WELCOME TO THE DISCUSSION GROUP FOR THE BOOK "THE GENIUS IN ALL OF US" BY DAVID SHENK. PROMPTS AND POSTS ARE STUDENT GENERATED. THIS IS A COLLECTIVE EFFORT TO ENGAGE IN DISCUSSIONS THAT CONNECT THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION WITH THE BIOLOGICAL CONCEPTS (LIKE GENETICS AND EPIGENETICS) AND THEMES DISCUSSED IN OUR COURSE THROUGHOUT THE YEAR. THE BOOK ALSO PROVIDES A NICE CONNECTION TO THE SOCIAL EMOTIONAL LEARNING STRATEGIES EMPLOYED THROUGHOUT THE COURSE.
Friday, April 13, 2012
Evidence: How early is too early?
(Eric Savin, Dallastarsfan13@gmail.com)
Argument: Is Competition A Requirement for Success?
Argument: How Important are Genes?
Argument: Jim and Jim
(Yanfei Gao, feifeiyg@yahoo.com)
Evidence: Indoctrinated by Mendelian Genetics
(Yanfei Gao, feifeiyg@yahoo.com)
Argument: Academic Achievement
(Eric Savin, Dallastarsfan13@gmail.com)
Argument- GPS vs. hippocampus
Argument:
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Argument: GxE
Based on your reading of this book as a whole, do you personally agree with the GxE model in lieu of the G+E model? Why? How does the concept of GxE add legitimacy to the concept of Lamarckism or take away legitimacy from the concept of evolution? Can you think of different examples (other than those shared in the book) in which either GxE or G+E seems more plausible than the other? For what reason?
(Adithi Rao, adithi.a.rao@gmail.com)
Argument: "Hidden" Environments
How does this concept of a hidden environment acting as a factor connect to evolution? Do you think that we, as humans, may eventually be able to find the 'ideal' environment for successful offspring even with the hidden environment in play? Why?
(Adithi Rao, adithi.a.rao@gmail.com)
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Argument - Effectiveness of Learning Methods
In this section, Shenk discusses the story of Shinichi
Suzuki, who created the Suzuki method which teaches very young kids to play
complex instruments, like the violin. This method focuses on: “extraordinary
repetition, parental persistence, and strong cultural reinforcement”, which
includes “heavy parent involvement, steady practice, memorization, and lots of
patience” (136). This proved that with “the right training and persistence,
anyone could achieve remarkable success” (137). Relate this type of learning to
the different types of learning studied in Campbell Chapter 51. Do you believe
this is an effective way of learning? Do you believe this is the BEST method of
learning? Why or why not? How does the theme evolution play a role in the
development of the brain and behavior if this was the only method of learning
used by humans to learn?
(Lea Nowack, lea.nowack123@gmail.com)
Argument- Physical Activity
Argument-Positive Triggers
Evidence: Changes in the Body
Joseph Hugener (jah1112@comcast.net)
Argument- Motivation
Evidence: Intracellular Environment
Adele Padgett adele.padgett@gmail.com
Evidence - Human Body Affected
Lily Walker (lwalker220@gmail.com)
Argument - Ten-Thousand-Hour Mark
The Argument - Respiratory System in Athletes of Different Ethnicities
Shenk suggests that Kenyans who can
athletically perform better, especially with running, than their Caucasian
athletes in the Olympics come from the “Kalenjin tribe in the Great Rift Vally
region of western Kenya, where they have a centuries-old tradition of long-distance
running.” This tradition of running and cattle raiding was continued because it
directly linked to survival since “the better a young man was at raiding
[cattle]- in large part a function of his speed and endurance- the more cattle he
accumulated […and] since cattle were what a prospective husband needed to pay
for a bride[..., such] a reproductive advantage might
cause a significant shift in a group’s genetic makeup over the course of a few
centuries”(103). Relate how natural selection and adaption/evolution ("survival and reproduction") play
into the development of the differing performances due to changes in the lungs.
In addition, compare and contrast the vital capacity, tidal volume, and
residual volume of the lungs of an American athlete to a Kenyan athlete, or an
average European Caucasian’s to a Kenyan athlete. Would a Kenyan athlete
experience a Bohr shift, and what causes this shift? Would this
shift be more significant than a shift in a Caucasian athlete in training from
America?
Relate back to the Respiratory System, the biological theme of
homeostasis, and the concept of evolution/natural selection.
Lea Nowack (lea.nowack123@gmail.com)
Monday, April 9, 2012
Evidence: Muscles
~Jimmy Chang
Argument: Parenting the Wrong Way
Kate White (kw2020@gmail.com)
Argument: Environmental Demands
Following on that assertion, Shenk references psychologist James Flynn in his study that IQ has steadily increased over the decades, "a staggering difference of eighteen points over two generations" (42). How does this trend cohere with the previous claim, and how has this shift in intelligence capacity reflected on our society? Cite from personal experience and from the text.
Argument - Clones
Ted Williams was one of the greatest baseball hitters of all time, and after he died in 2002, "his son, John Henry, became convinced that his father's particular genius could be equaled only by a perfect replica: a clone" (73). What is the flaw with John Henry's logic, and why is he wrong? Why and how would making a clone of Ted Williams' DNA create a different Ted Williams than the original?
Adele Padgett adele.padgett@gmail.com
Argument- Gene Correlation
Argument: Is Evolution a Choice?
The common notion that “We cannot change our genes” is reinforced even in class (Shenk 157). Evolution is not a choice. Yet in 1999, botanist Enrico Coen discovered that changes to the epigenome can be inherited in the Peloria toadflax flower. Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck supports this discovery with his idea that "an individual's actions can alter the biological inheritance passed on to his or her children" (Shenk 155). Is Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck correct? Can our lifestyles change our own gene expression as well as that of future generations? How can Lamarck’s idea be connected to evolution or are they completely different things? Support your argument with the discoveries discussed (such as about the toadflax plant and the mice) as well as an explanation of how the epigenome affects gene expression.
Evidence: Brain and body
Joseph Hugener (jah1112@comcast.net)
The Argument: Practice Makes Perfect
Argument: The Elastic Mind
In “The Genius in All of Us,” Shenk writes that “our brains and bodies are primed for plasticity; they were built for challenge and adaptation” (131). From this, it is obvious that the advantage in having such the power to “change [our] minds when faced with the data” is the ability to quickly adapt to the environment (131). Yet, just because we are faced with similar sets of data does not guarantee that we will all end up with similar products. As Patrick Bateson suggests, GxE is “like baking a cake…A hundred cooks may start out with nearly the same ingredients but will in the end produce very different cakes” (23). Thus, the notion of “hidden, undetectable differences” – especially Crabbe’s three city rat experiment (129) -- suggests that the environment has effect that is much more pronounced and evident than is explained by the idea that we adapt to what’s around us (130).
Relating the Relationship between Structure and Function and possibly Interdependence in Nature, provide specific examples in how it is more advantageous to have a plastic mind or body over a fixed mind or body. Next, providing evidence, contemplate on how a plastic mind is important in the GxE model and how it helps to disprove some of the old notions from the G+E model.
Some thought questions. (But you are free to answer them in your post.) There isn’t a correct answer:
A child who grows up immersed in a musical background is assumed to find and develop a love for music. Is this necessarily the case?
In the Crabbe’s three city rat experiment, the macroenvironment of where the rats were in the world was enough produce changes. Does this mean that no matter what the interaction of GxE, results will always be truly random? Or can we at least attempt to point someone in a certain direction?
Since the mind is plastic, how easily can it be moulded? That is, if someone held a certain skill, left it alone for several years, will the skill be retained or must the person learn the skill again?
Sunday, April 8, 2012
The Argument: Environmental Factors
(Kalista Noegroho, Kalista.dara@gmail.com)
Argument: Puzzles and the Growth Mindset
Alex Nye
alex.nye95@gmail.com
Argument: Sculpting A Culture
Argument- Shenk argues through economic observations of cultural differences that the key to a strong education system is "To sculpt a culture that can accommodate different personality types and levels of motivation" (151). This theory of sculpting a culture is one which seems to be even more improbable in present day education. Shenk also reflects that this system can be created through lessons learned from a 2006 study which observed that in matriarchal cultures, women were more likely to exhibit competition thriving personalities and in patriarchal cultures, men were more likely to exhibit competition thriving personalities. The lesson being that "There is no fixed male or female competitive biology"(151). Shenk, quoting Gneezy, goes on to express that what may be the best education policy is one "Targeting the socialization and education at early ages as well as later in life" (151). Seeing that this is a fairly bold assertion as students in the US generally have stood by a multiculturalist sentiment since the 1970s, how does this idea of sculpting a culture apart from ethnic or social norms play into the "AP Biology Culture" at Stevenson High School in teaching methodology (Hint: Look at Erdmann's "Growth Mindset")? Also, what biologically justifies the method of sculpting a culture based on targeting socialization at early ages as superior to the present day American educational structure (Think effect of coed vs. single sex schools)?
Alex Nye
alex.nye95@gmail.com
The Arguement - The Greatness Gap
Argument-Rats and their environment
Argument-Failure of prodigies
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Evidence: Fetal Development
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Argument: Ethnicity and Genes
(Michelle Kelrikh, mjkelrikh@gmail.com)
Monday, April 2, 2012
Argument: epigenetics and lifestyle
Vivian Wang (vivian.wang9895@gmail.com)
Argument-Non-Achievers
Sai Nimmagadda (saiguy@me.com)
Argument: Motivations
(Michelle Kelrikh, mjkelrikh@gmail.com)
Evidence - An athletes genes
Evidence - Natural Talent
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Argument- Marshmallow test
Argument:
How does this experiment support Shenk's argument on the growth mindset and how does it go against? How does the experiment (141), a side experiment, reviewing the idea of developing skills, support Shenk's theory of GXE.
