Difference between revisions of "Genius Is Not about Excelling at Something - It’s about Doing Things Differently (YouTube Content)"
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'''Genius Is Not about Excelling at Something—It's about Doing Things Differently''' was | '''Genius Is Not about Excelling at Something—It's about Doing Things Differently''' was a video with [[Eric Weinstein]] on Big Think. | ||
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Revision as of 21:26, 22 March 2021
Genius Is Not about Excelling at Something—It's about Doing Things Differently | |
Information | |
---|---|
Guest(s) | Eric Weinstein |
Length | 00:05:22 |
Release Date | 4 May 2017 |
Links | |
YouTube | Watch |
Portal Blog | Read |
All Appearances |
Genius Is Not about Excelling at Something—It's about Doing Things Differently was a video with Eric Weinstein on Big Think.
Description
We want our surgeons to be excellent. We want our classical music performers to be excellent. But do we really want excellence everywhere? This is the provocative line of thought economist and mathematician Eric Weinstein is currently chasing. We've figured out how to reliably teach excellence, which is useful — but there is a trade-off. Individuals and education institutions become hyper-focused on cutting variant individuals to a certain shape, pushing them into a mold so they can passably imitate the "excellent" population, but not really perform. "The key question is: who are these high-variance individuals? Why are our schools filled with dyslexics? Why are there so many kids diagnosed with ADHD? My claim is these are giant underserved populations who are not meant for the excellence model." To that end, Weinstein suggests that the label of 'learning disabled' is severely misguided. Perhaps we should call this phenomenon what it more accurately is: a teaching disability. How much genius is squandered by muting the strengths of these populations?
ERIC WEINSTEIN:
Eric Weinstein is an American mathematician and economist. He earned his Ph.D in mathematical physics from Harvard University in 1992, is a research fellow at the Mathematical Institute of Oxford University, and is a managing director of Thiel Capital in San Francisco. He has published works and is an expert speaker on a range of topics including economics, immigration, elite labor, mitigating financial risk and incentivizing of creative risks in the hard sciences.
Transcript
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