Hidden Brain - Kinder-Gardening
Episode Date: May 29, 2018Many parents think they can shape their child into a particular kind of adult. Psychologist Alison Gopnik says the science suggests otherwise. This week, we revisit our December 2017 conversation with... Gopnik, who thinks we'd all be better off if we had a different understanding of the relationship between parents and kids.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Step into the basement of Alex Hamilton's home in Frederick, Maryland, and you'll notice it has a distinct smell.
It's wood dust and cigars.
This is a nice cigar smoking area.
The wood dust? That's from his carpentry projects.
Alex's basement is his workshop.
He's built things for every room in his house and outside too.
Cote hooks.
That's the table I made.
A shed.
This picture frame I made.
A mailbox.
Color coordinated with the house.
Yeah, that makes stuff like that.
Alex is showing my producer Rina Cohen around.
Today he's building something for a beloved family member.
One of my dogs likes to go with me everywhere, so I'm making a bike seat just for her.
Alex calls himself a retired perfectionist.
Things don't have to be perfect for you to enjoy them.
That's especially true for another of Alex's hobbies.
He steps outside his house to show us a A sausage of a dog scampers up.
Butter bean. That's my garden helper. Alex walks around his garden pointing out the fruits
and vegetables he's planted. Those are blackberries, broccoli, brussels sprouts, tomatoes, sugar
baby watermelon, artichokes, maybe not artichokes.
Had one artichoke plant, I've never had an artichoke plant before. And there is a rabbit
who kept eating it down to the ground. And a couple weeks later it would grow to be
two or three inches tall. Then the rabbit would come back and eat it all the way down
the ground. So good for him. I still haven't seen what an artichoke plant looks like.
This pesky rabbit is one of the variables that distinguishes Alex's gardening from his carpentry.
When he's in his workshop, there are things that he can control.
The humidity, the shape, the size, the color, how smooth the finish is, or if you want to leave it rough or rustic.
But as a gardener, he's found he has to let go.
You can't control the weather, you can't control your rain, you can't control the humidity. So there are probably,
I would say more than half of the variables for gardening, you have absolutely no control.
Carpenters draft plans and stick to them. Gardeners, well, you have things that creep up on you
all the time. Surprises are what make gardening so frustrating. Those weeds are really awful. I hate those things.
But surprises are also what make gardening so rewarding.
All these flowers here started from one flower,
and they propagated.
So at the end of the summer, we had this beautiful flower bed
and we didn't have to do anything.
Alex Hamilton's hobbies are a metaphor for something
very different.
According to Psychology Professor Alison Gopnik,
the different philosophies of the carpenter and the gardener
play out every day in how parents interact with their children.
I think it was kind of natural for people to think
this is like going to school and working
and if I can just find the right manual or the right secret handbook
I'm going to succeed at this task the right secret handbook, I'm going
to succeed at this task the same way that I succeeded in my classes or I succeeded in my job.
This week on Hidden Brain, we bring you our show from December 2017 on how to raise
a human in our hyper competitive world. We'll study two different approaches to modern parenting
and their consequences.
Alison Gopnick is a professor of psychology and philosophy at the University of California Berkeley. She is the author of several books about children's development,
her most recent book, The Gardener and The Carpenter,
explores the different ways parents can raise kids
and the consequences of those choices.
Alison, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Glad to be here.
Your book is built around an analogy.
Parents behaving like gardeners, parents behaving like carpenters.
Unpack those analogies for me.
Well, if you look at the prevailing culture of parents and caregiving in the United States,
even in Europe now.
It's a picture that's a lot like the picture you might imagine
if you thought about a carpenter.
And the idea is that if you just do the right things,
get the right skills, read the right books,
you're going to be able to shape your child
into a particular kind of adult.
And that picture is very different
from the kind of picture that comes from the science.
The picture that comes from the science
is much more like being a gardener. Now one thing about being a gardener
is you never know what's going to happen in the garden, the things that you plan, fail,
but then wonderful things happen that you haven't actually planned. And there's actually
a deeper reason for that. And the reason is that what being a gardener is all about is
creating a rich, nurturing, but also variable, diverse, dynamic
ecosystem in which many, many different things can happen, and a system that can respond
to the environment in unpredictable kind of ways.
And I think the science suggests that being a caregiver for human beings is much more
like being a gardener than being a carpenter.
