A lot of people wonder why many students don't perform well in schools. However, they contemplate the wrong reasons to solve the problem. They wonder: Do we need better standards? Or do we need better teachers? Maybe increasing the education budget will be a solution. And they have asked those questions, which resulted in the recent implementation of Common Core. Many politicians speak of schools needing bigger budgets, too. If these solutions did work, schools should have improved dramatically in the past decade, yet they didn't. Instead, we should recognize what's actually causing the problem and fix that. If we keep fixing the problem itself, it will always return. It doesn't matter how intriguing the teachers are if the student doesn't want to learn. It's their choice, and most are forced to make the choice to learn. One of the causes of the complication is exactly that — they are forced to learn, forced to comprehend it as everyone else is. But if they don't believe that what they are learning and the way they are learning it will help them in life, they might learn it — but will forget about it just as quickly. Many classes promote strict thinking: following a specific format or guideline exactly. It might help some that need a little more support, but it greatly restricts the freedom of all the other students. Thinking creatively will allow problems to be solved in life, whereas thinking strictly will only apply to specific situations. The math standards, for example, require us to know a couple of methods that a specific problem can be solved with. We can use the method, apply it, and get the answer, or we could think of a quicker way to solve the problem, and use that instead. Some problems can only be solved with the methods provided. But if there's a simpler way, they should be able to use that. If students could use their own methods to answer a question, it would require more intuitive thinking to get the answer. But instead, the standards motivates thinking analogous to computers, getting an input, choosing an algorithm, and applying it to return a value. Because we have to do this so much within schools, creativity is simply killed. It's also why having standards that all students have to conform to isn't a good concept. If the standards have a voice, it would be shouting, “All students need to know these certain topics, and if they know more, it's great, but we don't care.” It destroys the entire value of self-improvement and intellect. The goal of school is to learn to be smarter than everyone else so you can succeed in a competitive world. But instead, it's only making sure that we're smart enough. Schools are made to prepare children for life as an adult, through education. It gives them knowledge of situations, big and small, in life, but unless it prepares them not only with ways to resolve them, but also the experience to come up with their own resolutions, it wo­n't be very benificial in an vast and expanding world. Many know that what their taught in school might not even apply to them 20 years in the future, considering the progress of technology and other advancements. We shouldn't be taught what people half a century ago needed to succeed in life. We should be taught ways to find our own needs to succeed in life. Buckminster Fuller once said “Everyone is born a genius, but the process of living de-geniuses them.” And yes, yes it's true. ferrisb

A lot of people wonder why many students don't perform well in schools. However, they contemplate the wrong reasons to solve the problem. They wonder: Do we need better standards? Or do we need better teachers? Maybe increasing the education budget will be a solution. And they have asked those questions, which resulted in the recent implementation of Common Core. Many politicians speak of schools needing bigger budgets, too. If these solutions did work, schools should have improved dramatically in the past decade, yet they didn't. Instead, we should recognize what's actually causing the problem and fix that. If we keep fixing the problem itself, it will always return. It doesn't matter how intriguing the teachers are if the student doesn't want to learn. It's their choice, and most are forced to make the choice to learn. One of the causes of the complication is exactly that — they are forced to learn, forced to comprehend it as everyone else is. But if they don't believe that what they are learning and the way they are learning it will help them in life, they might learn it — but will forget about it just as quickly. Many classes promote strict thinking: following a specific format or guideline exactly. It might help some that need a little more support, but it greatly restricts the freedom of all the other students. Thinking creatively will allow problems to be solved in life, whereas thinking strictly will only apply to specific situations. The math standards, for example, require us to know a couple of methods that a specific problem can be solved with. We can use the method, apply it, and get the answer, or we could think of a quicker way to solve the problem, and use that instead. Some problems can only be solved with the methods provided. But if there's a simpler way, they should be able to use that. If students could use their own methods to answer a question, it would require more intuitive thinking to get the answer. But instead, the standards motivates thinking analogous to computers, getting an input, choosing an algorithm, and applying it to return a value. Because we have to do this so much within schools, creativity is simply killed. It's also why having standards that all students have to conform to isn't a good concept. If the standards have a voice, it would be shouting, “All students need to know these certain topics, and if they know more, it's great, but we don't care.” It destroys the entire value of self-improvement and intellect. The goal of school is to learn to be smarter than everyone else so you can succeed in a competitive world. But instead, it's only making sure that we're smart enough. Schools are made to prepare children for life as an adult, through education. It gives them knowledge of situations, big and small, in life, but unless it prepares them not only with ways to resolve them, but also the experience to come up with their own resolutions, it wo­n't be very benificial in an vast and expanding world. Many know that what their taught in school might not even apply to them 20 years in the future, considering the progress of technology and other advancements. We shouldn't be taught what people half a century ago needed to succeed in life. We should be taught ways to find our own needs to succeed in life. Buckminster Fuller once said “Everyone is born a genius, but the process of living de-geniuses them.” And yes, yes it's true. ferrisb
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Sometimes I want to... Kill our customers. Literally reach over the counter and stab them in the throat. I'm soft-spoken and sweet, but underneath I'm an angry, bitter person because of my work and the side of people I've seen. I shouldn't have to tell them to form an orderly line, wait their turn and watch their language around kids. Didn't they learn this in preschool?!? They wait in line without having filled out their forms, even though there's a table with pens - and the forms are on it! You can't miss it! It doesn't take a genius to figure this out. But no... they have to bring the mess to the front, then take up my counter filling it out while everyone behind them gets p***** off. They always talk about how hard the form is to fill out. If you can read English (or Spanish) you should have no problem! Put your name where it says "name." If you can't figure it out, you need to sit in the rain with your head up and your mouth open, and save me the trouble of strangling you!! They hate our safety policies, but if we didn't enforce them and it turned into fraud, they'd be beyond angry and I'd be fired. When I tell them I'm required by law to do something, it's like it doesn't matter that I'd be facing fines and jail time if I skip it, they just want to get out of here two minutes earlier. And to top it off, so many of them say their social out loud or leave sensitive documents behind where anyone could get them. And if their identity is stolen, guess who's going to be investigated! Why can't they use their *$#@*& brains!?!?!? Add the fact that I've been slapped, had things thrown at me, threatened and came out to find people actually waiting for me in the parking lot (what are we, in grade school?) and ask me why I drink. I should collect all the info that people leave lying around and sell it. Run an electrical cord into my pens - which are attached for a reason, people! Stop yanking on them! - and shock people who p*** me off. Tell people with screaming kids and loud cell phone conversations to get the $^@& out of my store and never come back. And if you don't comply, get smart with me, won't take no for an answer, pick a fight or take too long, I'll have you escorted out while I tell everyone why you're being kicked out. I hate your guts and I hope you get hit by a bus and drug past your family, leaving a strawberry-jelly trail on the asphalt. And I hope you live, and loose all of your limbs, and your entire savings and income are used up on your care until you end up in a disgusting care facility where they beat you with coat hangers and put cigarettes out on your stomach. I hope bedsores rot you in half. And I hope that through it all, you're consciously reminded that you're there because you're an idiotic $#@!*&%.

Sometimes I want to... Kill our customers. Literally reach over the counter and stab them in the thr...