Well said, nofunctionalart. My question was somewhat aggressive - I was really pushing for a response and got it. Your comment rings true, though. Many of our most important 'thinkers' were ridiculed and laughed at by the 'educated'.
Crazyyake, I've heard that before. As with any humor, sometimes there is some truth in it. William Buckley once said that he would trust the first 2,000 names in the phone book to lead the country more than 2,000 Harvard professors.
I have incredible respect for educators and owe them much - but they do have a perspective on life, work, God, economics, and government that often conflicts with the average person.
My question is not specific to my son's University nor my education. My question is more rhetorical in question - does a secondary education provide students with the skills to think or does it simply try to push education AS the answer itself.
My son is a double honors major in his freshman year and is quite capable. Class requirements are fairly standard across any accredited university, though. My son's favorite challenges have been working as an assistant in the labs - not in the classroom. I'm lucky enough to have a child who creates his own challenges, he doesn't rely on the university.
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Well said, nofunctionalart. My question was somewhat aggressive - I was really pushing for a response and got it. Your comment rings true, though. Many of our most important 'thinkers' were ridiculed and laughed at by the 'educated'.
Crazyyake, I've heard that before. As with any humor, sometimes there is some truth in it. William Buckley once said that he would trust the first 2,000 names in the phone book to lead the country more than 2,000 Harvard professors.
I have incredible respect for educators and owe them much - but they do have a perspective on life, work, God, economics, and government that often conflicts with the average person.
Hi Aussie,
My question is not specific to my son's University nor my education. My question is more rhetorical in question - does a secondary education provide students with the skills to think or does it simply try to push education AS the answer itself.
My son is a double honors major in his freshman year and is quite capable. Class requirements are fairly standard across any accredited university, though. My son's favorite challenges have been working as an assistant in the labs - not in the classroom. I'm lucky enough to have a child who creates his own challenges, he doesn't rely on the university.
Thanks for your response.