Not saying that at all. Just saying that our education system as currently constructed does far more to stunt the intellectual growth of those that would end up at the top than it does to aid them. Any system designed to bring the lowest common denominator up to the middle will necessarily kill off the top end. The end result is mediocrity.Turquoise wrote:
And I'm sure if I home schooled, I'd be president right now.JohnG@lt wrote:
Most of the tycoons from your hated gilded age were self taught men. I spent most of my time in public school waiting for the gum chewing hair twirler in the back of the class to understand a basic concept before drifting off into a stupor again. Then there were the M&M throwers that the teacher would spend half the class chastizing. All public education does is breed mediocrity. With a little direction I could've taught myself far more on any given subject than I ever learned in the classroom. A public education barely provides the necessary skills for entry into college, let alone entry into the workforce at anything hire than unskilled labor. So there goes your economic mobility theory.Turquoise wrote:
Compare economic mobility before public education vs. after.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat