A delightful story appears on page 106 (10.8 Education and
Development) of Marvin Minsky's book "The Society of Mind" (Picador
Edn 1988). The story relates to the psychologist Piaget's experiments
on children of their understanding of conservation of quantity under
transformation.
================================
All this reminds me of a visit to my home from my friend Gilbert
Voyat, who was then a student of Papert and Piaget and later became a
distinguished child psychologist. On meeting our five-year-old twins,
his eyes sparkled, and he quickly improvised some experiments in the
kitchen. Gilbert engaged Julie first, planning to ask her about
whether a potato would balance best on one, two, three or four
toothpicks. First, in order to assess her general development, he
began by performing the water jar experiment. The conversation went
like this:
Gilbert: "Is there more water in this jar or in that jar?"
Julie: "It looks like there's more in that one. But you should ask my
brother, Henry. He has conservation already."
Gilbert paled and fled.
--
Moral: Don't try to perform psychological experiments on the children
of psychologists!
--
From the RHF archives as selected by Brad Templeton, Maddi Hausmann and
Jim Griffith. This newsgroup posts former jokes from the newsgroup
rec.humor.funny. Visit
http://www.netfunny.com/rhf to browse the RHF pages
and archives on the web.
Join and contribute to the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) today.
Archived from group: rec>humor>funny>reruns