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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling stories about science and life
Despite the subtitle of this book, the stories are less a guide to making your child into a scientist and more a series of autobiographical essays.

Sounds boring? Absolutely not.

The writing is alive and vibrant, the stories are funny and poignant. While you might approach this book thinking "I can help my child love science", you'll probably...
Published on March 31, 2005 by Bernard Farrell

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10 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A Very Atypical Child Becomes An Academic
Anyone buying this book as a gift or for insight on how a typical child becomes a scientist will be very disappointed. Do scientists work in industry? Not in this book. Is your child a female? She would be a distinct minority if she becomes a scientist, to judge by this book. Will your child have a Ph.D. by age 21? No? How disappointing. The scientist profiled in...
Published on April 16, 2005 by Virtual Chemist


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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling stories about science and life, March 31, 2005
By 
Bernard Farrell (North of Boston, MA USA) - See all my reviews
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Despite the subtitle of this book, the stories are less a guide to making your child into a scientist and more a series of autobiographical essays.

Sounds boring? Absolutely not.

The writing is alive and vibrant, the stories are funny and poignant. While you might approach this book thinking "I can help my child love science", you'll probably leave thinking "this science stuff sounds interesting, how come I've not tried it?".

As you read you'll find many examples of people who were turned on to a love of discovery because of some adult they met who treated them as a colleague or a collaborator.

Read the book. Buy a microscope, grow sugar crystals and watch fill the eyepiece. Share the experience with your 7 year old daughter. There's magic all around in science, and this book may open your eyes to it.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the scientist in all of us, September 19, 2006
By 
NYer family (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
As the parent of two school-age children, I loved this book. For all of the current passion for loading our children up with the "best" and "the latest", the best approach is perhaps to simply get out of the way. What struck me about this book was that so many of the scientists profiled made do with very little as children--it wasn't all chemistry sets and parents with advanced degrees. My favorite was the primatologist who was inspired by the Bronx Zoo down the block AND the theme-song from Gilligan's Island ("...the professor and Mary-Ann" convinced him that brains might attract women). There was the woman whose parents wanted her to be a nightclub singer, but the Nancy Drew books she read led her to love investigations. A brain surgeon grew up searching for bullets in the brains of cows that his cowboy-butcher father processed. Indeed some of the scientists don't even find their focus until adulthood (in other words, if your high-schooler doesn't win the Intel science prize, there's still hope). This book made me realize that inspiration is all around my children and the wisest thing I can do is just be supportive.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Where does a successful adult come from?, January 4, 2007
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Although the subtitle uses the terms, Child and Scientist, I think the real topic is how a person develops into a successful, creative adult. I found the book fascinating as I looked for patterns to validate how I raised my own children, or how I was raised, or how anyone should mentor younger people. What I learned was that becoming a scientist or any thinking adult is a mixture of luck, genetics, family influence, peer influence, and social setting. There is no recipe, but there may be patterns for our children and ourselves.

While this was not a well constructed statistical survey, it was a well conceived set of informative essays from interesting, successful folks. Excellent book, great to discuss. Also, the format of many short essays made it easy to read in pieces and reflect.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fine guide on the sources of inspiration, February 13, 2005
What makes a child decide to become a scientist? Some of the scientists included here share a curiosity and passion for learning - and reveal their inspirations and motivational events in a collection of essays from almost thirty world scientists. Parents receive a fine guide on the sources of inspiration and how to recognize early scientific genius.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "and as the twig is bent....", March 14, 2007
I have enjoyed this book so much. After reading the New York Times Tuesday Science Section for years, I wished that those writers would gather the stories in the "Scientists" series and put them in a book. In CURIOUS MINDS the personal reiminiscences include surprises such as a woman who loved Nancy Drew and her sleuthing. Richard Dawkins, often in the news now,
loved the Dr. Doolittle books. A good number of women scientists are included. Some of the scientists are from "scientific" families, others from good ole blue collar roots.
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10 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A Very Atypical Child Becomes An Academic, April 16, 2005
Anyone buying this book as a gift or for insight on how a typical child becomes a scientist will be very disappointed. Do scientists work in industry? Not in this book. Is your child a female? She would be a distinct minority if she becomes a scientist, to judge by this book. Will your child have a Ph.D. by age 21? No? How disappointing. The scientist profiled in the first chapter, Nicholas Humphrey, descendent of famous scientists who grew up an acquaintance of, among others, young Stephen Hawking, captures why this book misses the mark in its selection of role models for aspiring scientists. He "wonders if having been born to be a scientist has not undercut my right to call myself a scientist at all." That is too harsh. It's not his fault that such a good idea for a book and a promising title were wasted.
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3 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars It Takes a Curious Mind To Be Known!, May 2, 2005
Memory is faulty. "Even when we remember events accurately, we are apt to misidentify their places in the casual tapestry of our lives." It wasn't anything in childhood which influenced psychologist Steven Pinkier to pursue his dreams or career, or take a certain path. I think that fate has some place in what we become and do at a particular phase in our lives. It was in grad school when his interest in language became the focus for his career in vocabulary and grammar, my special interests, too.

Just like a man, when he is confronted with a question or situation he isn't expecting, he just nods -- therefore, no real "thinking" takes place. For a psychology professor, he has a strange way of thinking about truth, changing his viewpoint as the whim hits him. He feels that childhood influences don't steer a "curious mind" in a certain direction. Usually we find our niche in life quite acccidentally.

Most of us don't know what we will become (when suffering through childhood) nor any way to deflect what the future has in store for us. Happenstance has a way of steering us in a direction we might not want to go. We never know when life will throw us a curve ball.

The old hometown is full of transplants and aliens interested only with making big money, not in promoting "curious minds" of children to become scientists. Thomas Wolfe was right, "You can't go home again." Because home is where you are, not the place you were born. That's a myth -- an illusion. Nothing is ever the same. No one is ever there to greet you or welcome you "home."

These essays include stories by Howard Gardner on making a social scientist, Doyne Farmer (physics), Steven Strogatz (math), V. S. Ramachandran (science), no big names, no one I've heard of, but they have been successful enough in their diverse fields to be included in a social science assortment.

John Brockman's books include SPECULATIONS, CREATIVITY, and HOW THINGS ARE, all of which decide who we are as individuals and what we become as adults. He's been busy writing, editing and co-editing. He owns a software agency in New York City. What I am wondering is why he didn't become a scientist with his "curious mind."
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1 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Do it for your children., February 6, 2005
By 
Lightworker (Delray Beach, FL USA) - See all my reviews
If you are concerned about the education of your children, you must read this book.
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Curious Minds: How a Child Becomes a Scientist
Curious Minds: How a Child Becomes a Scientist by John Brockman (Hardcover - August 31, 2004)
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