Your Child is Likely a Genius, but NASA Study Suggest Traditional Schooling Will Make Them Mediocre.
In the late 1960s, Dr. George Land, in collaboration with NASA, conducted a groundbreaking study to measure creativity among children. Initially developed to identify innovative engineers for NASA, the study tested 1,600 children aged 3 to 5 and revealed that an astounding 98% of them qualified as creative geniuses. However, this percentage dramatically declined as the children aged, dropping to 30% by age 10 and plummeting to a mere 2% by adulthood.
The Decline in Creativity
Dr. Land attributed this decline to the traditional education system, which he argued stifles creativity by prioritizing convergent thinking (judgment and evaluation) over divergent thinking (imagination and new ideas). This dual approach creates a cognitive clash that hinders the natural creative processes children exhibit at a young age. Moreover, high-stakes testing and a rigid curriculum further exacerbate this issue by discouraging risk-taking, curiosity, and independent thought.
The Role of Outdoor Learning
Outdoor learning offers a compelling solution to this creativity crisis. By moving the learning environment outside the conventional classroom, students can engage in experiential learning, which is proven to foster creativity, critical thinking, and problem-solving skills.
Conclusion
The George Land NASA study underscores the need for an educational paradigm shift to nurture, rather than stifle, the innate creativity in children. Incorporating outdoor learning into educational systems can play a crucial role in this transformation. By providing diverse, hands-on, and stress-reducing learning experiences, we can help maintain and even enhance the creative genius in our children as they grow.
As educators, parents, and leaders, it’s imperative to advocate for and implement outdoor learning opportunities. Let's take a cue from nature and create learning environments that inspire and cultivate the creative potential within every child.
Prevention starts at age 5, not 15. Nurturing Creativity> Seeding Purpose > Preventing anxiety and depression
1yMusk resurrected interest in investing and progressing space exploration to ignite Gov. funding in NASA. We must take Dr George Lands research forward to Change The Education Paradigm to Nurture Creativity and Seed Genius
James Bradshaw Thanks for Sharing! 😁