Another way school is making children dumb and depressed is by having them confuse monetary gain with successful living. At school, children are taught that the primary goal in life is to earn a good salary, and to achieve that they have to get a good college degree and find a high-paying job.
This mentality has been imbued in us mainly via schooling. At school, children are made to believe that sacrificing today will bring them great rewards tomorrow. Overall, This is just my opinion. You may or may not agree with me, And that's fine. Schooling is invariably the most effective way to inform the masses of what it takes to survive in today's society. Ages of compulsory education differ among countries.
In some instances, school attendance is not mandatory. Homeschooled children, and children whose parents are teachers, are such exceptions. Granted, the majority of students do not fall into either category; parents do not simply "lose" their kids. Some parents revel at this opportunity of freedom. Other parents work for a living and cannot let their ten year olds sit at home playing Call of Duty all day, every day. Perhaps a school's most useful function, is to prepare students for the 'big, bad world'.
PDA bans, dress codes, and other such necessary restrictions, all serve this common purpose. That type of behavior is inappropriate in the workplace. Would a reputable law firm hire John Doe, a man who wears Busweiser shirts and flip flops every day of his life? It's doubtful. Public schools provide equal opportunity for every boy and girl. Private schools often make up their own rules regulations. Multiples teachers provide students with a wide range of viewpoints and insights that challenge them to think.
Tight schedules prepare students to catch their flight connections. Schools are great for tricking the populations into abiding by the government's will. Schools are the best propaganda tool for subliminal messaging and for mind-washing. Therefore schools are a product of genius, and not stupidity.
Now, I have gotten straight A's all of my life and have been in all the honor programs. I guess you could say I'm smart so that's why I think it's not stupid, But that's not the case.
Don't even get me started on that. But whether you like it or not, School is important. It can affect your college acceptance and your likelihood of finding a job. You should always put your best effort through. If you don't go to school, You may never know things that you must use in life. School is also a good way to meet new people and socialize when you have the time to. School is not stupid at all school is good for all children and students around the world ok and yes school is important to all children and student lives ok ok so yeah my final answer is yes ok ok so yeah my final answer is yes ok good bye.
I think that school is not stupid at all ok and yes I know some kids love school while other kids hate school but children and students need to go to school and school is not stupid ok ok so yeah my final answer is yes ok ok good bye. The idea of school is is genius; a place where you can learn so much to use later in life, But the way school executed the idea can use some changes.
Everything you learn up to 5th grade you will most likely use more than once in life, But once you get to 6th grade up to 12th grade you probably not use very much of what you learned.
In my opinion, It's better to go to school, And learn some awesome stuff as well as some useless stuff instead of not learning much at all. I applied and auditioned, and I got in. July rolled around and I moved in to a college dorm for five weeks. Every morning I took a three-hour class with college professors in theater, and every afternoon I had a two-hour class in sculpture or creative writing. In the evenings we all watched old black and white movies, and at night we stayed up late in the dorms eating pizza and talking.
It was the first time I had a fellow student talk to me about school stuff during our free time. I asked him why, and he said because he wanted to know what I thought of it. I thought he was a bit odd, but I gave it a shot. When we met up later, we talked about it for an hour, rereading parts of it and trying to figure it out. He was really into it, and I found myself getting really into it, too. I had a few more moments like that over that summer, staying up late to finish a sculpture, rehearsing scenes with my theater partner, reading excerpts of Zen and the Art of Archery, sometimes staying up until well after midnight.
None of this was the sort of thing we ever did in classrooms. It was like we were characters in Dead Poets Society. The whole summer program culminated in a performance of scenes I had worked on in theater class and an exhibit of visual arts, and other students shared films they shot and poems they composed and music they learned.
On the last day, we were given a homework assignment to share what we had learned with someone out in the world. At the end of the summer I came back home and fell into a deep funk, because I missed all of my artsy friends. My family and I went on vacation to the beach and I moped all over the beach house. For example, on that day, she took the students to gather on the schoolyard to learn math using an unconventional method. Marda asked the students to make rows based on a specific group of numbers.
They then enthusiastically followed her instructions. Marda was teaching math by instructing her students to form rows on the schoolyard. This is one of the creative learning methods that she sometimes used to refresh the learning atmosphere so that students would be more excited to learn.
Marda also emphasised the importance of students getting to know each other. Thanks to this system, stories arose and had helped her have more profound understandings of her students. I would then ask the child who likes to annoy his friends, why he does that.
Ultimately, this process would make him open up and reveal the reason for his action. Subsequently, we would tell him not to repeat such poor behaviour. In addition to having different seatmates periodically, students also experience changes in the seating arrangement.
Marda would occasionally change their seating; sometimes lined up, another time in groups, at other times U-shaped. These seating changes happen every once a month to refresh the learning atmosphere. For Marda, becoming a teacher is a childhood dream come true. She had always admired the figure of a teacher who she saw as a smart person.
On June , she was assigned to the school where she now teaches until finally being appointed as a civil servant PNS. Marda said, her years of becoming a teacher has been filled with many memorable experiences.
There was a student who was cheerful and liked to read.
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