Nurturing Childhood Curiosity to Enhance Learning: Evidence from a Randomized Pedagogical Intervention

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP17601

Authors: Sule Alan; Ipek Mumcu

Abstract: We evaluate a pedagogical intervention that aims to improve the learning quality of elementary school children by nurturing their curiosity. The pedagogy, aimed primarily at science teaching, was practiced by children's teachers for an entire academic year. We test the effectiveness of this pedagogy using objective test scores and a novel measure of curiosity. Our curiosity measure involves first creating a sense of information deprivation, then quantifying the urge to acquire information and the ability to retain information. We find that the intervention increases curiosity, the ability to retain knowledge, and science test scores. The intervention also makes friendship networks a potent tool to disseminate knowledge within classrooms. Our research design establishes the causal link between the urge to know and deep learning. The evidence can help design better pedagogical tools to increase pupil and teacher engagement and the quality of learning worldwide.

Keywords: curiosity; deep learning; pedagogy; achievement

JEL Codes: No JEL codes provided


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
pedagogical intervention (A20)children's curiosity (C92)
pedagogical intervention (A20)knowledge retention (O34)
pedagogical intervention (A20)science test scores (C12)
children's curiosity (C92)knowledge retention (O34)
pedagogical intervention (A20)aspirations to pursue science-related fields (I23)

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