It's much more about providing a protected space in which unexpected things can happen than it is like shaping a
child to come out to be a particular kind of desirable at all. I was surprised to
read that the term parenting itself isn't very old. When did the term become
popular and how did it come to be? Yeah it's interesting. The very word
parenting which seems so ubiquitous and taken for granted now,
is actually quite recent. So if you look in Google Engram, it's only around the
1970s in America that the word first begins to really take off, and then there's this kind of
exponential increase from the 70s up to the present moment.
This is Focus on the Family, hosted by psychologist Dr. James Dobson, the author of such best-selling
books on the family as parenting isn't for cowards.
Hey, parents, listen up to this.
This could be revolutionary.
You have to change the way you think about parenting because how many?
Amy Chou, I've knighted a firestorm by sharing the surprising details of her strict parenting
methods in the book, Battle Him of the Tiger Mother.
And if you think about it, parenting is a kind of strange word.
After all, we don't whive our husbands or child our parents.
What we say is that those are relationships.
I am a child or I am a wife.
It's not a kind of goal-directed activity that I'm doing that has a particular outcome
that I'm trying to achieve.
And I think being a parent is a much better way of describing what that relationship is
all about than parenting, then changing a child into something else.
So it's interesting that that switch in some ways to a verb changes what we think about
the activity.
As you say, we don't start a friendship saying,
in three years' time, I want my friend to become X,
and I'm going to raise my friend to become that person
that I want him or her to be.
Yeah, in fact, if you think about something like a friendship,
of course, it's when friends are in bad shape,
that the friendship counts the most.
I think there was actually a historical reason why the word appeared in the late 20th century
and the culture that goes along with it, which has become more and more intense, even in
the 30 years since I had my own children.
And I think that reason is that for the first time in human history, people were having
children, especially middle class American people people who had not had much experience
of caring for children before.
So one of the things, again, that comes out of the sciences
for as long as we've been human, older brothers and sisters
and cousins and aunts and grandmothers
and the whole village has been involved
in caring for children.
And that meant that for most of human history,
by the time you were ready to have children yourself, you'd had lots of practical experience in caring for children. And that meant that for most of human history, by the time you were ready to have children yourself, you'd had lots of practical experience in caring for
children. You'd also watched lots of different people, not just your own parents, but many
other people care for children. And what happened in the 20th century was because families got
smaller and people got to be more mobile and people had children at a later age. For the
first time, people were having children who hadn't had much experience of caring for children,
but had had lots of experience of going to school
and working.
So I think it was kind of natural for people to think,
oh, okay, this thing that I'm about to do,
this is like going to school and working.
And if I can just find the right manual
or the right secret handbook,
I'm gonna succeed at this task,
the same way that I succeeded in my classes or I succeeded in my job.
So I think that historical fact is a lot of the reason why this culture and with it this kind of sense of anxiety and worry and also this billion dollar parenting industry all started emerging at the end of the 20th century. Allison points out that compared to other primates,
humans have an especially long childhood.
We just sort of take it for granted
that children need to be taken care of for a long time,
but that's actually sort of evolutionarily paradoxical.
And there's an interesting question about why it did that happen.
And one idea, at least, is that having that long period
of childhood gave you this protected
period where you could figure out a new environment.
You could move, say, from one village to another or from one place to another, and childhood
gave you a chance to master that new environment.
And I think that a lot of the things that seem kind of strange about children, the fact
that they're simultaneously so creative,
so imaginative, so exploratory, and yet so bad at taking care of themselves, kind of fit that picture.
So you would say, for example, that the length of childhood that humans experience in some ways
perhaps not even lends itself to the model of the gardening parent, but actually is designed
for the model of the gardening parent, but actually is designed for the model of the gardening parent.
That's exactly right. So even if you could do the carpenting thing, even if you could think beforehand,
here's how I want my child to come out and you know I'm going to engage in this set of
procedures that's going to make that my child come out that way, you would have defeated the
whole point of childhood by doing that because the whole point of childhood on this view is to be able to bring new ideas, new
ways of being in the world, new ways of understanding the environment to life.
What do you think the harm is of parents trying to be carpenters?
Well, I mean, it's a tricky question.
I think the main harm is that it makes the process, the life of being a parent anxious and
difficult and tense and unhappy in all sorts of ways that are unnecessary.
And I think it makes it that way for parents and it makes it that way for children.
Now, the question about how any kind of behavior on the part of parents influences children
in the long run is very, very complicated.
