At a training session recently, the speaker started off with a demonstration of gestures (without words) and asked the audience to start singing the words and following when they knew what song he was signing.
The audience quickly joined in (one person almost as soon as the first gesture started). The speaker noted about “three people” in the audience of roughly 200 people didn’t understand, and we must be “International” attendees.
Even after he explained the song was “Isty Bisty Spider” and that “everyone” knew it, I realized I had never consciously heard or remembered it.
I mentioned this to Aliene and she said “Everyone” knew the song and to ask my 6 and 8 year old granddaughters.
Sure enough last night I called my 8 year old granddaughter and asked if she knew the “spider song” and she immediately started singing the entire song. (My 6-year-old granddaughter was crying in the background for the chance to sing it also).
The speaker was trying to demonstrate that we all retain a lot of information in our memory that can be accessed.
What I learned was that no one knows everything, and, again, it demonstrates the importance of involving as many people as possible in solving a problem and the importance of comments and suggestions! I was reminded again of the importance of public input and the persons who serve on volunteer Boards and Commissions and how valuable their contribution of knowledge and information is.
Perhaps appropriately, the speaker was Robert Fulghum, author of “All I Really Needed to Know I Learned in Kindergarten” and, yes, I am one of those persons who never attended Kindergarten!
Friday, September 26, 2008
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