This coming Sunday, Leonore Simon will lead the Adult Forum in a discussion on the findings of the well-known Mischel Marshmellow test. In 1972 Stanford psychologist Walter Mischell tested 4-year olds and their ability to delay eating a marshmellow for 15-minutes. Follow up studies on the subjects 15 years later showed that those children who did delay eating the marshmellow were significantly more successful in several measures than those who did not. This test, used as an indicator of delayed gratification, has been repeated in other, non-US cultures and found to be an effective predictor of academic and other measures success. It is intriguing to imagine the extent to which delayed gratification can be taught and learned, and why it might be worthwhile to do so.
Dr. Leonore Simon earned her J.D. from Case
Western Reserve School of Law in 1978, practiced criminal law in Ohio and in
California for five years, and obtained her Ph.D. in clinical psychology
from the University of Arizona
Department of Psychology in 1991. She has taught criminal justice at Temple
University, Washington State University, and East Tennessee State University.
Dr. Simon has published over 35 journal articles, and presented over 75
conference papers in criminal justice, law, and psychology and taught over 20
different courses.
Please join us. Loving childcare is provided.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Will our kids be a different species?
In an excellent TED talk, Juan Enriquez asks whether we've developed to the point that access to a wealth of resources will allow our next generations to direct their own evolution. Could this be what the star dust that comprises us and all of our world does? Recent discoveries in technical and biological sciences are abruptly posing questions that we're not ready to answer, but yet, the questions are upon us. Please join us as we watch the talk and share our thoughts and opinions.
Loving childcare is provided.
Loving childcare is provided.
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Something from nothing...Lawrence Krauss
ASU Physist Lawrence Krauss recently published the title "Something From Nothing" in which he posits the theory that empty space is unstable and spontaneously gives rise to matter. This is an astonishing proposal in that it potentially answers Mortimer J. Adler's time-tested question, "Why is there something instead of nothing?" This question has been the bulwark of religious apologists who have used the question as an argument for the necessary existence of God. So, if the question is answered, where are we? How affected are sacred and precious tendrils of our hearts.
Please join us as we explore.
Loving childcare is provided.
Please join us as we explore.
Loving childcare is provided.
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