0:00
I don't know that there's a need to measure intelligence
0:13
We have this incredible drive in our culture to enumerate everything and measure everything
0:20
And I'm not sure that we need to do that. From my perspective, our current education system measures intelligence by a young person's ability to perform on a
0:29
predetermined, pre-designed assessment at a particular time and to give back the answers that are
0:36
expected, given what was given to them. That system of measurement does tell you something about
0:42
what they can do under those conditions, but it doesn't tell you anything about their potential
0:47
So one of the real problems with this way of thinking about achievement, which often morphs over
0:52
into intelligence, is that it undermines agency in a sort of broader sense and instead, teaching
0:59
his kids to focus very narrowly on the problem spaces that have already been invented
1:05
that are being given to them and formulated by somebody else on somebody else's terms
1:09
Some of that is fine, but the problem is that becomes the privileged and oftentimes only way
1:15
of knowing what a child knows how smart a child is, rather than looking at what I would
1:21
call a more dynamic, lived, ecologically valid, sort of emergent kind of intelligence
1:26
which is the ability to manage yourself in complex context and make sense out of things and
1:29
invent in real time on the fly. That is a much more adaptive sort of ecological kind of
1:36
intelligence and I think it's essential for society and we really should do more to support it