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| Notices |
| Philosophy of Education The study of how one should be educated and it's ultimate purpose. Includes Pedagogy (learning how to teach). How can one teach? What is Education? Is Education important? How can I be a better Educator? |
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| Re: What's the point of School, really?
Are the students really that much better off *with* school? All I can see is a failed system of "education". And no one is any closer to discovering what interests them. School prevents you from doing other things beside their work, so how is that diverse?
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| Re: What's the point of School, really?
Students are not independent enough to care to make productive goals, and strive for achievement. Especially with gaming and all that stuff, school needs to be mandatory for the little bit of learning that acts as a gemstone to all the tailings of education we get.
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| Re: What's the point of School, really?
I'm 17, and in highschool, and all I see among people in my class is wanting to socialize; they talk about video games, xbox, what they talked about last night on MSN, "What's up", etc. (the ceiling, the sky) lol. Yes we have creative minds, but to bring out such an inherent gift is not provided through elementary school. Unless you get the odd few who know what they want to be from the very beginning, which usually parallels their surroundings like that of a teacher, or doctor, or dentist. We kids and teens are too taken in by the non-constructive world, and thats only going to get worse. (Unless game industries decide to go "educatative" by "incentive" from the government or something). lol. |
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| Re: What's the point of School, really?
Im 19, in college, remember highschool and what I did while I was there. After age 15 I stopped playing videogames entirely, stopped watching t.v.. I started to develop myself. I took up guitar, got a teacher and practiced for 5 hours a day, I developed my art through my own studies, I read quite a bit and wrote even more. School did not stifle my creativity, if anything, it broadened it. It added to my existential angst, it gave me subjects to criticize, to understand. It showed me conclusively that an adult is often just a big kid, and maybe even a big baby. It showed me that those who have authority rarely have any more worth than those who do not, and they are rarely the most ideal candidate for the position that they have taken up. They might not even do the best they can with it. I did often dispair that the system was one which just cranked out a product, and I often objected in taking part in it to any degree which might be too much of an inconvenience, but I always welcomed any task which allowed for some degree of creativity such as writing papers(though I often lost points for not following the outline, I though that was goofy since I clearly still was achieving the same thing in doing the task as I chose to, try telling a teacher or administrator that and they will deny it either on the grounds that their outline was the only one which could achieve the ends they intended or that a student is too young to comprehend their educational scheme). School gave me a good bit of free time to develop my ideas. While I was ignoring the task at hand, I got to spend time thinking, writing, drawing and I had a constant source to draw from. I think that were it not for school, I would have never developed my healthy skepticism and disregard for authority and profesionalism. The single most objectionable thing I can think of were those damn outlines. Especially the busy work designed to pound the following of directives into the students skull. There was one in particular that I remember doing that said to read the whole sheet and in small print at the very end said don't follow the previous instructions or answer the 30 questions. I figured that one out, thank god, but everyone who filled out the answers got a zero. The message:get with beurocracy or get out. I like sen. mccain's plan to allow for those who have degrees and professional experience in a subject to teach. Every single decent teacher I have ever had had field experience in the topic, or at least some kind of real life experience away from the defunct school system. . |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - Zetetic11235 for the above post! | ||
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| Re: What's the point of School, really?
When I started on the forums here I stopped playing games. Basically they are boring now. And yes, school can broaden creativity, but it is never about figuring things out for yourself. Math, sure, when learning the basics as are still done in highschool, we require to follow the guidelines of a teacher. But when doing labs, and writing essays that are narrowed to a book against one's own choice, the student should follow their own path. Especially chemistry. We are stuck doing labs of titration with an acid that is less acidic than rain. And we never get to invent our own experiments. |
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| Re: What's the point of School, really?
You can teach yourself math better than any sicence. The experiments are often created with a pretty specific purpose in mind if they are done right. I self study advanced math pretty often. I essentially taught myself basic calculus. Yet I find learning fairly basic chemistry from a book quite a bit more troublesome. I think that there is a good ammount of value to structured labs. On the other hand, if you think you can design a better one, that would be an interesting project. Holiday you kind of remind me of this guy I know who lives in Wilton, Connecticuit. Just throwing that out there. |
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| Re: What's the point of School, really?
Yea, I used to think this too. When I was young and in the early years of school no one could come up with any argument that'd convince me...
Cultures that try to teach their young in this kind of structure realized long ago the innumerable benefits of schooling their young. It jump-starts life and the human mind and gives them basic mental and physical tools to succeed. I, too, can come up with cases where an individual's natural curiosity pushed them to learn and develop on their own. But this is the exception and the natural lassitude of the human animal generally prevents this. As society becomes more focused on the 'me', it loses the discipline - needed by all instruments of culture - to make this system work and the wisdom to even understand why we're doing it at all. Then rears the ugly heads of selfishness, laziness and apathy. I suppose it comes down to yet another self-fulfilled prophecy: If you see no point, and no one ever helps you to understand any point, your lack of discipline and motivation will lead you to a place where that becomes reality. Years later, you can then sit in your ignorant, unproductive and uninformed life and tell *your* kids, "Naw, ain't no pont to it anyways". ... my take. PS: I play games too! I love 'em and there's nothing wrong with diversions taken in prudent measure. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - Khethil for the above post! | ||
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