Video Series: Cultivating Curiosity to Help Children Grow Their Ideas

with Susan Engel, Ph.D., Educational Psychologist, Author & Director of Williams College Program in Teaching

Susan Engel, Ph.D., graciously joined Seedlings Facilitators and Fellows, as well as special guests, for a gathering to explore the small steps schools can take to help teachers and students thrive in their classrooms.  Explore the short videos below to see how encouraging curiosity and helping students grow their ideas can make learning fun for students and teachers alike.

Supporting Curiosity and Student Ideas

Exploration & Collections

Children Create Collections to Build Knowledge and Ideas

Children’s collections are their way of building knowledge. Sometimes those are things like pine cones and sometimes they are answers to their questions about specific topics. As children get older they begin to narrow what they are curious about. That narrowing of curiosity is essential to their ability to build ideas, says developmental psychologist Susan Engel, Ph.D.

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Questions: A Powerful Tool for Learners

Asking Questions is a Powerful Tool for Building Knowledge

Early on, children begin to develop epistemic curiosity–the desire to know how and why. By age two, most children’s inquiry gains a powerful tool: the ability to talk, and therefore ask questions. In schools, we need to encourage inquiry to continue building a love of learning and intellectual curiosity. Child development expert Susan Engel, Ph.D., tells us why and how.

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Watch the Full Presentation

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