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pupils "held back" by overemphasis on arts
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squirrelkingFree Member
Because in philosophy you are encouraged to think for yourself, footflaps, and in sciences spoon fed and asked to regurgitate.
Inquisitive, open-minded, pataphysical deliberations are encouraged in the arts and crushed in science where the best-fit hypothesis is not to be challenged by mere students.
This was the subject of my PGCE essay BTW.
You clearly never studied STEM subjects then, a bigger load of bollocks I have never read. Science is ALL about open mindedness, are you sure you aren’t getting it confused with Scientology?
jonbaFree MemberEdukator – Troll
Because in philosophy you are encouraged to think for yourself, footflaps, and in sciences spoon fed and asked to regurgitate.Inquisitive, open-minded, pataphysical deliberations are encouraged in the arts and crushed in science where the best-fit hypothesis is not to be challenged by mere students.
This was the subject of my PGCE essay BTW.
I was going to reply to the rest of the thread but this stopped me in my tracks. I hope you don’t teach science because if you do you are doing it very wrong.
EdukatorFree MemberMy PGCE was many years ago and I was challenging the way science was being taught then. So I didn’t study something (STEM) dreamed up many years later. Science is all about an open mind but you wouldn’t believe that from the way sciences are still taught.
ElectricWorryFree MemberSTEM is not a subject, it is an acronym for a group of subjects which I suspect you would have studied at least up to a certain point or you wouldn’t be teaching now.
Sciences are taught in a variety of manners in my experience and saying that any of the STEM courses are taught with an emphasis on verbatim learning is largely incorrect.
footflapsFull MemberEdukator you come across as being very very very stupid (or just biased).
There would have been no scientific progress if open mindedness was mutually exclusive with studying the sciences.
edhornbyFull Memberthe fact that this education minister thinks ANY pupil right now could have a school plan that overemphasises the arts and not STEM is laughable, she and her predecessors (of all political hues) have marginalised the arts – which is quite astounding if you look at the art, design, music that this country produces and the ROI you get. I know that she’s mindlessly lumping humanities in with the arts but the same applies.
yes STEM is important and yes a lot of people don’t make a full time living out of the arts after study, but consider that only the tiniest percentage of graduates don’t have employment, you’ll find that those arts graduates have their artistic pursuit as a 2nd income
EdukatorFree MemberWell open up a current physics text book and show me where they encourage imaginative thinking, footflaps. Do this, do that, observe such and such, draw this conclusion, learn these facts and make sure you can regurgitate all that in an exam. It just teaches kids to go through pre-written procedures in a formatted manner.
footflapsFull MemberNB For those that don’t know STEM is an acronym referring to the academic disciplines of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.
footflapsFull MemberWell open up a current physics text book and show me where they encourage imaginative thinking, footflaps.
In order to advance in any subject you need to learn the basics. If you learn music, you learn the basics first e.g. scales etc but just because you’re learning a pattern by heart doesn’t mean your mind is being closed. Or is anyone who studies music closed minded as well?
It just teaches kids to go through pre-written procedures in a formatted manner.
It teaches the basics of scientific rigour eg that you start with a hypothesis and design an experiment to prove or disprove the initial hypothesis and then learn how to interpret the results to draw a conclusion.
The very fact we see continual progress in all the STEM subjects shows that people are being open minded and challenging what has gone before and pushing back the boundaries on a daily basis. Or maybe you think that everyone in STEM businesses has actually studied Philosophy…..
EdukatorFree MemberI taught my son to play guitar but I didn’t teach him scales. He started to ask about them when he found people playing in different keys on Youtube. By that time he was playing very well. I’d post some of his compositions but fear plagiarism so he’s banned from putting his original stuff on the Net.
miketuallyFree MemberIt doesn’t make a lot of sense to lump GCSE choices and A level choices in together, as science and maths are both (essentially) compulsory at GCSE.
Speaking as an A-level physics teacher, I really hope we don’t suddenly get a bunch of kids selecting physics because they don’t really know what they want to do. I want to teach students who have a genuine interest and aptitude for the subject!
footflapsFull MemberI taught my son to play guitar but I didn’t teach him scales.
