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Teachers at the 2012 International Go Symposium
Published on 11/27/2012
The
2012 International Go Symposium
in Black Mountain, North Carolina attracted leading scholars and researchers from around the world for two days of presentations and discussions on the many aspects of the game of go. Dozens of hours of footage have now been edited down and
posted online
to accompany the conference papers. This 3-part series covers highlights of Symposium presentations by teachers, scientists, historians and anthropologists.
Games may be a major key to learning, suggested keynote speaker
Nolan Bushnell
(right)
at the
2012 International Go Symposium
, August 4-5, 2012. The entrepreneurial wizard behind products as diverse as
Atari
and
Chuck E. Cheese
, Bushnell is now applying principles such as “thalamic engagement” and “spaced repetition” to develop
Brainrush
, a game-based learning app that aims to help students learn all kinds of material more effectively. Mexican Go Assoiation President
Israel Rodriguez
offered some interesting speculations on the nature of the barriers to developing a go culture. Yet go is a superb medium for growth and development, as Dr. Roy Laird – a clinical social worker who manages treatment programs for
The Children's Aid Society
in New York City and former President of the American Go Association – explores in his talk “
Play Go And Grow
,” about the unique aspects of go that favor positive development, and some interesting recent research on go and the brain. While go is popular in Asian communities and has developed a growing base among Caucasians in the West, its presence is very limited in other Western cultures. In
Playing Under and Pushing Through the Stones
, Roxanna Duntley-Matos, a member of the Western Michigan University School of Social Work faculty, describes how she used go as a tool for "emancipatory education" with the Ann Arbor Hispanic community, promoting leadership, camaraderie and success among a marginalized minority. At the upper end of the learning spectrum,
Peter Schumer
described a for-credit course on go that he has taught at Middlebury College for years, offering tips on everything from curriculum development to teaching style.
In “
How Rules, Terms and Attitude
Help or Hinder the Game
,”,
American Go Foundation
(AGF) President and AGA Rules Committee Chairman Terry Benson
(left)
urges a rethinking of what it means to “play go,” and what we teach.
Peter Freedman
, an experienced go teacher from the Portland area, looked beyond simply teaching children the game to how to help them develop a lifelong love for go, while go teacher
Siddhartha Avila
’s Mexican school is committed to teaching through the arts. On a practical level, AGF VP
Paul Barchilon
outlined some of the many ways that the AGF can help aspiring organizers in the US.
Laura Martinez
ended the go teacher’s panel, and the conference, by unveiling the winners of
The Second International Go Art Contest.
The AGA and the
2012 US Go Congress
are extremely grateful to the
International Go Federation
for financial support that made this event possible, and to the American Go Foundation for additional support. All presentations can be found at
the Symposium's YouTube channel
. In addition, links to
all the videos
and to associated
papers, links and contact information
be found at the
Symposium website
. NEXT WEEK: Historians and anthropologists at the Symposium.
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