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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][tlug] [OT] Raising a geek (was: Interesting Hans Reiser article in Wired)
- Date: Sat, 14 Jul 2007 09:36:04 +0900
- From: "Josh Glover" <jmglov@example.com>
- Subject: [tlug] [OT] Raising a geek (was: Interesting Hans Reiser article in Wired)
On 14/07/07, Shawn <javajunkie@example.com> wrote:
I really don't know about Hans and his situation. In my son's case, he was asked to leave the US Embassy preschool in Tokyo. Of course he was bored and causing trouble, they are drawing three dogs to represent the number three. He is teaching himself multiplication and reading books that explain fractions.
This is almost eerily similar to my situation as a child. In my case, I had learned to read before going to public kindergarten (in the US, you go to "kindergarten"--which is 0th grade, or equivalent to "preschool" in Europe--at age 5) and was thus bored out of my mind. Needless to say, I entertained myself by acting out, and was removed from public school at the end of the year.
I don't think anyone really set out to discriminate against him but it's just that his interests are so different than his peers.
It is very difficult to take care of a special needs child in current education systems. Your son needs targetted attention from his teacher(s), and that is just not how teachers are trained these days.
In my case, I was lucky enough that my mother was a certified teacher who had stopped teaching in public schools just before I was born, so she simply home-schooled me and my two sisters for the next four years.
Now, home-schooling has a (well-deserved) bad reputation currently, mainly because evolution deniers in the US use it as a tool to give their children a fundamentalist education so they can grow up to hate gays yet secretly sleep with them[1], all the while screaming about how immigration will be the downfall of Western (meaning US) Civilisation.[2]
But my mother, aside from being a certified teacher, is a certified lover of science. She gave us instruction in maths, science, and the other two Rs (reading and wRiting) that was uniquely targetted to our progress and learning style. The result was, when I entered a prestigious private school in 5th grade, I learned preciously nothing from the coursework, save from my French class, where I learned to say "Je suis Americain, mais ne parle pas Anglais." ;)
The classroom had an Apple, and they were teaching us Logo, which would have been awesome had I not taught myself Applesoft Basic at home (by that time, I was dabbling in 68000 assember; I would enter the programs from those magazines, and very occasionally could I find and fix a simple bug).
So--surprise, surprise--I entertained myself by acting out, this time against the spoiled rich kids who made fun of my flannel shirts and jeans with patches in the knees and the fact that my mother had to work for a living! (She was teaching science at the private school, which almost covered the cost of tuition for me and my two younger sisters.) Just before Christmas vacation, one of the kids went too far and I bloodied his nose and blackened his eye, and that was curtains for my private school career.
After the break, I entered public school, which was almost as bad as private school in terms of other kids making fun of me because I was different, and much worse than private school in terms of the coursework. It is no exaggeration when I say that I did not learn anything new or worthwhile until 8th grade, when I had the good fortune to get put in the "Gifted and Talented" classes (AKA "Classes for the rich kids who are in public school instead of private"). I had an excellent history teacher who really engaged us to think about current events in the context of history and try to understand why ongoing conflicts are occurring.
But the best thing about public school is that I met a few fellow geeks: a computer geek (well, he was not then; he just had video games, but when I introduced him to computers, he was hooked for life and now owns a company that provides network services to small businesses and dental clinics) and a D&D geek (his older brother had written and *published* a role-playing game while at Uni). These two chaps, along with a classical music / computer geek who I had met at private school (he is now a professional programmer with interests in Erlang, functional languages, genetic algorithms, and Perl 6 / Parrot), are my best friends to this very day.
But don't get me wrong, high school sucked. Luckily, I had the bare minimum number of teachers who realised my special needs (i.e. the need to be treated like an intellectual equal, if a 後輩) plus the good fortune to befriend my computer geek friend's father, who had an intellectual curiosity surpassed by none since maybe the Royal Society days, and equalled by few. Had it not been for these handful of people who were willing to see that the reason I was a pain in the ass (and I was, don't get me wrong) was that I was bored out of my goddamn mind in school, I would almost certainly not have gone to uni.
