Brilliant video, castarchival. Very thought-provoking! This topic is one reason why my 16 yr old daughter just started unschooling last week. The censorship in schools is appalling!
Where does the high school library and HS librarian fall in your experience? Are they more like the public library, the teachers, or something different?
Great video, and great points. You are a rare beacon of light in a world of brainwashed kids.
I sincerely regret the fact that my parents sent me to public school.
People learn the best when you get out of their way and allow them to pursue their own interests. If they have no desire to learn, they will not learn.
What we do in public schools is force students to do time-consuming exercises on material they have no interest in. It is completely ineffective.
When I went through public school I memorized information before a test, belched that information out on the test, and then promptly forgot that information.
None of what I did not WANT to learn stuck with me into my adult life. I remember only the things that I wanted to learn. Mostly computer programming and science.
So, I will never send my children to public schools. Doing so would be a crime against them as public school wastes their creativity, time, and potential.
Thanks for your reply. I did understand the metaphor. I like your argument for constructivist learning. Your point about compartmentalization is also well taken, but I still feel that purely self-designed learning might not provide exposure to the very thing that a student might come to find fascinating. I love the tuning example- great way to appreciate geo sequences, logs, and 2^(1/12)! I have to tell you, though, that I know a lot of guitarists who have never pursued this on their own!
Excellent, thought-provoking video! But I do have questions for you. Do you see all your schoolmates regularly at the library? Also, what if I don't like history and therefore have never read a history book in my entire life? Or maybe I avoid all science. Is that OK? Finally, what if I don't like to read at all? Do I just stay home?
What the library symbolized in this video was personal freedom in education decisions. The three of your questions imply that not everybody will put their freedom to good use, and this is true. On the other hand, I do see that most everybody enjoys or is interested in something. These people want to practice this skill or learn more in a certain area, and you might say this is part of "what it is to be human"— to seek and construct.
Secondly, you said "what if I don't like history and therefore have never read a history book? Or maybe not science?"
This relation only works when you are thinking in terms of the education system we have today, with compartmentalized subject areas. There are math, science, reading, and social classes. In reality if you were learning about something, for example, electric guitar. You would need to realize many things that can not be categorized just into "math," "science," or "music." cont..
To use the equal-tempered tuning scale, you wouldn't know it, but that is a coupling of math, science, and music, as is every single other piece of the instrument. Many guitarists begin to learn musical history and culture. Any one "subject" can never be entirely separated from the rest of the other subjects. Everything is connected.
Just some observations, the people at the library are there by choice. This is why it is calm and quite, and the "bad kids" with guns aren't there. If you forced everyone into the library it would start to look like a school, bad kids and all. If you have a teacher that doesn't let you ask your questions you have a bad teacher. That said, great video, you're light years ahead of your peers in free thought.
hmmmm....I'd love to go to your library. Mine is populated with the homeless, unemployed, unemployable pervs/flashers and ADD children (who have parents who work all day or don't care or both) that dump the kids there as a substitute for daycare.
I am surrounded by those of school age who are reading manga comics. Hey that's great and entertaining, but don't delude yourself that that will prepare you to practice medicine, engineering, math and education which we need to sustain a society.
This fits in with what I've been reading lately--Kelly Gallagher's Readicide--How Schools Are Killing Reading and a book by Frank Smith called Learning and Forgetting. Great thoughts--thanks!
This has been flagged as spam show
close all public schools.. its wrong to rob people to fund the education of someone else's kid
longfootbuddy 1 year ago
Outstanding. I plan to show this to my economics class.
-Professor Gerdes
ProfessorGerdes 1 year ago
fuck you
NAVEEDKHANNISARKHAN 1 year ago
Brilliant video, castarchival. Very thought-provoking! This topic is one reason why my 16 yr old daughter just started unschooling last week. The censorship in schools is appalling!
bethmoore71 2 years ago
Unschooling and loving it! My schedule is my own.
WanderingGnome 2 years ago 3
That is why we unschool! Great video!!!!!
polykow 2 years ago
That's a terrific video. Good job.
--Michael Grant (Author GONE)
GONEbooks 2 years ago
Where does the high school library and HS librarian fall in your experience? Are they more like the public library, the teachers, or something different?
eldadiogrande 2 years ago
Great video, and great points. You are a rare beacon of light in a world of brainwashed kids.
