Doreen Gehry Nelson

Cultivating Curiosity


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X, the teacher education program that I was part of at UCLA.

      I am now retired from my second career as an adjunct professor and I am confident that the responsibility for carrying on Doreen's lifetime work is in good hands at UCLA, where it will grow the Design-Based Learning pedagogy to benefit future generations of learners.

       —EUGENE TUCKER, EdD

      As a rebellious teenager, I would have laughed if anyone had told me that I would one day become a teacher and a teacher of teachers—and that I would love it.

      I wrote this book imagining new teachers and seasoned teachers, who, like me, still aspire to make a difference in society through education. Most of us want to do more than just deliver dry subject matter to students. We want to prepare them for problem seeking and problem-solving around questions that are essential to society. We want the subject matter that our students need to learn to be put into a contextual setting that ensures their long-term memory retention so that they are able to apply what they learn to a wide array of situations. We know that teaching critical and creative thinking is the best preparation for an unknown future.

      As a classroom teacher, it seemed to take me forever to understand where to look for answers to how to make learning stick, and how to teach in a way that would bring who I am, and my deepest family values, into my classroom.

      We had moved to Los Angeles from Canada after my dad's heart attack at age 47. In Los Angeles, with my dad too ill to work, the burden of supporting the four of us was on my mother's shoulders. She would come home at the end of the day from her job as a clerk at the Broadway Department Store in Hollywood, we would make dinner together, and after she tended to my dad, she would sit down with me and together we wrote essays for our classes and articles for the school newspaper, and studied for the sociology class we were both taking. My grades soared. I liked the teachers, the students, and the social activities so much that I decided to apply to UCLA.

      As a student at UCLA, I went back to playing the harp, something I had studied seriously in middle school (with a harp my dad bought by working the night shift at a liquor store). I played in the UCLA Symphony for four years, and off and on in the Los Angeles Doctors Symphony. I changed my major a half dozen times, starting with Education, switching to Music, Anthropology, back to Education, then Sociology, then Art.

      My family's belief in the inherent value of creativity, perseverance, doing things for others, and community activism is the bedrock for my life's work. In Canada, where I grew up, my dad, who was an American citizen, was politically vocal. While I was at Fairfax High School in Los Angeles, my favorite teacher was accused of being a Communist because she was against the supposed temporary relocation of residents in Chavez Ravine near downtown Los Angeles, where a new public housing project was to be built. (The city of Los Angeles had bought up that property through the power of eminent domain. The residents lost their community when the housing project never happened and the land eventually went to Dodger Stadium.) I joined protests against the city with my brother, and after that, during election times, he would take me to underserved neighborhoods to register voters and promote candidates.

      When I became a teacher, I wanted to realize my strongly held belief that to equalize society, acknowledge cultural differences, and to prepare students to participate in a world of serious societal, political, economic, and environmental challenges, all kids needed to be taught to become courageous, original thinkers, capable of working together to make and evaluate proposals for change.

      (I met Jerry Bruner in New York in the early 1980s when I looked up his name in the phone book and had the chutzpah to call him. To my surprise, he answered. After I explained that I had developed my methodology based in part on what he had written, he invited me to lunch. Jerry became a friend and supporter of my work, and I was honored and deeply touched by his offer [at age 100] to write the introduction to this book, in progress at the time.)

      I eventually understood that during all my years of teaching, I had not been cultivating original thinking. I had long believed that building physical artifacts and role-playing within a contextual, cross-curricular “story” were vital for learning to become reusable. (Maybe it was my dad's passion for seeing how one thing could become something else that influenced me. As the owner of a furniture factory in Canada, he would explore how unique materials could transform the everyday products he designed and produced.) What I was missing was a way to unleash creative thinking in my students. That wasn't happening when the artifacts they made replicated what already existed and their “dramatic play” using those artifacts simply imitated others.

      I wrestled with the meaning of Bloom's Taxonomy that pointed to creative thinking as the highest goal of education. Convinced that creative thinking is innate in all students, disenfranchised and privileged alike, and could be taught without sacrificing academic rigor, I began conceiving what would become the Doreen Nelson Method of Design-Based Learning (formerly called City Building Education) to put creative thinking skills first.

      To discourage students from engaging in replicative thinking, I wondered what would happen if I had them “back in” to learning what I was required to teach them. After trying out numerous ideas in my classroom, I thought about how a city's character is reflected in its location, its architecture, and the values of the people who live and work there. I thought about how the parts of the city could be a metaphor for creative thinking