So, you know, another piece of this evolutionary picture is that every individual child has
their own characteristics.
Every parent does.
There's this complicated interaction between the parents' distinctive characteristics
in the child's, so that actually trying to say, well, if you do this, then
your child is going to come out like that in the long run.
That's pretty much of a mugs game, and I don't think we have very much evidence for that.
So I wouldn't want to say, ah, well, if you're a carpenter, then your children are going
to come out and have some terrible, crazy feature.
Children come out in all sorts of unexpected ways.
That's the whole point.
It's not just that the carpentry model is making parents and kids stressed.
There's something Addison has noticed about today's adolescence.
You know, in some ways they're doing much better.
They're achieving more.
They're less likely to take risks.
They are less likely to get pregnant or to use drugs.
But that goes with a kind of anxiety, high levels of anxiety, high levels of fear.
And I think that is kind of what you would predict from the Carpentry story.
So the Carpentry story is one where you're so concerned that the child come out,
that you're not giving the child the freedom to take risks and explore and be autonomous.
And it's not risk-taking unless there's some chance that it could really go wrong.
And I think that's another aspect of the current parenting
culture that's problematic.
We're so concerned about how these children are going to turn out
that we're unwilling to give them the autonomy that they need
to be able to take risks and go out and explore the world.
So I'm wondering if some of this has to do with what your goals are as a parent.
The point that I think you're making is that by creating an environment where children
can learn and explore, you build children who perhaps are going to be less anxious, more
resilient, more able to deal with the vagaries of life in front of them. And I get that,
and that does make sense. But there's also the case that I think our world
rewards people who can do very specific things and do them very well. So every four years the
Olympics comes along. The winner of the Olympics in 1998 in Nagano, Japan,
on the ice. Now 17 years of age. When I see people who are winning gold medals in the Olympics,
those are usually kids who've started ice skating lessons when they were three.
Or, you see someone who is joining the orchestra in your town and that someone who has started
piano lessons when she was four.
And there are these very specific skills that I think are very hard to learn and take an
enormous amount of time and dedication and practice.
And if you don't actually invest the time to do that early,
it becomes very hard to master those skills later on.
And even though you might say, you know, let the child figure out what it is
he or she might want to do, if a child discovers that she really wants to be an ice skater
or a ballet dancer when she's 14, it's probably too late at that point
to really be very good at it.
And I'm wondering if some of the tension here comes
from what it is that we're actually aiming for.
Are we aiming for children who are well adjusted
versus aiming for children who are successful?
And I wish there was an attention
between those two things,
but I sometimes think they might be.
Well, it's interesting.
There's no question that part of the kind of cultural
background for the parenting approach.
Is this sense that parents have of being in a very competitive universe where small advantages
to their children in terms of their education, for example, are going to be absolutely crucial
to make sure that the children continue to be in the middle class of the upper middle class.
The combination of increasing inequality and increasing relationship between that inequality and things like academic achievement,
I think puts a great deal of stress on and fear on middle class parents to make sure that their children get into that academic achievement truck.
When you look at sort of the inequalities in the country, what we see is that the wealthy in particular are able to pass on their privileges to their children in increasingly effective ways.
So if you look at the kids who are in the Ivy League colleges, you know a disproportionate number of them come from families who are in the top 5% or the top 1% of the country. And so it's clear that what these parents are doing,
whether they're gardeners or carpenters,
is passing on something to their kids
that allows their kids then to go on
and again, join that 5% or that 1%.
And I think in some ways, I think we send signals
to parents that it's good to be a gardener,
but we will reward your children in all kinds of ways
if you behave like
a carpenter.
And in some ways, I think there's a tension here for parents who are torn.
Do I want my child to grow up to be well-adjusted and flexible and resilient, in which case the
gardening model clearly seems to be better, or do I want my child to actually be, you know,
as I said, successful?
Yeah, I think that's exactly right.
And I think both those messages are there, And my experience in going around and talking about this book is, I think intuitively, parents
feel that there's something that's crazy about having your teenagers staying up until
two o'clock at night studying for their SATs and trying to get that little extra edge
that's going to get them into the college as opposed to someone else.
And yet, once that kind of competitive story starts in the culture,
it's very hard to resist, right?
It's very hard to pull yourself out of it.
And I'm genuinely sympathetic.
I mean, I've felt those tensions myself, as I say in the book.
