Teachers Need to be More Like Foxes and Less Like Hedgehogs!
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I am currently reading "The Signal and the Noise" by Nate Silver, the now famed economist/blogger that correctly called 50/50 states in the 2012 presidential election. The book discusses how predictions are often incorrect but sometimes can be correct (or something like that). The part that led me to write this post however is based around a chapter that asks the question "Are You Smarter Than A Television Pundit?". Silver discusses research by Philip Tetlock, a professor of psychology and political science. Tetlock was examining predictions made by "experts" and found that while they overall were about as accurate as a coin flip there was a slight differences in two subgroup he labeled "foxes" and "hedgehogs".
The names of the groups was based on a passage from greek poet Archilochus:
"The fox knows many little things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing."Here is a more in depth description from Silvers book:
- Hedgehogs are type A personalities who believe in Big Ideas- in governing principles about the world that behave as though they were physical laws and undergrid virtually every interaction in society.
- Foxes are scrappy creatures who believe in a plethora of little ideas and in taking a multitude of approaches toward a problem.
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We probably all know a hedgehog-ish teacher. A teacher that knows their subject inside and out but is completely unable to speak with any credibility on anything else the students may have questions about.
We need foxes in schools. We need teachers that are willing to learn. We need teachers that branch out. Most of all though, we need teachers that model the type of multidisciplinary learning that we expect from our students.
2 comments:
Taking the analogy further we are being asked and asking our students to become less foxy and more hedghog. To go deeper in a few areas. An inch wide and a mile deep is the most overused phrase at out school right now.
That phrase actually perfectly condenses what I was describing. I agree completely. It may take longer to build a mile wide but it will pay off in the end.
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