Beyond the Prisoner’s Dilemma
June 20, 2007 on 5:07 pm | In KS2, Public Understanding of Science, critical thinking, decision making, game theory, practical activities, primary education, user stories, wider context | 1 CommentHaving read Global warming and the Prisoner’s Dilemma yesterday, I spent the evening doing some fast background reading on game theory and minimax. Today I tried using the same clip with a Year 6 [10-11 years old] primary class. I, too, found that they responded well. They were animated and excited by the intellectual ideas of classification, weighting of choices, minimisation and maximisation of different outcomes. They were also interested in the general idea of using such methods to explore problem solving choices, and rapidly moved towards trying out the grid arrangement on more complex decision spaces and problems more directly related to their own experience.
One of the cases they worked on was a proposal currently under consideration and consultation for development of an area between school buildings and playing fields. Four main options have been mooted: a pair of asphalt tennis courts, a garden, or a semi wild “science area” complete with pond and simulated bog. There are also six funding options: split the available pot of money funds with a proposed new performance area in the school hall, annex all the money for the outdoor area, or work without funds and leave all the money for a better indoor development - and in each case work mount a special supplementary fundraising effort or not. So, they were planning in a twenty four cell grid like the one below.
These are my own pupils, I have known them since September, but I was astonished at how much they got from this and the degree of sophistication in their handling of it. The application to science was clearly seen and explored. Since they had followed a “funding vs benefit” example, I took them on to explore the idea of how finite public funding for science should be allocated: that, too, went extraordinarily well.
| Tennis courts | Garden | Science area | |
| No money | |||
| Only fundraising money | |||
| Half of existing money | |||
| Half of existing money plus special fundraising | |||
| All of existing money | |||
| All of existing money plus special fundraising |
[contributed by Rose]
Global warming and the Prisoner’s Dilemma
June 19, 2007 on 7:20 am | In AS-level, KS3, KS4, Public Understanding of Science, critical thinking, discussion starters, game theory, user stories, wider context | 5 CommentsYesterday’s early morning email included a message from Pauline Laybourn of Minnesota, pointing me to the following video:http://www.glumbert.com/media/global
I recommend watching it through, viewing it as an educational resource. Thank you, Pauline.
Having watched the clip, I followed Mike Willcox’s ‘YouTube’ example and used it as the departure point for a discussion session with some thirteen year old students within a “Public Understanding of Science” strand.
Which side you happen to sit on the global warming debate doesn’t matter; nor does whether or not you are persuaded by the argument in this presentation. The important point is the number of themes which are here.
There is, of course, the straightforward global warming issue which the presenter is addressing. In my group of young teenagers, there was a lot of very intelligent and perceptive discussion around the examples, choices and language involved in completing the four cells of the decision grid shown on the whiteboard in the video. Are the “worst case” squares really the worst cases? Are they exaggerated? Are they understated? Are they off the track altogether? Are they both so unacceptable that the whole exercise breaks down?
There is also a very accessible entry point to game theory (game theory is a branch of mathematics, but you can go a long way in general educational terms without any explicit mathematical work). The result is an introduction to What he’s sketching out is what game theorists call a saddle point - more specifically, the type of saddle point known as a “minimax”. A minimax is a decision which minimises the maximum harmful outcomes in a given situation. A well known example of a situation where minimax may apply is the Prisoner’s Dilemma thought experiment: a good Prisoner’s Dilemma link, with an very accessible introduction leading to deeper material, can be found here at the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy; other links include a Wikipedia entry, an online game at Princeton University, and a page of links connecting the dilemma to public ethics issues at the Constitution Society site.
Looking away from science to the wider context, the decision consideration process involved here is a valuable tool for thought in general. The video would be a valuable trigger for an AS level Critical Thinking session with sixteen year olds, but the critical thinking which it involves is an equally valuable component for any study, of any subject, at any school level. I plan to try it with eight year olds later in the week.
[contributed by Felix Grant]
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