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09/07/2023

If Children Educate Themselves, What Do We Do?

Our brains are built to benefit from play no matter what our age.
Theresa A. Kestly, Contemporary American psychologist

“When I say that children are biologically designed to educate themselves, I mean they are born with certain instinctive drives shaped, over eons, by natural selection to serve the purpose of education,” writes author and educational philosopher Peter Gray, who names these six drives:


In the Exchange Reflections “Nurturing Thinkers, Explorers and Innovators,” Laura Mickey shares these implications for teaching:

“How we ‘teach’ young children may provide information about what we already know or it may stimulate curiosity. I encourage us to do more than ask children to repeat the information we have given; let’s do more than have them sit on a square without talking or fidgeting.”

Gray’s six drives dovetail well with Mickey’s conceptualization of the teacher-child partnership:


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