Christine Park (go2christine@hotmail.com)
evidence- the exact same?
Evidence:
If the environment was the same and people had similar lifestyles could the body structure be the same? How does this idea relate to the theme of 'relationship between structure and function' between the environment and the shape the body?
Argument: Passing on Traits
Jenna Sherman (jsherm013@aol.com)
Saturday, March 31, 2012
The Argument: Similarities and Differences
Argument: Looking Beyond Limitations
Jenna Sherman (jsherm013@aol.com)
Argument-Changing genes
Bing Zhao (Bingzhao9@yahoo.com)
Argument-Power of the mind
Bing Zhao (bingzhao9@yahoo.com)
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
The argument: camouflage
(Mindy Shaw, mindyshaw95@yahoo.com)
The argument: memory development
(Mindy Shaw, mindyshaw95@yahoo.com)
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
The Argument: Intelligence x Environment
Yiran Xu, yxu135@gmail.com
Argument: Histones and DNA
Argument: Sports Excellence
Monday, March 26, 2012
Argument- Intelligence Levels
Sai Nimmagadda (saiguy@me.com)
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Argument: Talent in different stages of life
Katie Donnowitz (kdonnowitz94@aol.com)
Argument: Twin Study
Why are identical twins more similar than a cloned animal with an exact replica of the original's genes? Also, explain how there are so many similarities between the Jim twins if they were separated shortly after birth and grew up separately (refer to the GxE model of genes).
(Katie Donnowitz kdonnowitz94@aol.com)
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Evidence: Michael Jordan and the Rage to Master
Providing evidence, What kind of environment do you believe should most effectively foster this "rage to master?" Is this environment similar to or differing from the environment Michael Jordan was raised in? Relating to Interdependence in Nature, would competition between people help foster growth of "the rage to master" but hinder overall development?
Michael Kim (mikekim2012@gmail.com)
Argument: John Mighton
To what extent would you think that mentally has power over human growth and development? In a GxE environment, would a student fostered in a society of high confidence be more advantaged to develope positively than a student fostered in a society of low confidence? How could high confidence be a crutch? Does this suggest that the concept of GxE and the theme of Interdependence in Nature are intertwined?
Michael Kim (mikekim2012@gmail.com)
Evidence: Embedded in the Brain
(Yanfei Gao, feifeiyg@yahoo.com)
Friday, March 23, 2012
Argument: Language Gap
(Yanfei Gao, feifeiyg@yahoo.com)
Argument - Culture & Competition
How does Shenk's claim further develop the biological theme of interdependence in nature? In addition, how does this claim compliment the theory of evolution in which environmental pressures "force" organisms to evolve? Do you agree that every culture must place these pressures in order to "foster values that bring out the best in its people" (146)? How does Shenk's claim cohere with history which contains periods of concentrated achievement and periods of time nearly devoid of achievement? What factors may have caused this distribution?
~Jimmy Chang (jimmychang95@gmail.com)
Evidence: "High performance genes"
Evidence - Absolute Pitch
Taking this new theory of absolute pitch into account, how is tone deaf taking into the theory, where everyone is born with the capability of absolute pitch? What early childhood factors may have contributed to a child's development of absolute pitch? To a child's development of only partial absolute pitch, in which a child can reproduce but not label? What selective advantage does absolute pitch place on people who have it as opposed to people who do not? Cite specific examples from the book and from sheer experience.
~Jimmy Chang (jimmychang95@gmail.com)
Evidence: The Brian and the Athlete
Joseph Hugener
Evidence: Effect of Environment on Gene Regulation
Neil Edat (neil.edat@gmail.com)
Argument: Cloning
(Diana Liao - dianaliao3@gmail.com)
Evidence: Implication of "The Forgotten" on Argument
Joseph Hugener
Evidence: Can White Men Jump (Jewish Basketball Players?)
alex.nye95@gmail.com (Alex Nye)
Argument
David Shenk explains how Head Start, America's program for children of the working poor, has had made "'small to moderate' positive impacts on three- and four-year-old children" because of that fact that Head Start "wasn't getting hold of kids early enough" (45). Relate Shenk's argument to imprinting, considering sensitive periods, in terms of humans, yet validate Shenk's belief that "every human being can grow smarter if the environment demand it" regardless of age(44).
Bobbie Damani (vidhbie23@yahoo.com)
Evidence: Stimuli
(Diana Liao - dianaliao3@gmail.com)