Why is “Organization” the FIRST step??
By: TheMister
In TheGateWay Method we start with “Organization” because it serves as the core of life-long learning. What good is information if you don’t have somewhere to put it?? What good is it to take notes or save an interesting piece of information if you can’t find it when you need it??
We live in an information age… but how much of that information can we USE?? How often have you created a pile of papers and wasted hours sifting through it to find the page you needed only to get distracted and forget what you were looking for in the first place or even WHY you needed it?? We have more access to information than at any time in human history and (it seems) less ability to process it into a useful form that can improve our lives.
If you want to add to your existing body of knowledge you can’t just read something one time, or jot down a few notes and expect the information to stay with you. You need to read a passage multiple time and go back to your notes over and over if you want new knowledge to become deep understanding. In order to turn information into intelligence you need to WORK with the information… not just memorize it. There’s a process to working with information that TheGateWay Method teaches. In order to work that process you need to be able to find the passage of reading, writing or the notes you’re “working” on so you can continue to the next step, and that requires the information be well ORGANIZED and easy to access.
At AtoZ Learning Solutions we believe that building cognitive skills through physicality is a key feature to improving educational outcomes and developing the next generation of learners.
That’s the “surface” reason that we start with organization skills, but there’s a deeper reason. In TheGateWay Method we work with physical material, not digital, because our process is more than just a set of learning skills, it’s a strategy for brain-training. In TheGateWay Method we see learning skills like organization, note-taking, and text-marking as physical manifestations of a cognitive process. As you learn to physically organize your materials and WORK with new knowledge you engage your brain in a different way.
Think of it this way… why did you have to write out 2+2=4?? Why did you need to write out your long division and two column multiplication? Do you still need to write it all the way out or can you work it out in your head?? Why do we want elementary kids to work with manipulatives when learning “number-sense”?? Because there is a very CLEAR mind/body link. We evolved to manipulate objects in space to help us have a sense of them and build understanding and that influenced our brain development. People who were better able to develop their cognition through physical manipulation were better able to survive… and here we are.
In TheGateWay Method we work with riddles and puzzles, but there is a very specific WAY we “work” with them. In my teaching practice I have seen kids come up with (what they thought) was a good answer but refuse to share it with the class. When I asked what had caused them to lose confidence in their response they said:
“I didn’t realize that I hadn’t thought it out until I wrote it down.”
The mechanical process of writing out their reasoning is what revealed the flaw, and over time I’ve seen the same kids develop their reasoning skills… through this process… and become better thinkers. I don’t THINK this works… I’ve SEEN it work for multiple students over multiple years.
The same can be said for Cornell-Notes, Text-Marking, Goal Setting and Tracking, and Self-Assessment strategies, these skills have proven successful in practice, not just in theory. Kids who practice these strategies and develop these skills become better learners, better thinkers and better decision makers.
At AtoZ Learning Solutions we believe that building cognitive skills through physicality is a key feature to improving educational outcomes and developing the next generation of learners.
We hope you agree and will follow us on this journey as we help kids develop the independent learning skills that will keep them competitive in the 21st Century.