Teaching Grit: How “Non-Cognitive Skills” Lead to Success

Teaching Grit: How “Non-Cognitive Skills” Lead to Success

Last year, Ira Glass devoted an episode of This American Life to interviewing Paul Tough, author of How Children Succeed.  

They talk about the focus on cognitive abilities, conventional “book smarts.” They discuss the current emphasis on these kinds of skills in American education, and the emphasis standardized testing, and then turn our attention to a growing body of research that suggests we may be on the verge of a new approach to some of the biggest challenges facing American schools today. Paul Tough discusses how “non-cognitive skills” — qualities like tenacity, resilience, impulse control — are being viewed as increasingly vital in education, and Ira speaks with economist James Heckman, who’s been at the center of this research and this shift.

Daily Show on Second Amendment Hypocrisy

Daily Show on Second Amendment Hypocrisy

In the wake of terrorism in Boston, Jon Stewart chronicles Congressional Second Amendment hypocrisy.  Legislators who were unwilling to  curtail the Second Amendment in order to combat the scourge of violence in our inner cities (which has caused nearly a million American deaths since 1970) were more than willing to sacrifice other Constitutional liberties in order to combat terrorism (which has caused approximately 3,400 deaths since 1980).