Problems with Education – Very Funny Video

Problems with Education - Very Funny Video

Purchase videos at http://www.openthemeeting.com http://teamworkandleadership.com/ This illustrates a lot of the problems with education. This is a very funn…
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Education Is NOT The Same As Schooling

Did high school ever feel somewhat like a prison? Did it ever feel like being in a machine that had its own purposes and goals separate from yours? This feel…
Video Rating: 4 / 5

50 thoughts on “Problems with Education – Very Funny Video

  1. Yeah Armis back when humor didn’t have to pander to the lowest common
    denominator. The operative word “have”; comedy could still be crude. Kind
    of like your lame attempt at a joke. Keep your day job kid there are 10,000
    comedians out of work.

  2. Father Guido Sarducci is a fictional character created by American comedian
    Don Novello. Sarducci, a chain-smoking priest with tinted eyeglasses, works
    in the United States as gossip columnist and rock critic for the Vatican
    newspaper L’Osservatore Romano (sometimes mentioned as The Vatican
    Enquirer, a take-off of the tabloid The National Enquirer). He’s a riot.

  3. Self education is the best education. Unfortuantely here in germany if you
    don´t have a Bachelor or finished an apprenticeship you are fucked. Here it
    is all about degrees.

  4. I remember when the 08 election occurred and I was probably more of a
    Liberal then, my 8th grade english teacher showed us pictures of George
    Bush looking like a fool after 9/11 and made a joke out of it.

    I look back on this version of me and I just shake my head at how ignorant
    I was back then.

  5. If you like the system off schooling America has, then your education has
    failed you. A short history lesson on how we got where we are.

  6. Schooling = Cram it in all before the test, then forget it the next day.

    The topics you do want to learn you teach yourself.

  7. Most grown ups assume kids are lazy and incurious and have to be forced to
    do and learn stuff, probably a projection of their own teared down sexually
    obsessed minds.

  8. I remember one of my earliest memories about school was that it was a
    prison and the adults always said it was a school and it was good for me,
    but I knew….. that I was in a cage I was not allowed to escape

  9. School is, by definition, forced indoctrination. Hell, you can probably
    call it slavery if you get a lot of homework. I remember a time when I was
    depressed, and I loathed waking up everyday to go to school. Also, it’s a
    proven fact that almost 90% of what we learn in school is forgotten by the
    time we are finished. Knowledge that can’t be applied to your life is
    useless. Even though I skipped mountains of homework and hundreds of days
    of school, I was able to ace nearly every test, and my reading level was
    way higher than normal.

    Ah, feels good to get that off my chest..

  10. If you’re stuck in the rudimentary classes, it will definitely feel this
    way. But in the higher tier classes it’s a different story.

    I doubt there is a better system for the US that can be universally
    implemented.

  11. I hated school. All the real education I have ever received was on my own.
    There was the occasional class period that I enjoyed, but that is the only
    way to learn is if you want to. If you don’t want to learn something, it
    won’t happen.

  12. There is a pervasive misconception that college is a service when in
    reality you are the product processed by the college, and you pay for that
    processing. Imagine if a pineapple paid for its own canning. Such a
    business model would be quite lucrative for the benefactors.

  13. I don’t agree with the proposal that Schooling is not a mostly a
    requirement for Education. Firstly, most people are not very keen to learn
    esp. young children. Secondly, the environment in a School and culture
    helps in staying focused on gaining knowledge even if for a short time and
    only to pass an exam.

    Only thing really worth improving in the rigidity of grades or levels
    (there are no 1.5 grade for e.g.) so that children who are more eager to
    learn can do it at their own pace. However, this approach still has the
    problem that children have better bonding with children of their same age.
    But it is still a viable approach for very large schools

  14. I agree. Upon many issues, the whole concept of standardization is
    fundamentally flawed. Schools just pass failing students to maintain their
    government benefits & aid due to educational systems assuming that one’s
    GPA or SAT result determines a student’s comprehensive knowledge. They only
    teach for the test, lacking depth, analysis & only focus on a brief,
    sweeping generalization that denies true knowledge. In addition,
    socialistic tendencies filter throughout it all but that’s another
    discussion altogether..

  15. Parents would not want to get rid of the current educational system, as it
    equates to free daycare. Sort of. They pay for it through taxes, but people
    don’t usually equate their benefits from government as tax dollars. They
    only equate other peoples benefits from government as tax dollars.

  16. I agree, although my university has class times that are scheduled, it is
    more guided by the wants of the student. This seems to be much more about
    k-12 schools.

  17. I find it interesting that kids, just before they reach schooling age, will
    ask you so many questions it will drive you insane. Then, after a year of
    school or two, they have almost no interest in learning anything.

  18. What lol how does it have no bearing in the “real world” lmao some of the
    smartest people in history didn’t even need schooling.

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