| Posted on: October 15th, 2009 | Categories:
Art,
Creativity,
Design,
Fun,
Good | Bad Design,
Learning,
Mathematics,
Philosophy,
Poetry,
Psychology,
Puzzles,
Representation,
Stories,
Teaching,
Worth Reading |
5 Comments »
Other related posts and pages:
|
Rethinking homework, some thoughts… |
Create… Emergence! |
Explore, Create, Share… the videos |
Designing for anticipation, Teaching for anticipation |
7 tools… one big job: Video Explore II |
I had written earlier about the idea of “postdictable” which was defined as something that is “surprising initially, but then understandable with a bit of thought.” It lies at the spot between predictability and total chaos. The movie Sixth Sense is postdictable in the best sense of the world. Good teaching I believe needs to be postdictable. That is what keeps us engaged, keeps us waiting for more, the payoff as it were. And best of all, once all the pieces are in, we can’t wait to go back and review everything again, to see just how beautifully the whole thing holds together. There is a strong aesthetic component to this – a sense of wholeness, closure, elegance, and inevitability. Good poems have this quality, as do mathematical theorems. A well crafted lecture or a lesson plan has this quality as well. In my mind these ideas are closely tied to the Dewey’s idea of experience and to the idea of design. Hopefully I will have a chance to explore these connections in a later post but for now, here are a couple of commercials that I think were postdictable in a really cool kind of way.

Incidentally the Explore, Create & Share series of videos I made with my kids attempt to capture some of these same qualities!
October 16th, 2009 at 9:41 am
Those videos were great but your explanation of how it relates to teaching was better. Please keep on posting!
October 16th, 2009 at 10:19 am
Thanks Patrick. You know you are an educator when you tend to see everything (and I mean everything) through the lens of teaching and/or learning.
September 15th, 2010 at 9:57 am
[...] Stories, Teaching, Worth Reading | 3 Comments » Other related posts and pages: |Postdictable, the commercials | Teaching design, some ideas | designing research | designing technology | TPACK & Creativity [...]
September 15th, 2010 at 10:49 am
[...] Designing for anticipation, Teaching for anticipation | Punya Mishra's Web on Postdictable, the commercialssharmila on Demotivational postersmapquest directions on Happy DiwaliPunya Mishra on véjà du, all [...]
December 22nd, 2010 at 11:12 am
[...] line between predictability and chaos, and most importantly makes sense post hoc. See these posts here and here on the idea of [...]