Well done! You might, however, want to look up the difference between an anecdote and a hypothesis. I will warn you now that it’s a STEM thing so you might not understand it…..
miketuallyFree MemberWell open up a current physics text book and show me where they encourage imaginative thinking, footflaps.
We currently teach A-level physics B, which requires huge amounts of imagination and creative thinking to apply the fundamental concepts to varied scenarios.
If you want to see creativity, watch these videos made by some students after last year’s unit 1 exam, which was fairly ‘challenging’… 🙂
EdukatorFree MemberYou can study STEM academically. It’s not just an acronym (or abbreviation), it’s also regarded as an approach. See what the Americans have to say.
EdukatorFree MemberI don’t see any creativity in the first vid, Mike. I see lots of copy-paste.
footflapsFull MemberWe currently teach A-level physics B, which requires huge amounts of imagination and creative thinking to apply the fundamental concepts to varied scenarios.
I think we’re wasting our time, apparently the only person who can think creatively is edukator and his son (who wasn’t taught scales and thus spared a lifetime of closed minded drudgery).
miketuallyFree MemberThe people I knew at uni who studied philosophy mainly memorised sets of arguments and essays and regurgitated them in an exam.
Discuss.
miketuallyFree MemberI don’t see any creativity in the first vid, Mike. I see lots of copy-paste.
I see the use of a meme to convey humour.
miketuallyFree MemberI think we’re wasting our time, apparently the only person who can think creatively is edukator and his son (who wasn’t taught scales and thus spared a lifetime of closed minded drudgery).
You say that but a philosophy graduate who can’t play scales landed a spaceship on a comet yesterday. Oh, hang on.
footflapsFull MemberI think closed minded people see what they want to see, regardless of the evidence to the contrary….
footflapsFull MemberYou say that but a philosophy graduate who can’t play scales landed a spaceship on a comet yesterday. Oh, hang on.
I was going to mention that, but he’ll just come back saying either:
a) ESA is entirely run by Philosophy graduates
b) he taught them all the guitar
c) none of them learnt scales as a childmartinhutchFull MemberThe people I knew at uni who studied philosophy mainly memorised sets of arguments and essays and regurgitated them in an exam.
That’s pretty much what I did in A Level Latin. Learned to recognise about every 10th sentence in Caesar’s ‘Gallic Wars’ in Latin, then learned the entire English translation around this, on the basis that the passages presented for translation were at least 15 sentences long.
I thought it a creative solution at the time. 😀
footflapsFull MemberI thought it a creative solution at the time.
quid a ipsum scientifica methodo
grumFree MemberI think closed minded people see what they want to see, regardless of the evidence to the contrary….
Surely a science-minded person like yourself would know that everyone is affected by confirmation bias.
footflapsFull MemberSurely a science-minded person like yourself would know that everyone is affected by confirmation bias.
Sadly yes.
klumpyFree MemberPhilosophy as a subject these days is actually history of philosophy, learn what other people thought, and learn to argue with other people who know what other people thought by countering their repeating other people’s thoughts with your own repetition of other peoples thoughts.
Free thinking? Not “just learning by rote”? Pfffft.
Nowadays that we seek to understand the world by observation, measurement, understanding, and analysis; we’ve got over “philosophy”.
miketuallyFree MemberSurely a science-minded person like yourself would know that everyone is affected by confirmation bias.
Ever since I learned about confirmation bias I see it everywhere.
HughStewFull MemberEver since I learned about confirmation bias I see it everywhere.
Genius – should be cross-posted to the short clean joke thread
jonbaFree MemberYou say that but a philosophy graduate who can’t play scales landed a spaceship on a comet yesterday. Oh, hang on.
I imagine a good number of them were doctors of philosophy.
I kind of see where edukator is coming from. Science taught badly can be about learning equations and answers to exam questions rather than exploring the world around us, questioning it and creating new ideas.
But then so can most subjects.
EdukatorFree MemberI think I’ve been subjected to enough sarcasm, mockery, mimickery and insult for one day.
