by Insanity test on Tue Feb 13, 2007 1:47 am
Sometimes societies get polarised. For some set of reasons like a combination of adverts remembered, certain ways of thinking being slotted into an image, an idea that you can only belong to one group etc, people tend to either go radically for one choice or the other.
So in school you get the 'teacher's pets' or 'geeks' who have chosen to either obey a strict authourity figure eg. parents or have decided that they actually want to improve themselves, or you get the cool people/bullies/whatever they manifest themselves as, who see the dictum that they must do as they are told as oppression and seek to undermine it, or aspire to be like a person who is a role model to them who might not have liked school much themselves.
Of course these are just a few examples, there are infinate reasons for the way people choose to lead their lives, but in certain situations like school the divide seems to be built into the system. It could be down to the simple lack of choice in the fact of going to school itself. The students seek a choice that they are in control of. Some choose to learn despite orders/popular thinking/lack of immediate freedom, while others make their choice not to learn.
In this light maybe it is the school system which is at fault. The mandatory attendance robs children of their ultimate freedom they enjoyed at home and they now have to do what they are told.
But School is good for you. Civilisation would not have reached the state it has were people not given the opertrunity to learn.
Therefore it is the preconceptions we have about learning which are at fault. From a very early age we are bombarded with the sterotypes hamster mentioned, the resentment of those who chose not to learn of those who did and vice versa. Even before we reach a school we expect to fall into one of these catagories - before we have all the facts we are already deciding which group we will belong to.
What is needed it a radical change not just of the school system or even how it is seen, but a change of our entire culture.
Companies advertise to a certain sterotyped group or other, entertainments like kids TV show the groups in all their glory and often glamorise them. Our parents and older siblings will have been in one of these groups and will affect which we join. The schools themselves don't help, by offering narrow feilded clubs to join, specifically taylored to a certain group.
I myself am British, and i think there are subtle differences in the situation. One of my friends recently did an exchange to America and was surprised at how polar it seemed compared to where we are. You either worked all the time and were extremely driven, or never worked. But then I am in a music school, everyone has a similar goal and our course is practically rather than academically driven. I imagine it would be different in a medical college or other, larger university. Plus I have never visited America myself, I only go by what I've been told, but I can see it in the TV shows etc. In Britain the schools are much the same - there are those who work and are nerdy or those who don't and are popular. But I believe the way forward is a more balanced approach to life.
Everyone should be seen as a wholly rounded person. Even the most closed minded bully will have an aptitude for something, whether it is evident or not. Just because someone is intelligent, it doesn't mean that they're automatically crap at sports. If you are a sports-person, take an interest in other subjects aswell. If you are a mathamatition, get out there and socalise with the others.
Of course it's all easier said than done. The groups will currently not allow one person to cross over without facing some form of ridicule or resentment. This is the curse of the self sustaining system. But if you treat someone else how you wish to be treated, maybe, just maybe, they'll recipricate.
--/:Out of cheese Error:/--
Please shutdown Universe and reboot from Start.