this post was submitted on 08 Oct 2023
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So true.
People are forced into school to "learn how to learn". Yeah no shit, what happens is that many dont want to learn anything anymore.
I have to live in a bubble, because I really enjoy and often have discussions with many people about all sorts of things.
The worst thing at school by far was being forced to read shit like Romeo and Juliet at school that I just didn't care about. Of course, I still enjoy reading, but it is really off-putting as an experience. Too much of the school system focuses on exams and retaining correct information, rather than the logical processes or conclusions derived from learning something and adapting it. Memory and exams are still very, very important, but without the skills to adapt the information or consider alternatives it becomes very limited in application when you are taught so strictly.
"Will the world ever stop being anti-intellectual?"
"They really should stop teaching that dumb Shakespeare crap at schools."
Not exactly a solid foundation you've built there for the thread, OP.
I enjoy literature very much, but I don't see why they couldn't have picked something more relevant or thought-provoking. My own teachers said it was just what they did as part of the curriculum because it was the easiest to teach relative to some of the other options.
I love AI here. In germany we have "Anforderungsbereich 1, 2 and 3" which is the "level of skill"
Ironic thing here is, that even in a Gymnasium / high school, its like 50/30/20 or more. If you are pretty much unable to think by yourself, can stupidly repeat information, you have a 4.0 and you make it.
If you are bad at repeating informations, but can analyze and interpret perfectly, you get the same amount of points.
I was always suffering from that, in History for example, where 3 is the shit you should actually take home. Antifa forever.