In Praise of Responsible Curiosity
Medina Helps SPU Celebrate Innovative Thinking During
the Day of Common Learning
ON OCTOBER 22, 2003, no classes were held at
Seattle Pacific University — but classrooms were still filled
to overflowing. SPU’s second annual Day of Common Learning
began with developmental molecular biologist John Medina urging
students to celebrate what he called “responsible curiosity” and
the rewards that come from “thinking out of the box.”
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Every seat in Brougham
Pavilion was taken for the second annual Day of Common Learning. |
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Medina’s
keynote address, “How Your Brain Learns,” drew a standing-room-only
audience in Brougham Pavilion. That afternoon, 30 faculty members
in 13 classrooms continued the day’s exploration of learning
and curiosity with seminars as varied as “Learning in Literature:
Or How Curiosity Killed the Cat,” “Was Curiosity the
Original Sin?” and “Imagination and Curiosity in Art
and Science.”
“In most academic programs, we’re separated by status,
discipline and department,” says Susan Gallagher, director
of the Center for Scholarship and Faculty Development at Seattle
Pacific. “During the Day of Common Learning, students, faculty
and staff sit together in classrooms around campus talking about
the same topic. This year was so much fun that we’re already
brain-storming about the topic for next year.”
Medina, founding director of Talaris
Research Institute in Seattle, held his Brougham audience in rapt attention. “I was looking
forward to his lecture,” says English major Rachael Darden, “but
I didn’t expect to be as engaged as I was. He was very animated
and that, along with the information he presented, made me want
to learn more about his research.”
Medina’s childhood had a profound effect on his choice to
become a scientist. His father was a career U.S. Air Force officer,
and his mother was an actress-turned-fourth-grade-teacher, whom
he credits for fostering his curiosity. Medina says that when he
was a toddler, his mother noticed subjects in which he was interested — and
took action. If he mentioned dinosaurs, she’d fill the house
with them. “There would be pictures of dinosaurs and figures
that I could hold,” he recalls. “And we would do dinosaur
sounds, and she would try to make dinosaur food.”
When he developed an interest in space, his mother went into high
gear again. “All the dinosaur stuff would come down and,
guess what, all the astronomy stuff would go up,” he says.
Investigating facts and ideas “was not only not scary, it
was cool,” he says. “I have never been able to shake
that.”
Today, Medina and wife Kari, who directs evening worship at Seattle’s
University Presbyterian Church, encourage curiosity in their two
sons. Ages 6 and 3, the boys have 600 square feet of space in their
home devoted to their curiosity. “Right now we’re on
a unit I call ‘origins,’ where we’re talking
about the Big Bang, galaxies, planets and whatnots,” says
Medina.
Up until the 1990s, Medina was a faculty member in the Department
of Bioengineering at the University of Washington School of Medicine.
Then a presentation he made to U.S. governors on early child-hood
learning caught the attention of the Apex Foundation, the philanthropic
organization of Bruce and Jolene McCaw. Impressed by his call
to unite brain and education research, the Foundation announced
a $25 million gift to help start the Talaris Research Institute.
In 2000, Medina became founding director of the Institute, which
is dedicated to exploring how children think and learn.
A two-time recipient of the Bioengineering Student Association
Teacher of the Year Award, Medina is also a consultant for the
Education Commission of the States and a frequent on-air commentator
for radio and television. His books include The
Genetic Inferno, Inside the Seven Deadly
Sins and Depression: How It Happens,
How It Heals.
Medina says he wants Christians to understand that scientific literacy
is vital — and he’s helping to spread the word. Since
1994, he and Earl Palmer, senior pastor of Seattle’s University
Presbyterian Church, have taught popular five-week seminars on
topics such as science, art, parenting and more. “John Medina
is that marvelous mix of brilliance, Christ-centered faithfulness,
interpersonal enthusiasm and sheer whimsy — all together
in one man,” says Palmer.
Medina not only took part in SPU’s Day of Common Learning,
but he also spoke at the Science Building dedication in September. “The
Science Building is a great witness — both to the community
of faith and to the secular world — that religion and science
don’t have to be fighting,” he says. “I am really
excited about the directions SPU is taking.”
— BY HOPE MCPHERSON — PHOTO BY MIKE SIEGEL
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