“A remarkable book. Whether you are an educator, parent, or simply a curious reader, you will come to see, hear, and understand children in new ways.” ―Howard Gardner, author of Multiple Intelligences
Adults easily recognize children’s imagination at work as they play. Yet most of us know little about what really goes on inside their heads as they encounter the problems and complexities of the world around them. Susan Engel brings together an extraordinary body of research to explain how toddlers, preschoolers, and elementary-aged children think.
A young girl’s bug collection reveals how children ask questions and organize information. Watching a boy scoop mud illuminates the process of invention. When a child ponders the mystery of death, we witness how ideas are built. But adults shouldn’t just stand around watching. When parents are creative, it can rub off. Engel shows how parents and teachers can stimulate children’s curiosity by presenting them with mysteries to solve, feeding their sense of mastery and nourishing their natural hunger to learn.
“A fascinating read for parents who wonder, simply, what is my child thinking? Why do they love collecting? Where did that idea come from? A celebration of children’s innovation and sense of wonder.” ―Emily Oster, author of Expecting Better
“Combining insight, scientific acumen, and exquisite narrative, The Intellectual Lives of Children allows readers to peer into the minds of infants, toddlers, and preschoolers as they explore and learn in everyday moments, emphasizing what constitutes real learning.” ―Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, Science
Susan Engel is a developmental psychologist in the Department of Psychology at Williams College and the founder and director of the Williams Program in Teaching. She wrote a column on teaching for "The""New York Times" called "Lessons" and is a cofounder of The Hayground School in Eastern Long Island.
It was missing a golden thread of narrative. I was never sure how each story fit into the whole. The word that came most to mind was anecdotal. Which isn’t bad, but without the connecting bits was hard to follow or summarize
I love Susan Engel's work and regularly use The Stories Children Tell with my undergraduate research students. I've also used The Hungry Mind in a senior seminar class. One of the things I appreciate most about Engel is the deep respect she has for the voices of young children - by listening to children talk about their experiences and their understanding of the world in their own words, she recognizes how we can better shape and nurture their own curiosity and intellectual pursuits as well as how much we can learn from them. Her approach to studying children's cognitive development contributes to our understanding that young children are far more competent than Piaget and other researchers have given them credit for. This was not my favorite work of Engel's. While she masterfully incorporates anecdotal stories to complement relevant psychological experiments in her efforts to describe children's thoughts, ideas, and intellectual interests, at times it felt that the writing was meandering and the core theme was lost (especially in the Ideas chapter). I most enjoyed the Inventions chapter.
This book is at its best when it highlights the author's research with children, showing through anecdotes and examples how children are deeper and, frankly, more human than people give them credit for. I disagree with other reviewers on here: I think the regularly spaced stories do a great job supporting the thread of her thinking.
As a homeschool dad, this gives me a lot of ideas and material to work with as I raise my kids to be deep and critical thinkers. Thinking through questions and problems is a skill, one we would do well to help our children grow.
An interesting book. Something to think about next time I visit my nieces and nephews. It seems that it could have been shorter, though. Like many nonfiction books of late, there is a pretty simple idea that gets spread over too many pages.
Πολύ ωραίες προτάσεις, ιδέες και σκέψεις για την εκπαίδευση των παιδιών και τις ιδέες τους. Να είναι σίγουρη όμως η συγγραφέας ότι στον σύγχρονο ολοκληρωτικό καπιταλισμό τα παιδιά, η εκπαίδευση και το σχολείο, δεν θα γίνουν ποτέ έτσι όπως περιγράφει στο τελευταίο κεφάλαιο, αν δεν τον ανατρέψουμε!
Good book! Confirmed things I already knew or suspected and got excited about some new ideas! Definitely an interesting read for a parent, teacher or lover of humanities studies.