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If you could change one thing in Indian Education, what would it be?
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<blockquote data-quote="napstersquest" data-source="post: 2500186" data-attributes="member: 84955"><p>I am not sure - were you expecting to assemble a Lamborghini first day of vehicle production school?</p><p>I kind of get your point too - I always used to feel 'why am I learning this' every day in comp science grad course. The solution is simple: If the professor explained in 5 mins how this will be useful in real life, it will take away most of the frustrations.</p><p>The microprocessor architecture and the programs I wrote in assembly help me every day writing react, node, go, python code and debugging critical issues. <em>You HAVE to learn addition and subtraction before calculus.</em></p><p></p><p>That's unfortunate. I feel bad for you, getting good teachers needs a lot of luck.</p><p></p><p>I kind of disagree. I used to remember a lot of things by writing with pen and paper. Physical books is still my go-to for reading. Could be because I was using them from the beginning?</p><p>There is an alternative: Arrange lockers/shelves for everyone so that they don't have to carry classwork notebooks and textbooks. Let them take home what they need.</p><p>In my opinion, black(or green)board and chalk is still the best method to teach theory. Actual practicals and experiments will always be better.</p><p></p><p>Gifted is such a great movie for this - I always feel the things we learn in schools from social interactions have no replacements.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="napstersquest, post: 2500186, member: 84955"] I am not sure - were you expecting to assemble a Lamborghini first day of vehicle production school? I kind of get your point too - I always used to feel 'why am I learning this' every day in comp science grad course. The solution is simple: If the professor explained in 5 mins how this will be useful in real life, it will take away most of the frustrations. The microprocessor architecture and the programs I wrote in assembly help me every day writing react, node, go, python code and debugging critical issues. [I]You HAVE to learn addition and subtraction before calculus.[/I] That's unfortunate. I feel bad for you, getting good teachers needs a lot of luck. I kind of disagree. I used to remember a lot of things by writing with pen and paper. Physical books is still my go-to for reading. Could be because I was using them from the beginning? There is an alternative: Arrange lockers/shelves for everyone so that they don't have to carry classwork notebooks and textbooks. Let them take home what they need. In my opinion, black(or green)board and chalk is still the best method to teach theory. Actual practicals and experiments will always be better. Gifted is such a great movie for this - I always feel the things we learn in schools from social interactions have no replacements. [/QUOTE]
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If you could change one thing in Indian Education, what would it be?
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