I sincerely regret the fact that my parents sent me to public school.
People learn the best when you get out of their way and allow them to pursue their own interests. If they have no desire to learn, they will not learn.
What we do in public schools is force students to do time-consuming exercises on material they have no interest in. It is completely ineffective.
AnduinX 2 years ago 5
When I went through public school I memorized information before a test, belched that information out on the test, and then promptly forgot that information.
None of what I did not WANT to learn stuck with me into my adult life. I remember only the things that I wanted to learn. Mostly computer programming and science.
So, I will never send my children to public schools. Doing so would be a crime against them as public school wastes their creativity, time, and potential.
AnduinX 2 years ago 2
Thanks for your reply. I did understand the metaphor. I like your argument for constructivist learning. Your point about compartmentalization is also well taken, but I still feel that purely self-designed learning might not provide exposure to the very thing that a student might come to find fascinating. I love the tuning example- great way to appreciate geo sequences, logs, and 2^(1/12)! I have to tell you, though, that I know a lot of guitarists who have never pursued this on their own!
eislessthanpi 2 years ago
Excellent, thought-provoking video! But I do have questions for you. Do you see all your schoolmates regularly at the library? Also, what if I don't like history and therefore have never read a history book in my entire life? Or maybe I avoid all science. Is that OK? Finally, what if I don't like to read at all? Do I just stay home?
eislessthanpi 2 years ago
Good questions.
What the library symbolized in this video was personal freedom in education decisions. The three of your questions imply that not everybody will put their freedom to good use, and this is true. On the other hand, I do see that most everybody enjoys or is interested in something. These people want to practice this skill or learn more in a certain area, and you might say this is part of "what it is to be human"— to seek and construct.
thecaster 2 years ago
Secondly, you said "what if I don't like history and therefore have never read a history book? Or maybe not science?"
This relation only works when you are thinking in terms of the education system we have today, with compartmentalized subject areas. There are math, science, reading, and social classes. In reality if you were learning about something, for example, electric guitar. You would need to realize many things that can not be categorized just into "math," "science," or "music." cont..
thecaster 2 years ago
Comment removed
thecaster 2 years ago
To use the equal-tempered tuning scale, you wouldn't know it, but that is a coupling of math, science, and music, as is every single other piece of the instrument. Many guitarists begin to learn musical history and culture. Any one "subject" can never be entirely separated from the rest of the other subjects. Everything is connected.
thecaster 2 years ago
Outstanding Video!
TheDarkEmerald 2 years ago
Just some observations, the people at the library are there by choice. This is why it is calm and quite, and the "bad kids" with guns aren't there. If you forced everyone into the library it would start to look like a school, bad kids and all. If you have a teacher that doesn't let you ask your questions you have a bad teacher. That said, great video, you're light years ahead of your peers in free thought.
whizbo 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
wow gay
lordlutari 3 years ago
wow ignorance
hurdl3thed34d 2 years ago
@hurdl3thed34d How come?
mundaneaccount 3 weeks ago
hmmmm....I'd love to go to your library. Mine is populated with the homeless, unemployed, unemployable pervs/flashers and ADD children (who have parents who work all day or don't care or both) that dump the kids there as a substitute for daycare.
I am surrounded by those of school age who are reading manga comics. Hey that's great and entertaining, but don't delude yourself that that will prepare you to practice medicine, engineering, math and education which we need to sustain a society.
Shypop1 3 years ago
I give this one 5 stars, for sure. I want to hear more from this guy. Where' s he been lately?
queengatewood 3 years ago
This fits in with what I've been reading lately--Kelly Gallagher's Readicide--How Schools Are Killing Reading and a book by Frank Smith called Learning and Forgetting. Great thoughts--thanks!
teacherninja1 3 years ago
Right on in comparing classroom learning to free-will education that takes place in the library. Make another video, please!
zenamcfadden 3 years ago
Are you familiar with John Taylor Gatto?
jaberwocky6669 3 years ago
w000 Real Books not school books!
ummzahra 3 years ago
Excellent!
Unfortunately most books are still garbage. What are you recommending?
I'll go first.
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, Robert Heinlein
psikeyhackr 3 years ago