Diola Bagayoko, Ph.D.
Director,
Timbuktu Academy
Southern University
and A & M College
Baton Rouge,
Louisiana 70813
Telephone:(225)
771-2730Fax: (225) 771-4341
E-mail: bagayoko@phys.subr.edu
Reference one
below explains, using the power law of human performance, that anyone can be
made an intellectual giant (a genius)!The power law of performance, also known
as the power law of practice, simply says that “Effort and practice partly
beget and certainly enhance athletic, artistic, and intellectual abilities and
related achievements” (REFS. 1-2).The authors also discuss the details of
“how to make an intellectual genius” or a well-educated and productive citizen
out of any individual. Key points include the following.
Ø
Spend
adequate time on learning tasks (studying, and doing assignments) during
the academic year and the summer! The secret here is that difficulties one may
think exist in a science, engineering, or mathematics discipline are replaced
by simple challenges as one learns and practices.
Ø
I
may watch some educational and other programs on TV or other media, from
time to time, but I shall not reduce my existence to that of “watching” or
“listening to” others do their jobs! I shall study and prepare my future,
irrespective of how enticing the shows may be. These shows will not invent new
medicines, produce food, construct buildings, space shuttles, or cars, defend a
country against weather, man-made, or cosmos-borne (ask Planet Jupiter about
Comet Shoemaker-Levy) calamities. They will not pay my bills either.
Ø
The
sequential rigidity of mathematics and science disciplines dictates the
proper exposure (scope and depth) to the proper courses in the proper order.
Algebra, English, and science are needed in the middle school for advanced
placement (AP) mathematics, English, and science in high school. These latter
courses, in turn, maximize science, engineering, and mathematics options in
college.
1.The Dynamics of Student
Retention,
D. Bagayoko and Ella L. Kelley, Education, Vol. 115, No. 1, pp. 31-39,
Fall 1994.
2.A Paradigm for SEM
Undergraduate Education, Bagayoko and Kelley, Proceedings, NACME’s 1993 FORUM.