from Seth's Blog by 
Seems like a simple question, but given how much time and money we spend on it, it has a wide range of answers, many unexplored, some contradictory. I have a thoughts about education, how we use it to market ourselves and compete, and I realized that without a common place to start, it's hard to figure out what to do.
So, a starter list. The purpose of school is to:
- Become an informed citizen
 - Be able to read for pleasure
 - Be trained in the rudimentary skills necessary for employment
 - Do well on standardized tests
 - Homogenize society, at least a bit
 - Pasteurize out the dangerous ideas
 - Give kids something to do while parents work
 - Teach future citizens how to conform
 - Teach future consumers how to desire
 - Build a social fabric
 - Create leaders who help us compete on a world stage
 - Generate future scientists who will advance medicine and technology
 - Learn for the sake of learning
 - Help people become interesting and productive
 - Defang the proletariat
 - Establish a floor below which a typical person is unlikely to fall
 - Find and celebrate prodigies, geniuses and the gifted
 - Make sure kids learn to exercise, eat right and avoid common health problems
 - Teach future citizens to obey authority
 - Teach future employees to do the same
 - Increase appreciation for art and culture
 - Teach creativity and problem solving
 - Minimize public spelling mistakes
 - Increase emotional intelligence
 - Decrease crime by teaching civics and ethics
 - Increase understanding of a life well lived
 - Make sure the sports teams have enough players
 
If you have the email address of the school board or principals, perhaps you'll forward this list to them (and I hope you are in communication with them regardless, since it's a big chunk of your future and your taxes!). Should make an interesting starting point for a discussion.
No comments:
Post a Comment