Why is origami so good for you?
Read this if you are a parent of a kid
who would like to learn origami...
...or if you are a kid who wonders why
your art teacher thinks origami is important.....
I am writing from the perspective of an art teacher
who likes to exercise a child's brain; to stretch them out in directions
that could use a little flexibility so they build an awareness of alternative
ways of thinking, and to strengthen them in areas that will serve them
in regular academic tasks. Origami does all that in an enjoyable way.
Kids don't give much verbal feedback to a teacher,
but they have told me they really like learning origami. They don't
say it is easy, but they do say they like it! I think that is one reason
they do like it...it does take concentration and care, it does
take many steps, it makes you feel like you have conquered something when
you are done. Best of all, you end up with a very cool model. This magic
of turning a flat piece of paper into a three dimensional sculpture is,
perhaps, the most enchanting feature of origami.
Kids feel "empowered"!
After all, if you can transform scrap paper into a jumping frog, you have
POWER! Parents often tell me that their daughter or son came home and spent
a week filling the house with a favorite model. Why do you think kids do
that? (Adults usually do one, or two to get it just right, then stop until
they need a gift for someone.)
The ability to visualize, to actually
"see" in your head, a shape you want to fold is a talent that
can be strengthened with simple practice. (Don't look for references to
supporting research in this draft of this essay...it's out there somewhere
though!)
Have you ever heard the old story of the sculptor
who was asked how he knew what to carve? His answer was, "It's easy!
I just see the sculpture and take away what shouldn't be there...".
This talent is obviously useful to visual artists,
but it is also of the greatest use to our creative scientists and engineers.
And, if you are looking at this page on your computer monitor you know
how important graphics and visual methods for presenting information are
becoming. In fact, when analyzing huge amounts of data a graphic interpretation
is often the only way a person can really take in the meaning, the pattern,
quickly (or at all).
Origami is a relatively painless way
to have kids realize the importance of sequencing. Teachers spend
a ton of time with some kids because the child doesn't understand that
some things have to be done in a certain order of steps to be successful.
Writing stories where there is a beginning, middle and end may seem a simple
concept...but it isn't to lots of young people. The concept of "first
things first" has to be learned. If a child hasn't imprinted on the
pattern of a well built story, then they simply don't see the importance
of following a sequence of steps. Arithmetic relies on the first things
first stuff, too. The cool thing about origami is that I do not have to
tell a student that it their model isn't "right"; they can see
that they didn't get where they wanted to go (when your swan looks more
like a spit ball that isn't hard!)...and they back up and try the sequence
of steps with more respect and care on their own.
If you have kids you know that their
ability to estimate the relative size of things develops during grade school
years. In math they have to work on getting a feel for fractions. Half
a pizza, a fourth of the team, a third of our class and so forth are concepts
that need to become quickly and accurately understood. Origami is built
of paper folded to those fractions. "Exactly one half" has a
more real feel to it after a child sees what happens when you don't have
it! (...the small "half" of a candy bar holds the same lesson.)
Basic geometry concepts are painlessly learned (we very commonly have to
bisect the corner of a true square to form the two identical right triangles....and
having to cope with the knowledge that a "sort of" square doesn't
do this, or, even more basically, a square behaves very differently than
a rectangle, is tough on kids. By fifth grade many kids who have had no
personal reason for filing these facts away are still clueless. True learning
only occurs when kids feel that the subject has importance to them
in a direct and personal way. (It is easier to see the need for learning
multiplication if you are trying to calculate the value of your very large
trading card collection, for another instance.)
temporary end of draft #1

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