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High schools are finding that 69% of parents are expecting their kids to get a Uni education, however only 16% are actually making it to Uni (Georgia Striagt). The reason parents feel so pressured to get their kids into Uni is because Uni (knowledge based) are not only the highest paying, but are also city based jobs. Unlike many trade jobs. With the way the economy is moving, they are now telling highschool students that not only are they studdying for jobs now that may not exist in 10-20 years, but they should expect to change their job 20-30 times in there life. If your going to generalize Asian education with not having life skills, Id say its more based on culture. Asian students are also growing up in a high/dence population area = greater competition = greater results. Also keep in mind that the majority of immigrants (often from Asia/Europe) have professional careers/educations. Although this is great for Canada's economy, it has also greatly efected our culture and put A LOT of pressure on Canadian students. In the end you have to realize with technology and immigration that we are no longer competing and comparing our selfs in our own community, province, or country, BUT the entire world. Is this what you talking about wum? |
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just because we do something out of 'free will' that doesn't mean it wasn't strongly influenced by an original trauma. Kinda like how a battered wife 'chooses' to sustain abusive relationships. |
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A lot of the peer-reviewed journals that have explored that idea have refuted that it's at all any kind of a significant factor, really.
The free will argument is a good one, but introducing codependence into the equation will just make you look ignorant. There's a lot of literature on the subject, though. Go do some research already and form some educated opinions instead of asking the internet for theirs. |
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Basically the government re-education camp we go through in our formative years (one-upping the Jesuits, really) is a shaping process that effects most of us for the rest of our lives. Last edited by azazel; Feb 16, 08 at 05:13 PM. |
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Wherever human behaviour shows up, you can be damn sure predictability and consistency are excusing themselves from the room.
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And I don't think more school is the answer for people to become hip to this fact, or even to become better trained at a "job". What marketable skills did you have exactly after HS? 13 years, 6 hours a day, homework, and hundreds of thousands of tax dollars later, what did you have to show for it? Did they teach you how to tie a knot, run an organization, leadership skills, network with people, people skills, cooking, how to spot a scam, or really anything important? Or was the whole thing a 13 year character test? Something is obviously very wrong with our system. But all this is beside the point. Read about the lives of Benjamin Franklin or other people who lived during his era. He ran a newspaper at the age of 15 and was RUNNING SHIT in his teens. He went to Europe twice before he turned 18 in search of opportunity and was almost completely self-educated. Here was a guy who was obviously in charge of his life. Contrast that with the young generation of today whose daily life is completely devoid of meaning as they are forced to memorize useless facts and put their work into assignments, tests, and projects that have ZERO impact outside the classroom. All this imaginary 'play time' as it were keeps people in a state of arrest development, and that's why so many (read: adult babies) are playing games like world of warcraft or other useless bullshit well into their 20's. Last edited by azazel; Feb 16, 08 at 06:57 PM. |
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ebbo, i don't want to quibble about definitions here. what is your main point?
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And no wife chooses to sustain abusive relationships (sado-masochism aside). Someone will stay in an abusive relationship do to all sorts of constraints which are specific to that situation. This does not sound quite like free will to me but rather coercion and power. I think you are dancing on all these concepts but not quite hitting that controversy button well enough. |
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Having a bias is okay, but failing to admit or acknowledge such a bias is very detrimental to an argument, particularly when it's being reviewed by peers (or marked by a TA). And I still think using the phrase "opiate of the masses" is hella cliche. |
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Do you want us to help you with your homework or do you just want us to do the writing for you so you can take our ideas and print them as your own? Sheesh. (see, that was trying to analyze you) |
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"Basically the government re-education camp we go through in our formative years (one-upping the Jesuits, really) is a shaping process that effects most of us for the rest of our lives."
This is one of the central points of your argument, but it lumps people together too easily. It ignores all concept of humanism or resiliency, and leads to other sweeping statements like "opiate of the masses". It's justified but dangerous, because it leads you into logistical corners and it becomes easy to find holes in your arguments. If you point them out before your detractors do, you come out of it looking smart and well-thought-out. Honestly, profs and TAs love it when you argue with yourself. |
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But to flesh things out if I must, an opiate is something that has a dulling effect on people. Based on all the people I see in a state of arrested development, I posit that school is the culprit. |
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