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Ask PG: Thoughts about "Free To Learn"

11 pointsby KedarMhaswadeover 11 years ago
I am reading Peter Gray's Free to Learn. It's a refreshing look at schooling. You have expressed thoughts about "how to fix schools" in H&P. What do you think of Peter Gray's book?

4 comments

merlinsbrainover 11 years ago
Unschooling - I believe that&#x27;s the philosophy that a successful YC startup (Hacker School) has imbibed in helping programmers get better at their craft.<p>Although I haven&#x27;t read the book (yet - sample on Kindle), I have tried to apply principles of unschooling to my own learning process.<p>Background: I&#x27;m 25 with a bachelor&#x27;s degree in CS and currently leading the platforms &amp; analytics efforts of a tech startup. Stellar academic and co-curricular record till high school.<p>The degree took 6years (I withdrew two years in the middle) instead of the usual 4, and I think one of the reasons (although not primary) that contributed to that was sheer boredom. I am undoubtedly opinionateed here, and what I speak of is a personal experience, but I just couldn&#x27;t get the point of what they were quizzing us on. The books were great, the content amazing, the lecturers okay, but sitting in a class of 60 only to be asked in the exam: &quot;List the five things about...&quot;; &quot;How does this work, explain with a diagram&quot;; etc.<p>Although one can argue this is probably more reflective of the university I attended, I would argue back saying that I&#x27;ve attended 3 of them to get the degree, each time looking for a challenge and failing miserably to deal with the mundane teaching and exams.<p>The books became my lectures and the authors my gurus of their domain. I found the right peer group to discuss problems and developments in the field but more often than not this was done over a drink or 5. That&#x27;s how things worked out for _me_, my lecturers from 2 of my alma maters (so to say) now invite me for guest lectures (1.5 years out of a degree).<p>I didn&#x27;t do anything special. I just skipped classes to watch videos from MIT OCW (pre-Coursera&#x2F;Udacity&#x2F;edX) on anything at all that interested me (while of course retaining an emphasis on the semester subjects) and read the books they recommended.
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pgover 11 years ago
This is the first I&#x27;ve heard of it.
011011100over 11 years ago
The message in the book, based on my understanding from online reviews and summaries, resonates with me. I usually have a hard time with school and I&#x27;ve found that if I study on my own, under my own control, and that I get an opportunity to figure things out when I need or want to, I will usually do well when the material is formally taught. University doesn&#x27;t really offer this for me because there&#x27;s always a necessity to progress.
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Bsharpover 11 years ago
Just ordered it off Amazon. From reading the description it seems like I already agree with the premise of the book so it might just reinforce my existing beliefs, but it seems interesting nonetheless.