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bryanlarsenyesterday at 4:50 PM1 replyview on HN

I don't think awe demoralizes children the same way it does adults. Kids want to be an astronaut, president of the United States, et cetera. They're still dreamers.

If done incorrectly, this message could backfire. At that age, the worst label a job can have is "boring". If anybody can do it, it's no longer interesting.

Not that the author is doing it incorrectly -- letting kids play with pieces of the factory process is very much the opposite of boring.

It's only later on in life to kids get hammered into them that they can't do hard things.


Replies

jauntywundrkindyesterday at 6:29 PM

I do think though that the astronaut, president, etc roles are imaginable. And that seeing the crazy automated factory with all manners of machines drillings stamping etc, that that is much harder to imagine oneself doing. The making of that factory is not on display, just the output of the human. Trying to emphasize the human, the role itself, is I think what Matt is getting at, and that needs to be imaginable.