Postby Doubleshadow » Thu Apr 10, 2008 10:06 am
Although I didn't read the article, I'm going to suppose the author is of the common place mind set that one goes to school only to acquire sufficient knowledge to produce an efficient worker and nothing more. This is a damaging idea that prevents the expansion of intellect and makes one more susceptible to misunderstanding, poor judgment, and easy manipulation. If one only knows just enough to perform communications in a specific job with a limited vocabulary how is one expected to communicate with people unfamiliar with their terminology? Also, it is well-known that vocabulary (in fact, language in general), limits ones ability to think because a person can only think in terms of words they know and their assigned meanings, restricting their reasoning. This is why people are encouraged to think in concepts rather than words to learn and apply a new language.
If you can only express yourself in certain ways and limit your thinking by a lack of knowledge and exposure to new ideas, you'll certainly make a good, predictable, mindless cog in the machine that never asks questions or causes trouble; that a company or individual can simply use, trick, cheat and disregard with impunity. However, I seriously doubt it is a good idea to limit oneself this way. A democratic society will not survive without an educated populace to determine when freedoms are being attacked or abused. Furthermore, the original educational system, that deliberately included music and art, two valuable ways of learning expression and appreciation of different forms of communication, was designed to help students understand God better. The many different ways of thinking were meant to help students find ways to see and understand their Creator and commune with Him.
Teaching students just enough to earn themselves a paycheck hurts the individual and the country.
[color="Red"]As a man thinks in his heart, so is he. - Proverbs 23:7[/color]
The Sundries
Robin: "If we close our eyes, we can't see anything."
Batman: "A sound observation, Robin."