As it was, I took a year off after high school and worked at a PC repair shop. It was a great experience, as I learned (and quickly!) how to act maturely and deal with office politics. But more than anything, it made me want to go to college, as I saw how people who did not were discriminated against and people who did were treated with respect. I was offered a job as a Visual Basic programmer (!) by that firm, and my supervisor in the PC repair section said that I was, at age 17, the best technician he had. But I knew I needed the Piece of Paper, so I applied to The College of William and Mary in Virginia. And I was damned lucky that my mother was an alumnus, because I am not sure if my spotty high school grades would have gotten me in (luckily, I had aced the SAT[3]--I can still do much better on standardised tests than I deserve, just because of my voracious reading) without the legacy boost.
And it was there at uni that I finally found what I was looking for: unlimited access to information and truly great minds. Strangely enough, I was extremely well-liked by my professors in uni (where I was most certainly *not* liked by the crushing majority of my high school teachers) because I was very interested in what they were selling, and I always engaged them outside class hours with questions on their subject matter. For example, when I was writing an Asteroids clone (in Visual Basic 6.0--IIRC) and I could not figure out an elegant equation for tracking a certain point on my triangular ship, I asked my Algorithms and Data Structures professor--who was one of the mathematicians that founded the Computer Science department at my university--how to do it. Not only did he tell me, he encouraged me to take his graphics class the next semester, skipping a pre-requisite course, so I could grab more cool maths.
And I think this is the key to raising a geek: provide him with information! Your son is lucky enough to grow up in the age of the Internet, where Wikipedia can give him an overview of almost any topic in just a few minutes. Show him the good stuff on the Internet (can he read yet?) and teach him how to check sources and question orthodoxy from the start.
I have thought a lot about this since I recently became a father myself, and I pray that I have this problem with him in a few years. :)
The other thing that I would recommend is being very honest with him about how the world works. If he asks "why is the sky blue?", don't give him some bullshit answer, tell him about ROYGBIV and how the BIV colours get scattered more by the atmosphere. And for heaven's sake, if he asked you a question to which you do not know the answer, respond, "I don't know. Let's look it up and learn together!"
In Japanese preschool, we got called in yesterday to explain his differences in front of all the other parents. He doesn't interact like other kids.
Yeah, well the Japanese education system is broken, not your kid. Tell him as much as soon as you feel it is appropriate. He needs to know that he is special, but that the world is designed for average people, and he will always have to play their games to some extent.
I wish someone had told me, when I was five years old, that life was a game that I had to play so that I could win, i.e. get what I wanted out of life, which is simply access to knowledge.
I remember the day he realized he was different. He hid under a blanket and covered his eyes and kept saying "I'm different, I'm different". I put on a Thomas (the tank engine) episode where Thomas ridicules a tractor for having caterpillar tracks and not proper wheels. Of course, the tractor later pulls Thomas out of the snow.
I hope he got the point, but I would advise you to try to explain this to him directly. Tell him that being different is a wonderful thing, and that other kids who are not themselves different are jealous of his intelligence.
Maybe though you wouldn't say my son is a geek. Maybe you would say he is a mutant. He likes Gnome very very much too if that tells you anything.
I would say that your son is a treasure, and if humanity is to live long and prosper, we need to cultivate and revere such treasures.
I don't know Hans' story so much even after reading the whole article. There is no justification for harming others even if he faced a difficult life. Still, sometimes I honestly can't believe how painfully difficult and problematic it is for people who are different by their nature.
I think that understanding parents can make all the difference in the world. Look at Hans's situation: his father was absent from his life until somewhat recently. His father is a conspiracy theorist who finds it likely that Hans is under surveillance by the KGB.
