Thursday, February 22, 2024

Woodcarving Illustrated and sled runners

Today I received copies of the latest edition of Woodcarving Illustrated, containing my article about making hook knives. 

Beyond that, there is a great deal of information that points to the significant role of the hands in learning. Anyone who has paid a modicum of attention to observing his or her own learning experience, would know that “hands-on” is the key and won't need experts to tell what you can see for yourself. But for those who don’t know their hands from a hole in the ground, there are some important things happening that tell us that we have it ALL wrong in most modern classrooms. Some of the research being done in a variety of areas tells us that we have grossly misunderstood the role of the hands in thinking and the development of intelligence.

One significant item I’ll point to is the research that concludes that the playing of instrumental music in school has a significant effect on the development of math proficiency. I think it is particularly interesting to consider the role of the hands in the playing of music. It was Frank Wilson’s involvement in music that lead to his book, The Hand: How its use shapes the brain, language and human culture, and while this particular research doesn’t specifically address the hand’s role in learning, instrumental music is clearly hands-on. Was it the music that made the difference, or the use of the hands in playing the music? It would take more extensive research to prove one way or the other. I strongly suspect that both have effect, the music and the hands that play it. The book describing the research can be found for download at the  Government Information website "Critical Links: Learning in the Arts and Student Social and Academic Development," was sponsored by grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the United States Department of Education and was written by James Catterall, Karen Bradley, Larry Scripp, Terry Baker and Rob Horowitz. It is truly astounding how rarely the United States Government is able to take its own advice. It is a clear case of the left hand not knowing what the right hand is doing.

In the meantime, I enjoy making jigs and sleds and for the table saw,
most of my sleds have involved wooden runners. Because I make them myself, they're cheap and because they are wood, it is easy to mount them with screws. But I'm always open to new things. The plastic runner shown is high density 
polyethylene that is cut from a common plastic cutting board I purchased on Amazon here. The advantage is that it is stable material, can be machined with common woodworking tools, and mounted with screws just as I would one made of wood.

Make, fix and create. Help others get the point.

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous6:44 AM

    Hi Doug.
    I was sitting here the other evening designing the outer casing for a mould polishing ‘machine’ I’ve designed for my son’s restaurant and chocolate making business when I thought I’d check out the few blogs that I read regularly, one of which is yours. Imagine my surprise when I saw that you were recommending the exact same material and source product for jig runners that I was sitting surrounded by – food grade chopping boards, in this case sourced from a catering supplier here in the UK. I’m using them as they are safe to use in a food environment and are easy to machine using the many tools in my wood workshop. I’m keeping all the offcuts for future use as I make, fix and repair things for people almost all the time in my retirement, to the extent that my grandchildren had their mother make a large printed banner for my workshop saying “Granpip Can Fix It”. They take it as a given that I can repair all of their broken toys!
    You may be interested to know that in the past, I have used laminated so called engineered bamboo left over from a home flooring project some years ago, for jig guides and runners. It is very stable and hard (the plastic material less so), can be glued and has a naturally slippery surface ideal for repeated sliding movement.
    Keep up the good work. Phil.

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  2. Anonymous9:47 AM

    Thanks for introducing yourself, "Granpip!" I have my first grandchild and am looking forward to her breaking a few things. It's great to have the sense to recycle and reuse a few things from our environment. That the plastic cutting boards could be so cheap and useful was a nice discovery for me.

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