I do think in terms of the larger culture,
it's again, kind of disturbing if what we end up with is this kind of tiny core
of people on the top who are all just like the people in the previous generation, dynamism
and flexibility of people changing, having different developmental trajectories going
in different paths, that's something that actually makes the society large flourish.
And I think there's a really interesting tension between sort of the individual incentives
to try to, especially in the academic context, to get children to do the best they possibly
can, and what you'd want in society as a whole, that you'd want to have a sense of flexibility
and movement and dynamism.
And of course, it's particularly ironic because school was actually designed as part of
trying to get people trained for an industrial world. In a sense school was designed to make robots
in that it gave people skills that now robots are capable of doing. And in a post-industrial world,
exactly the skills that we need, innovation, creativity, risk-taking are exactly the ones that
we're not encouraging in this very kind of narrow competitive academic parenting culture.
When we come back, we'll talk about the science behind how children learn and how adults can
sometimes do more harm than good when it comes to teaching their kids. Stay with us.
Researchers once ran an experiment where an adult presented a kid with a toy, and sometimes
the adult explicitly showed the kid how the toy worked, and sometimes the adult did
not. What was the toy and what happened?
So this is work that was done by Elizabeth Bonowitz and Laura Schultz.
And what they did was they showed the children this kind of complicated thing
that could do lots of different things.
It could squeak, had a mirror, it had a light.
And the question was, would the children discover all the things that the toy could do?
And what they found was that if you give a complicated toy like that to a four-year-old,
as you might expect, that four-year-old's play, and they find all the things that it could do.
But when the experimenter just changed what they said, when they presented the child with a toy,
where now the experimenter said,
this is my toy, I'm going to show you how it works,
and did one thing like squeak the squeaker.
The children were much less likely to explore.
What they did, sort of rationally, was squeak the squeaker,
did what the adult had demonstrated and suggested to explore. What they did, sort of rationally, was squeak the squeaker, did what the adult
had demonstrated and suggested to them. And we have a number of different results that
are like this, where children are very, very sensitive to quite subtle indicators that
someone's being pedagogical, that someone's being a teacher. And that has some advantages,
that narrows down the number of options they're going to consider. But it can also have disadvantages in terms of the range of expiration that
they're willing to consider too. Now of course play itself can be a
form of learning and one way to think about the importance of play is to think
about artificial intelligence and how play informs the way we train robots.
You talk about this idea in the book, how are researchers using play to help robots
learn and what does that tell us then about the science of raising kids?
Well, it turns out that a very good way of getting a machine system to learn is to give
it an early period where it can just play, it can just explore, it can just try out lots
and lots of different options and get a lot of information about how the system works.
So for example, they designed a robot that had a period early on where it could just kind
of dance around in this kind of weird funny way without actually trying to do anything
in particular.
And it turns out that if you gave a robot a chance to just dance around, figure out what
its limbs could do, and then you gave it a specific job,
like, you know, go and pick up this piece of cloth.
The robot was more resilient if it had a chance to play, and this is one of the interesting
things about play.
I think everyone has kind of the intuition that play is important and valuable.
But of course, if you actually want to have a specific outcome, like a particular score
on a test, you're always going to do better if you don't play, if you to have a specific outcome, like a particular score in a test,
you're always going to do better if you don't play,
if you just have very specific instruction.
But if you want that knowledge to be resilient,
if you want someone to be able to be flexible to say,
okay, I didn't learn how to do this particular thing,
but now can I apply what I did to something else?
Then play really seems to play a deep role.
So for the robots, for example, the robots who would play,
you could take off one of their arms or you could tip them over
and they would still be able to figure out how to reach for the cloth.
And that was not true for the robots who had just been trained on that particular action.
And I think that's a good model for the things that play can do in general.
So you were once in the kitchen with your grandson, Ogi, and you were whipping egg whites for pancakes,
and I understand your grandson was imitating you, but not quite doing it the way you were
doing it.
Tell me what happened.
Well, one of the great joys of life is cooking with two and three-year-olds, and they love
to cook, but of course they're
extremely inefficient at the same time. So you know what, Augie's whipping egg whites, the egg whites end up having egg white
fresco all over the walls and he's doing it in a way that is not nearly as efficient as it would be for me to do it myself.
But it's interesting that if you look across cultures, what
caregivers often do is not
give their child instructions on what to do, but let them participate.
So let them take on a piece like whipping the eggs.
