Steam'i Yükleyin
giriş
|
dil
简体中文 (Basitleştirilmiş Çince)
繁體中文 (Geleneksel Çince)
日本語 (Japonca)
한국어 (Korece)
ไทย (Tayca)
Български (Bulgarca)
Čeština (Çekçe)
Dansk (Danca)
Deutsch (Almanca)
English (İngilizce)
Español - España (İspanyolca - İspanya)
Español - Latinoamérica (İspanyolca - Latin Amerika)
Ελληνικά (Yunanca)
Français (Fransızca)
Italiano (İtalyanca)
Bahasa Indonesia (Endonezce)
Magyar (Macarca)
Nederlands (Hollandaca)
Norsk (Norveççe)
Polski (Lehçe)
Português (Portekizce - Portekiz)
Português - Brasil (Portekizce - Brezilya)
Română (Rumence)
Русский (Rusça)
Suomi (Fince)
Svenska (İsveççe)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamca)
Українська (Ukraynaca)
Bir çeviri sorunu bildirin
Now homework don't require half as much effort.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underemployment#/media/File:Baristas_first_starbucks.jpg
And that situation is even worse now because of AI.
People are becoming increasingly useless to society whether they're educated or not.
Me: I took that personally.
Probably more likely a problem with teachers in the US struggling to teach classes full of children who don't all speak the same language. Too many immigrants.
Teachers are often put in impossible situations where they're told to teach kids who don't even speak English, don't have an interest in learning, or come from troubled homes where being malnourished and poorly cared for causes them problems in school.
And also many children come from cultures that don't value education, so the children are disinterested.
Then mentally lazy Republicans see the failure rate and blame the teachers instead of fixing problems.
You *can* live life without but in today's fierce job markets you'll fare better with a degree or two under your belt.
indeed many careers won't touch those without a decent degree.
stay in school, kids!
What reason do you have for that conclusion?
Lots of Americans seem to be doing fine in public schools. I was mostly satisfied with my teachers. I took classes in both public and private schools, and didn't notice much of a difference.
People who are against public education often have bad motives. They're either religious extremists who are upset because children learning science interferes with religious indoctrination, or they're just greedy taxpayers who would rather have more money for themselves than pay taxes to have a healthy society with properly funded schools.
I already gave plenty of reasons why increasing failure rates are not proof of teacher misconduct, as I spell out here: