
happened as I tried to master the MaKey MaKey.
First, I attended a brief ‘how to’ session on MaKey MaKey in
the Mill, this session proved that MaKey MaKey should be pretty fool proof, yet
when I arrived at home with the kit and hooked it up to my MAC I found that it
didn’t work. I tried making a banana
space bar adaptation for my computer without success. I thought maybe my banana was bad, and
replaced it with a riper one. Next, I
detached everything then re-hooked it up.
No luck.
So, I decided it must be a case of a bad banana. To try out my hypothesis about the bananas
being the source of failure, I opened a new play dough jar and attempted to use
the playdough in place of the banana.
Still nothing. I called in back
ups…my children. They couldn’t get it to
work. They lost interest and abandoned me.
Feeling a bit discouraged I turned to the Internet. I was problem solving and determined to get
this thing to work. I became convinced
that it was my computer. I Googled, “Why
doesn’t my MAC work with MaKey MaKey?” I found a blog post that mirrored my
experience with nothing working, and at the end of the blog it said, “I tried
another MAC and it worked perfectly.” I
decided to abandon my computer and try to set up the MaKey MaKey system to my
daughter’s MAC. As soon as it was set up to the new computer… Voilà I had a
banana space bar!
Things really picked up from this point. I felt successful and ready to try something
more difficult. I got out the play dough
again and transformed it into arrow keys.
This success brought back my children; the play dough keys sparked their
interest. We got more and more confident
and tried out different apps on
Makey.com. We made a piano, bongo drums,
and ultimately the night ended with a concert as we hooked up to the concert
piano app and played along with a concert pianist. It was great fun and an intense problem
solving process for me. I never did find
out why it didn’t work with my computer…
Ultimately, if schools looked toward objects to think with
that focus on creative processes (like MaKey MaKey) rather than standardized “banking”
education and outcomes, we would have students who were much more capable of
wonderful ideas. Duckworth writes, “The having of wonderful ideas, which I
consider the essence of intellectual development, would depend instead to an
overwhelming extent on the occasions for having them.” Makey Makey may be one
more way to help kids think, explore, create, design and continue to have
wonderful ideas.
Duckworth, E. (1972). The having of wonderful ideas



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