Quote:
Originally Posted by dreadgeek
My father, before he died 10 years ago, spent 40 years of his life in education. Ten of it as a secondary school teacher, ten more as a Vice principal and 20 more as a professor of teacher education. I remember listening to he and my mother (also a college professor) talk about schools, their students and how education was changing and not for the better. Growing up in that environment I became an adult with an outlook on education that might justifiably be called romantic. I believe, deep in my bones, that education is the key to liberation. By education, I mean something far beyond knowing facts and figures. It's *how* to think about things, how to know the contents of one's own mind and a grounding in both basic science literacy and basic cultural literacy (art, music, poetry, theatre). This was what my parents saw their mission was: not to fill their students heads with facts for regurgitation but with a thirst for knowledge and understanding that was voracious. All the rest was details.
Cheers
Aj
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Exactly...
My son spent most of last summer in Baltimore with his sister.. She wanted to expose him to the *world of thought* (She is in her Dr. program at Johns Hopkins in Nuclear Physics) before he went into the military.. Lol.. I was hoping that by spending time with her he might change his mind and go to college.. I think that a envirment that encourages that thirst and hunger for knowledge is absolutly an essential part of living... Sigh.. trying to make my son live my dream...
Sigh.. to me.. that would be paradise..