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KNOWLEDGE SUMMIT
Jamie Hale's Knowledge Summit: Thoughts from a Practical Scientist
Click here to visit Jamie Hale's blog.
Saturday, July 18, 2009
The Story of
Science
By Jamie Hale
One
night while watching TV I stumbled across a program that featured Joy
Hakim. Hakim is an award winning writer who has written a series of
boon on US History and Science. After a couple of months of email
exchanges I decided it was time to do an interview with Joy Hakim.
What
does a day in the life of Joy Hakim look like?
When I'm writing (which is most of the time) I read the NY Times with breakfast
and then get to my desk (usually about 8:30 a.m.). I work until noon, trying to
remember to get up every hour and stretch. Then lunch and--this is where my
schedule varies--sometimes I do errands, or swim, or go to a yoga class, or go
back to work. Sometimes I write into the evening, sometimes I play.
Of the books you have written do you have a favorite?
The book I'm currently working on is always my favorite. But I'm perhaps most proud
of "Einstein Adds A New Dimension." It stretched my head and gave me
a chance to get to know a wonderful MIT author/physicist, Edwin Taylor.
Was it harder to write the US History books or the science books?
The science books were harder to write because I had little background in the
subject. I was trained as a journalist, so no subject intimidates me, still,
quantum theory and relativity were tough. I'd like teachers to feel they can
tackle any subject by being willing to learn along with their students. The old
model of teacher as ultimate expert is out-of-date. Knowledge is increasing at
exponential rates, no one can keep up. Teaching students how to find
information and process it needs to become the ultimate school goal. If we can
create real learning communities in our classrooms we can handle the abundance
of information that is now available to all of us everywhere.
Did you
have a team of researchers working with you on the history and science series?
I don't have any researchers helping me, I do contact lots of experts and have
them read copy and answer questions. It's wonderful, when you are writing for
young readers the best people are willing to help
What can we do to improve America’s History and Science programs in our
schools?
We need to stop thinking of history and science as isolated stand-alone
subjects. History is a great mother discipline. Everything that happens today
will be history tomorrow. So history can tie all subjects together. It should
be central to curricula. As to science, we live in the greatest scientific era
ever. The scientific discoveries of recent times underlie and guide our
society. And yet we keep today's most exciting science as an elite subject for
a small percentage of our population. No wonder school seems irrelevant to many
kids. Black holes, dark matter, dark energy are all out there ready to entice
young minds. For heavens sake, why aren't we teaching physics and genetics to
all our children? Teachers aren't trained in those subjects? Then they can learn
with their students and tie the subject to history and literature too
Why is there such a huge lack of critical thinking courses offered in most
school systems?
I don't think much of critical thinking courses. You learn to think critically
by researching and writing. I have some experience in those disciplines. I
promise--demand more research-based writing and critical thinking scores will
soar.
What is your favorite book? Who is your favorite author?
I'm an eclectic reader and love to mix the ancients with 19th century fiction,
but mostly I read current books for information, so it is in nonfiction that I
spend much of my reading time. We have a group of science writers today who are
astonishingly eloquent--they include Hans Christian von Baeyer, Alan Lightman,
Richard Feynman, Marcia Bartusiak, and Brian Greene--for starters. Stephen
Hawking and his daughter have written adventure books for young readers on
space exploration, and they are page-turners. Among historians, David
McCullough and Joseph Ellis are favorites. Christopher Buckley's recent book
about his parents is a writer's gem. I just finished Jenny Uglow's wonderful
book The Lunar Society, about a group of outrageous and amazing 18th century
thinkers and doers.
Are you currently working on any new projects?
Yes, right now I am working on two books that are complementary approaches to
biology and its process of change. I'm learning a lot.
Visit Joy Hakim's site at www.joyhakim.com
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