About “What True Education Should Do” by Sidney Harris
I've always found it a shockingly ignorant custom of humanity to destroy the natural senses of youngsters while bringing them up. As if society wouldn't need anything but well-conditioned, well-informed brains to work in already built-up systems.
I've heard about people considering childhood merely as a state of insanity. It's just amazing how fast a single conception can occupy a whole human mind, which used to be wide open before. I'm talking about the conception of 'educated thinking', or 'being a regular adult', for example, but it applies to even more simple ones.
The article, however seems to point out there's not any need to educate people in the regular way.
So we've got two conceptions here about education, the first seems to tell us we were all born with rubbish in our heads, and the second seems to tell we carry the seed of perfection inside, which doesn't actually need to be expanded further.
I would say, neither view is balanced, but indeed, one is less unwise.
Vocabulary on this article:
to elicit: to extract some information/reaction from someonecontroversy: public argument
succinct: brief and clear
dunce: a wrong student
to sift: to separate the rough from the fine, the necessary from the needless
to assent: to agree or approve something
oyster: a clam
ardour: enthusiasm
How to get from the Resource Center to the Rocky?
First, find your way out to the big hall with the nice flooring. Then you turn right, find the exit to the streets and cross the parking spot, you find yourself at the main road where the buses run. Now you've got two options. You can follow this main road passing B/1, A/1, and you have got the Rockwell in front of you on the left.
Or, if you'd like to walk less, you can go ahead, across the road, then a little left, towards the Library. You pass it to the left, follow the path to the main road, and if you don't get lost (which is fun anyway), you'll see the Rocky a little further on your right, at the opposite side of the road.
Two paragraphs, actually, but that's fine. The first one still needs a topic sentence. What is the paragraph about? That sort of thing.
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