I do suggest watching that Jack Bruce interview a few times though. You’ve been behaving as stereotypical teachers, Mike and Footflaps, trying to put down someone who dares to challenge who you don’t have an answer for. When you lack arguments you bluster and insult. Read back, what would the parents of your students think of your childish mimickery, sarcasm and mockery? “Edukator you come across as being very very very stupid” – et pourtant.
aracerFree MemberPresumably it didn’t take long to teach him how to hold the guitar and pluck a string. I’m assuming you didn’t stifle his imaginative thinking by teaching him chords, rhythm or harmony either. I’m sure an awful lot of musical creativity has been held back by knowing which note comes after which.
Because of course there are a lot of conventions in music – you might hot have formally taught him scales, just as my son hasn’t formally learnt any yet with his cornet lessons, but he knows how to play C, D, E, F, G, A (lips not quite yet trained enough to reliably manage the B and next C). Strangely enough the valves are in the same order on all cornets and also the same on a trumpet (and indeed on any valved brass instrument), hence I could play his having never played a cornet before. In the same way there is a standard to the order of strings on a guitar and how music is written down among lots of other things you have to formally learn.
The really interesting thing is that unlike the stuff in a physics text book in music these things are just conventions, with no particular reason why the middle line on a stave is a B, or that the first valve on a trumpet drops the note two semi-tones.
edit:
Oops, you posted while I was typing – though I think my point stands.
footflapsFull MemberI kind of see where edukator is coming from. Science taught badly can be about learning equations and answers to exam questions rather than exploring the world around us, questioning it and creating new ideas.
There is no taught subject which doesn’t involve a lot of learning of ideas which have gone before (that I can think of). All subject ultimately involve “questioning it and creating new ideas” otherwise knowledge would have stopped 100s of years ago and we’d be using Egyptian / Greek technology / language etc.
It is generally considered that “questioning it and creating new ideas” is an innate human trait which is independent of whatever subject you study / profession you choose. Obviously some individuals questions more than others, but you’ll find a spread of ability in any subject / field, even amongst Philosophers and musicians who can’t play Scales.
squirrelkingFree MemberI think I’ve been subjected to enough sarcasm, mockery, mimickery and insult for one day.
See you tomorrow!
footflapsFull MemberI think I’ve been subjected to enough sarcasm, mockery, mimickery and insult for one day.
All I can say is you bring it upon yourself.
I asked how come science keeps expanding in knowledge even though they’re all closed minded and you replied with an anecdote about your son and not teaching him the scales. That’s hardly engaging in rigorous debate…
miketuallyFree MemberScience taught badly can be about learning equations and answers to exam questions rather than exploring the world around us, questioning it and creating new ideas.
We need to provide the students with an understanding of the giants’ shoulders, otherwise what will they stand upon?
Besides there’s no time for creativity, because of all the mockery and sarcasm.
miketuallyFree MemberI think I’ve been subjected to enough sarcasm, mockery, mimickery and insult for one day.
Your opening gambit was to accuse all science teachers of spoonfeeding facts to be regurgitated, whilst claiming philosophy teachers creative thinking. You reap what you sow.
EdukatorFree MemberThe things in the physics text book are just as arbitrary. All the measures are convenient units with the exception of the speed of light when it is used as a unit.
Teach harmony sure, but point out the use of counter harmony too.
Teach rhythm, but that the rules aren’t fixed and some guitarists play on feel around the rythm. Keith Richards is often just before or after the beat. And that there are lots of time signatures to play with.
Guitar tuning is far from fixed, dropped D, E, G. Do you tune to 400hz or lower? Take off the E string if it gets in the way.
If you must teach a convention then show how the convention has its limits too.
footflapsFull Memberwhilst claiming philosophy teachers creative thinking.
Well they certainly don’t teach the difference between an anecdote and a hypothesis….
footflapsFull MemberThe things in the physics text book are just as arbitrary. All the measures are convenient units with the exception of the speed of light when it is used as a unit.
You really don’t understand Physics. Any Physicist / Engineer or Scientist knows that units are arbitrary and it really doesn’t matter what set you use as long as it’s defined and consistent. The fundamental dimensions such as time, length and mass are all that’s important, which is what Physics teaches. In order to measure, record and teach these dimensions you need units, which is why we have them.
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