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  1. We spend the first year of a child's life teaching it to walk and talk and the rest of its life to shut up and sit down. There's something wrong there. Neil deGrasse Tyson. Children, Teaching, Years. On this day long ago, a child was born who, by age 30, would transform the world. Happy Birthday Isaac Newton b.

    • On Succeeding in Science with A Learning Disability
    • On The Meaning of Life
    • On Preventing Asteroid Collisions
    • On How First-Graders Can Help Earth
    • On What Would Happen Without NASA
    • On Backward Time Travel
    • On What You Should Bring to A Desert Island
    • On "Scientifically Illiterate" Adults

    When an 8-year-old girl named Lois asked Tysonwhether anyone is his field has dyslexia, he used the opportunity to talk about the cadre of brilliant colleagues who suffer from any number of social hurdles, and how they don't let it affect them. "In my field," Tyson joked, "there are people who have all kinds of issues."

    When Jack, age 6 "and three quarters," asked Tyson about the meaning of life, he could have responded with a silly answer or made a Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy referenceand just said "42." He didn't. "Maybe meaning of life is something you create, you manufacture for yourself and for others," Tyson said. "And so when I think of meaning in life...

    A 9-year-old named Jacob became a hero to a gym full of people after dropping "non-Newtonian solid" in a conversation with Tyson. The topic: how to prevent collision with Earth-bound asteroids. And after debating the magnitude of a job like pushing all danger-zone asteroids into the sun (and telling the audience to go home because he's now just hav...

    When delivering a lecture in Worcester, Massachusetts, Tyson encountered a first-grade girl wearing an Einstein shirt and pigtails who wanted to know what her school class could do for the planet. And instead of phoning it in and telling her to recycle or something, Tyson told her to be curious — and to bang pots and pans. "You're just being a kid ...

    Kid astronaut James, decked out in his own flight suit for Tyson's lecture in Bridgetown, Barbados, wanted to know what a country without a space program would look like. He asked, "If NASA wasn't created, what would happen to our universe?" Tyson gave him a perfect answer — not just for a 9-year-old, but for voters in a country that's considering ...

    When Tyson talks to kids, he doesn't dumb it down or skip over real issues. Often, kids are asking questions his colleagues are wrestling with. So when 7-year-old Clayton asked about a black hole's ability to "suck up" other black holes, Tyson dove right in. "There's a path you can take around two moving black holes that haven't quite collided yet,...

    An 8-year-old boy first had to confirm that Tyson worked at the Hayden Planetarium. Once that was settled, he told Tyson all about the red dwarf star he discovered and how he found it with his own telescope. Tyson crossed his legs and sat on the floor in front of the junior astrophysicist, ready to geek out. He talked about how adults always ask ea...

    Tyson's message for children isn't meant for kids at all. It's a plea for adults to stop preventing kids from being kids. Children, he said, are "not the ones with the problem. [The problem] is not scientifically illiterate children, it's scientifically illiterate adults. ... Children are born scientists. They're curious about everything around the...

    • Max Plenke
  2. 22 de abr. de 2017 · Neil deGrasse Tyson how to raise curious children - YouTube. TabNabber. 90 subscribers. Subscribed. 71. 6.1K views 7 years ago. Tips from Neil DeGrasse Tyson on how to raise our...

    • 5 min
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    • TabNabber
  3. 27 de abr. de 2023 · Part 1: • Neil deGrasse Tyson on Growing Up in ... -------- In this clip, Neil deGrasse Tyson reflects back on being one of the few Black students at Harvard during the mid 1970s, he...

    • 7 min
    • 89K
    • djvlad
  4. 25 de feb. de 2010 · Email. In a discussion leading up to his NOVA special, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson talks about what it is to be educated, why science literacy is so important, and why it matters that...

  5. 6 de nov. de 2023 · How Neil deGrasse Tyson Keeps Kids Interested In Science. In our ongoing American Graduate series, your personal astrophysicist and director of the Hayden Planetarium in the American Museum of Natural History, Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson tells us about the state of science education. 28:00. Season 2023 Episode 9019. MetroFocus: November 9, 2023.

  6. 13 de mar. de 2018 · Mar 13, 2018. Neil deGrasse Tyson - Let Kids Be Kids. World-renowned cosmologist Neil deGrasse Tyson shares one profoundly simple piece of parenting advice about a child's innate desire for exploration. Transcript: Kids are born scientists. They're always turning over rocks and plucking petals off of flowers.