If you and your wife provide a loving environment for your children, they will almost certainly turn out fine. If you can go beyond this and provide them with knowledge and support, they will almost certainly succeed in any endeavours they undertake in life. If you can go beyond that and provide a kindred geeky spirit... the sky is the limit.
I mean seriously, your son could be the next Feynman or Hawking! [4]
Please note the reason that I singled out these two as examples: they are brilliant men who are also great communicators and successful socially. True geeks should not settle for success in their field, they should be challenged to succeed socially as well, which means whatever they want it to mean. For me, it means friends and family, as well as being respected and liked by my peers. Other geeks respect me for my abilities, but mundanes like me because I am friendly and treat them with respect. I treat people I despise with respect and courtesy, because a) it is never good to make enemies, and b) I could be wrong about them. Remember my D&D geek friend? We *hated* each other in 7th grade, due to being on opposite sides of a mock trial (I was, I am happy to report, on the winning side!). In fact, the story is brief and amusing, so I will recount it here (this email could not be further off the original topic anyway!).
In my seventh grade government class, we were studying the US justice system, and had a mock trial to illustrate it. The trial was an oldie-but-a-goodie: The State vs. Goldilocks[6], on the charge of breaking and entering. I was Baby Bear, star witness for the prosecution. Unfortunately for the prosecutor (my D&D geek friend, Adam), Goldilocks was played by a girl that I liked. The girl approached me at lunch and convinced me to change my testimony, which I did, resulting in a mistrial and her freedom. Adam hated me (and rightly so, according to the Code of Man: "bros before hos"[7][8]) for the rest of the year behind this treachery.
Anyway, to return to my original point, Stallman[9] and Newton[10], as brilliant as they are, are not good role models for geeks. They do/did not Play Well with Others, to the detriment of their ideas.
Other kids draw animals and people. Mine does train maps of Tokyo.
Awesome! Please make sure he gets some of those wonderful train models that they sell here!
The reason that geeks love trains is because it is a network that they can comprehend at a young age. I still love train and airline route maps!
Other kids can sense when they should follow the rules (kids are kids and need reminding). Mine will point out every time he sees someone breaking a rule and use that as justification for his own behavior. He just lacks a sense of people's intentions and when he can get away with it.
Then teach him why following rules is important (so that the System lets him alone to hack), and the corollary: which rules are vital (i.e. safety / ethics / "Bros before Hos") and which may be ignored if no-one is watching.
When I first went to work for Mauro, he said something very incisive: "The Japanese guys I have are great, but they just blindly follow the rules. A good sysadmin needs to identify the rules that are broken so he can come up with a better solution." And I think that geeks are good at this (and luckily, the American culture rewards people who break the rules and profit; this has a dark side--Enron--but it is more nurturing to the geek than the "nail that sticks up is pounded down" bullshit in Japan).
We were just discussing this at work yesterday in the context of the difference between the geek and the おたく. Without any urging from me, my Japanese colleagues (who were non-technical) identified me as a "geek" because I enjoy football and literature, whereas another co-worker was labelled an おたく because "he never leaves the house except to go to work".
I think that Feynman and Hawking (which I just misspelled as "Hacking", much to my amusement) are geeks, whereas Stallman and Newton are おたく.
Anyway, this post has gone on long enough. :)
Shawn, please read this in the spirit that it was intended, namely my musings on how to raise a geek kid, largely informed by my own childhood. I am certainly not telling you how to raise your kid, I am just hoping that some of these thoughts are helpful, even if they are only useful in the sense of getting you to consider my points and dismiss them out of hand. ;)
-- Cheers, Josh
[ 1 ] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted_Haggard [ 2 ] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Robertson [ 3 ] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAT [ 4 ] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Feynman [ 5 ] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Hawking [ 6 ] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goldilocks [ 7 ] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7BXpXLQK6FU&NR=1 [ 8 ] http://www.cafepress.com/zombiedonkey/989682 [ 9 ] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Stallman [10] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Newton
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