The things necessary to raise a geek...
Saturday, September 5, 2009 at 7:54PM By
David Sometimes I step back and really ask myself what makes me a geek. There are always only a few answers.
- I LOVE to solve problems.
- I feel like I'm learning something new when I have the opportunity to be creative.
- I am an unabashedly creative person, following my whims, wherever they lead me.
Without question, all of these traits came from learning when I was very young.
My dad and I played with language when I was a kid in ways that other people think are insane. He and I would pun and lampoon words, and sentences. I have great memories of this. Plus, we both tried out hand at mastering various immitations of accents from different cultures.
My friend Peter and I would build Legos until we were blue in the face. My mom promoted this by getting me building blocks, and construction kits of various kinds. Later, I would host contests to see which of the neighbor kids could build the best Lego model (I remember specifically - Star Wars Snow Speeder). After that it was building Lego Robot Arms with 4dof.
I'd sit down and visualize something I wanted to build in my mind, and then i'd start executing!
It's amazing how that skill came from two simple things: Playfullness in language, and practiced engineering skills.
Today, I apply BOTH of this skills to job every day. My responsibility is really to execute the IT tactics where our business software is concerned. I need to have an ability visualize how to get form where we are now, to where we want to be. I use what i learned in my childhood, to affect that visualization. These tactics are not always set in stone, and require that I apply a certain amount of creativity to a solution. Especially if that solution somehow does not meet our needs, once its in place.
Again, I rely upon my playfullness to find a solution that is as elegant as it can be, but also has the simplicity that is called for in our organization.
It is my belief that these types of skills are essential to being a great geek. Sure there are others, but these are a few that are important to form early on.
My company (Parents As Teachers) is hostng a series of events called family play dates. Blockfest is one of these - it helps parents learn how to engender these attributes in their child.
I think that this is critically important, as I believe that geeks are great people. If you're going to raise a kid, why not raise a geek. Fred Blassie not withstanding, we need more geeks to help us execute the tactics that history has come up with.
This family play date uses an educational curriculum that we licensed called BlockFest. Blockfest teaches Parents how to play with their children by learning about important engineering ideas, doing it in such a way that there is a great measure of creativity in this play time as well. Parents work with children and demonstrate things as simple as size and texture, all the way up to complex concepts like order of operations. (you have to build the foundation before you put the roof on)
Remember that this curriculum can be applied to children in a wide range of ages. So it is easy to hold one of these playdates, and entertain children from 4 to 42!
OK, why do i think that this is so important? It really boils down to this: We have stopped contributing scientists and engineers to our society. While we can educate them in their later years, we are not doing such a great job to cultivating them early on. The only way to fix this, is to help parents - give them tools to make learning these concepts fun AT AN EARLY AGE!
I want to encourage all my geek friends that read this blog to express interest in this event. Think of this as a way to get your kids involved in what you do at a very early age, have fun yourself, and really enjoy watching your child grow!




Reader Comments (1)
Interesting...Dave makes a point here that defines what our generation's make-up is versus somebody who, say, was born after about 1975.
In my/our day, at my house, we had a metal case of stone blocks, remnant from my dad's age at childhood. I stacked them and, since no two 3-D rectangles were exactly the same, they had to be laid just right to compensate for their lengths AND still stand as decent foundations to go on up from there.
Lincoln Logs were around, but they didn't really rate big with me--but had I gotten them I would have certainly enjoyed them.
Erector sets RULED! I'm talking about the old structural steel with blue-case drive motors that came with black tight twine for cables. The project booklets that came with them outlined all sorts of VERY cool projects. I once dropped a hundred or so for my son's try at a 'modern', but the charm had worn away as the spatial skills and 'in your head' math skills just wasn't in that company's toy design anymore.
Does that make me a geek? I don't think so, nor am I one. Geeks, the true geeks I know, have powerful creative-side brains AND pack a wallop in the left side as well...you need memory and patience with small applications...and tolerate a work/play life on a PC/Laptop building things that 1) the common folk can't transcend, and 2) require unworldly patience. Real geeks drink good wine, too; that seems to help.