Education as a whole should also further develop resilience, emotional intelligence and physical and mental health awareness, as well as spiritual awareness and interconnection within an ever widening sense of community. But without sufficient grounding in this area (from parents and community in the first five years), students begin school life at a serious disadvantage, and teachers are not equipped with time or resources to bridge this gap within the year and the hours they have with each child (on top of all the other requirements of teaching). — Possibility
I’ve been wondering about the period of education. Are those years in high school enough for students to be educated in all of those aspects, plus the subject matter itself? This seems more than a teacher can impart whose job it is to teach English, maths, etc. This also includes a lot of specialists. So should education be compulsory on into university. Should students be leaving school at the age they do? Should they be leaving at all if they are not educated? — Brett
...they have escaped the planned control... — Brett
Unless they regard themselves as psychological cripples, unable to act reasonably and reach out for what they want, then the education system they went through was either okay, or failed to impose its normalisation on them. — Brett
We get tested and then directed toward various slots in the big machine. — petrichor
I never claimed any of it is planned. — petrichor
Unless they regard themselves as psychological cripples, unable to act reasonably and reach out for what they want, then the education system they went through was either okay, or failed to impose its normalisation on them.
— Brett
— petrichor
You seem to suggest here that the only way of becoming something other than a psychological cripple is to be educated in such a system. Not so. — petrichor
Those who do as the education system tries to get them to do hardly question authority. Their understanding of the world is therefore rather impoverished. But they generally do okay. They get enough to eat. They stay warm. They get retirement benefits. They see their grandchildren grow up. But their lives are hardly their own. — petrichor
I think a certain level of individual failure in life is inevitable--more inevitable now than in the past when the technical demands of work, play, learning, etc. contained more -- and simpler -- options. — Bitter Crank
Well actually that’s exactly what you claim. But you’re right it’s very planned, but not for the reasons you assume.. — Brett
But it seems to me that everyone who writes about this suggests, by their comments, that they have escaped the planned control — Brett
Well that’s a change from being a victim of the Capitalist system. — Brett
The corporations are somehow held responsible for the standard of education that is developed only for their purposes — Brett
You probably take for granted what you learned at school, you may even be unaware of how much you did learn. — Brett
But it does seem to me that more elaborate automated processes, greater bureaucratic complexity, technological 'churn', and so forth make it more difficult for the average worker (white/blue collar) to find a niche in which to succeed. — Bitter Crank
Apart from helping them out economically what else can be done? — Brett
BUT, there is no guarantee it will solve economic problems for individuals. — Bitter Crank
It works on the collective scale. Good education (along with good governance etc.) of a society or a nation makes it succeed in World that we have today. Lousy or nonexistent education causes severe social problems on the macro scale, while individuals can make it fine even with having participated in a lousy education system.So if it’s the economic problems for individual we’re addressing, and education doesn’t necessarily do it, then what does? — Brett
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