Allison and I had mostly focused on how young children learn, so I asked her to talk about older
children. She said that whereas younger children learn well through play and exploration,
older kids learn best through an apprenticeship. They imitate, they practice, they get critiques.
But most schools teach in a very different way. Alison gave me a thought experiment.
So imagine we taught baseball the same way that we teach science currently. What we would do is
we would have children read books about baseball rules. When they got to
high school, we would let them reproduce famous baseball players of the past. And it wouldn't be
till graduate school that they would actually ever get to play the game. And that's pretty much the
way that we teach science. It's not till graduate school that you actually ever get a chance to do
science as opposed to reading about science or reconstructing science. And especially with things like virtual reality and computer environments, there's no reason
for that to be true.
Children could be actually doing inquiry and doing experiments and doing science early
on.
And I think the same thing's true for things like writing, for example.
Children learn about writing, but the way to write is to write with a good editor to
watch someone who's competent writing.
I think our whole educational system could be oriented towards both exploration
but also this kind of apprenticeship system much more effectively.
I'm wondering if some of the tension between the Gardner and the Carpenter Model
comes down to the different things that societies have called on young people to do.
So there used to be a time when we needed large numbers of people to join the industrial
workforce, but increasingly I think we are looking to young people to do the kinds of
things that are much higher order skills.
And I think the average futurist would tell you that in 20 or 30 years, college education
probably isn't going to cut it because the kinds of skills
that someone who's graduated from college can do will probably be done by robots.
And so at that point, you really need people who have much, much higher levels of skill.
And I'm wondering if this is partly the tension between the Gardner and the Carpenter
model, because if you actually need people who don't just simply understand how to do a
bunch of things in a factory, but who understand much just simply understand how to do a bunch of things
in a factory, but who understand much higher order things that requires a level of specialization
and a length of training that is not just going to be acquired through exploration and
play.
It actually has to be acquired through systematic and diligent training over very, very long
periods of time.
And is it possible that the way our society is changing is
part of the reason why people are drawn to the carpentry model?
Well, I think that's the picture that people have.
But again, what the science would tell us is just the opposite.
So, you know, if you compare, even from an evolutionary perspective,
you know, compare us to our closest primate relatives,
we're not actually as good at doing specialized tasks often as
other creatures are. What we're very good at is improvising and finding new ways of thinking
about the world around us. Here's a new problem. I don't know how to handle it. What would I do?
That's really the skill that we're going to need in the future. And the irony is that that's a skill
that you can't learn by just trying to learn that particular skill.
That's a skill that seems to come from a sense of freedom and exploration even in other domains.
So I think we may be kind of suckered into thinking,
well, if we want children or adults to succeed in this very unpredictable, variable world,
what we need to do is give them higher and higher and higher levels of very specific academic skills.
And I think, you know, even if you go down to Silicon Valley near where I am at Berkeley, I think they get it.
So, you know, famously Google gives their employees a day off to do whatever they want, and, you know, Pixar has playhouses as part of their environment. So I think the value of that kind of playful exploration
is something that people say in the tech world get.
But I do think it's intention with the sense
that this is so important, it has to be shaped
and you want a particular outcome.
So the irony is to get to good outcomes,
sometimes you do better by not trying specifically
to get to those outcomes and instead not
worrying about outcomes at all.
And I think that's one of the real deep messages of the science that I'm talking about in
the book.
Alison Gopnik is a professor of psychology and philosophy at the University of California
Berkeley.
She's the author of several books about children's development, and her most recent one
is The Gardener and The Carpenter.
Alison, thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you so much, Shankar.
This episode of Hidden Braille was produced by Raina Cohen and edited by Tara Boyle.
Our team includes Jenny Schmidt, Parth Shah, Thomas Liu and Laura Quarelle.
NPR's Vice President for Programming is Anya Grunman.
Our unsung heroes today are Susan Stamberg, Linda Worthheimer, Nina Totenberg,
and Koki Roberts. It's fitting to thank them in an episode about parenting because around these
parts, these women are known as NPR's Founding Mothers. They not only help build a great institution,
they literally invented what we think of today as public radio. Hidden Brain is part of their legacy.
Today's episode is part of an NPR-wide project called How to Raise a Human.
You can find more stories from that series at npr.org slash human. For more
hidden brain, please follow us on Facebook and Twitter and listen for my
stories on your local public radio station. If you haven't subscribed to the
podcast, please take a second to do so. You don't want to miss a single episode.
I'm Sean Curvee-Dantham and this is NPR.