TED Video Lessons

Life Lessons Through Tinkering

If you’re reading this webpage, it is likely that you are studying for your IELTS exam. As a student of English, you know that it can be a difficult experience to learn a new language. However, everyone learns differently. For some people, it even seems easy! Yet we all have ways that work for us and don’t work for others.

Most children learn best through doing. Sure, they need to listen and read sometimes, but they acquire knowledge through playing and figuring out problems with their hands. This is called tinkering.

In Gever Tulley’s TED talk from 2009, he explains why he started an unconventional school where students don’t study out of books. Instead, they learn problem solving by tinkering with all sorts of things.

 

True or False

  1. Tinkering School is a traditional school.
  2. The school gives students limited supplies.
  3. He thinks kids have too little free time these days.
  4. The aim is for students to learn through their actions.
  5. The students learn to plan better.
  6. He runs the project himself.
  7. Failures are celebrated there.
  8. Students become more creative when faced with problems.
  9. They produce a lot of trash there.

Speaking

Do you think that kids these days spend too much time indoors?

Yeah, I think that many children spend too much time inside. In the past, kids would normally spend lots of time playing outside, but now they’re expected to study constantly. Even when they’re not studying, they’re usually staring at a screen. They need more sunshine and fresh air, not to mention the chance to experience the world around them and learn by tinkering with the stuff they find.

Answers

  1. F – it is new and unusual
  2. F – they are given lots of stuff to use
  3. T
  4. T
  5. F – students learn to cope with plans going wrong
  6. F – he runs it with Robin
  7. T
  8. T
  9. F – they learn to reuse trash
David S. Wills

David S. Wills is the author of Scientologist! William S. Burroughs and the 'Weird Cult' and the founder/editor of Beatdom literary journal. He lives and works in rural Cambodia and loves to travel. He has worked as an IELTS tutor since 2010, has completed both TEFL and CELTA courses, and has a certificate from Cambridge for Teaching Writing. David has worked in many different countries, and for several years designed a writing course for the University of Worcester. In 2018, he wrote the popular IELTS handbook, Grammar for IELTS Writing and he has since written two other books about IELTS. His other IELTS website is called IELTS Teaching.

Share
Published by
David S. Wills

Recent Posts

Free Grammar Lessons

It's been a long time since I posted here. To be honest, the AI boom…

2 weeks ago

16 Words IELTS Candidates Always Get Wrong [Video]

I've been teaching IELTS since 2010 and I've marked many thousands of essays as part…

6 months ago

New IELTS Grammar Videos

I'm finally making videos again after a very long absence from YouTube! I hardly made…

7 months ago

Making Lists: An Essential Grammar Skill

In today’s grammar lesson, I want to show you how to make lists. I don’t…

7 months ago

New Video About Comma Splices

I just posted a new video on my YouTube channel. This one is about comma…

8 months ago

New Video: Sentence Types

I have given lessons on sentence types before on this website because it's such an…

8 months ago