• @fosforus
    link
    26
    edit-2
    8 months ago

    They should make the material interesting enough that people won’t have to resort to other stuff

    Nope. It’s all relative. Compared to what’s available via the phone and internet, 90% of school material is fundamentally more boring, because important things are often boring – and there’s almost nothing you can do about it. I mean sure, an incompetent/unmotivated teacher can make the material even less interesting, but that’s also why we need competent teachers. That’s a separate problem.

    So the quest to make school material more interesting than the Internet is a dead end – it’s just impossible. So they need to make everything else less interesting. Which means that phones and computers can fuck right off. If there are kids for whom this is a difficult situation and they’re unable to cope, such kids will need intervention. I.e. restrictions in free time as well.

    • @original_ish_name@lemm.ee
      link
      fedilink
      -58 months ago

      Did you hear what I said about dopamine being the “joy hormone” and used as a “reward”. Your body gives out happy hormones like this after an exercise and other good stuff for you (including school work if it is interesting)

      And don’t you tell me that knowledge isn’t interesting. For something to be interesting (by my definition) it must give you knowledge.

      Girls twerking on TikTok is not interesting - the way Hitler died is

      Memes are not interesting (unless they contain important info)

      These may produce dopamine in other ways but they are not interesting

      Which means that phones and computers can fuck right off.

      I could be considered “tech savvy”, I know a bit of C/PHP and a lot of shell script. Explain ro me how I could learn that without a computer (I’m also self-taught)

      So they need to make everything else less interesting.

      As I said, sleep is something that pupils prefer to schoolwork. Get schoolwork above a bar that low and then we can talk. Amyway, it just needs to be interesting enough that students won’t feel a need to check social media

      • @fosforus
        link
        7
        edit-2
        8 months ago

        I could be considered “tech savvy”, I know a bit of C/PHP and a lot of shell script. Explain ro me how I could learn that without a computer (I’m also self-taught)

        By using the computer or phone at home. Roughly half of the programmer workforce currently alive went through childhood without a mobile phone, because they didn’t exist for regular consumers. And personal laptops for children would’ve been perhaps an option for the top 1%, but probably not even them. Since you just didn’t have electronics in school.

        • BarqsHasBite
          link
          fedilink
          English
          48 months ago

          Way more than half. Let’s separate dumb phones from smart phones. Even smart phones weren’t all that capable for a long time.

    • @Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      -12
      edit-2
      8 months ago

      important things are often boring – and there’s almost nothing you can do about it.

      That’s downright ridiculous. The most important skill for a teacher is an ability to effectively impart knowledge and in order to make students listen and remember, you need to make them interested.

      So they need to make everything else less interesting.

      No, they ABSOLUTELY don’t. If I’m watching a fascinating TED Talk at home, I don’t need anyone to make my favourite tv show boring in order for me to pay attention. That’s not how attention works. For someone who seems at least dimly aware of the existence of dopamine, you seem remarkably confused about the effects of a lack of it.

      If there are kids for whom this is a difficult situation and they’re unable to cope, such kids will need intervention. I.e. restrictions in free time as well.

      So restrictions are your only tools? I really hope you’re not a teacher or a parent, because your ideas seem not just ineffective but actually borderline abusive.

      • @fosforus
        link
        9
        edit-2
        8 months ago

        If I’m watching a fascinating TED Talk at home, I don’t need anyone to make my favourite tv show boring in order for me to pay attention.

        You’re comparing a TED Talk that you chose to watch to school curriculum.

        I really hope you’re not a teacher or a parent, because your ideas seem not just ineffective but actually borderline abusive.

        I’m a parent who has witnessed the effects of smart devices on children, and I have made serious mistakes in this area. Those mistakes are from being not restrictive enough. I believe the society has made similar mistakes, but is slowly turning to facing and understanding those mistakes. A generation has been lost, though, and some people (like yourself it seems) are still fighting against countering these problems. I hope you’re not in any role where you can decide these things, because I think your opinions around this seem very harmful to both individuals and society.

        • @original_ish_name@lemm.ee
          link
          fedilink
          4
          edit-2
          8 months ago

          I hope you’re not in any role where you can decide these things, because I think your opinions around this seem very harmful to both individuals and society.

          Ignoring what we’re fighting about, just think of what you said there. You are saying (correct me if I’m wrong) that we should just not allow people with opinions that contradict you to not have any power

          Sorry if I came off rude or I’m putting words in your mouth but stuff like that is not ideas I take lightly. I think it’s a threat to democracy

          EDIT: I also hate stuff like this that directly attacks the person with the ideas. I have noticed that the replies to you became a lot ruder after you said that (probably it rubbed off.) I thing it is important to be calm in a discussion


          Back to the topic


          You’re comparing a TED Talk that you chose to watch to school curriculum.

          Teachers regularly put informational videos (including TED talks) on in the classroom. It never becomes less interesting because it’s forced upon me - if anything their a nice change of pace

          Those mistakes are from being not restrictive enough

          Can you please elaborate. What “mistakes” did you make and what do you do now (also please elaborate on the “mistakes” society made)

          Also please elaborate on the “effect”

          • @lightnsfw@reddthat.com
            link
            fedilink
            18 months ago

            Ignoring what we’re fighting about, just think of what you said there. You are saying (correct me if I’m wrong) that we should just not allow people with opinions that contradict you to not have any power

            No one should be basing policy decisions on opinions anyway. Those should be based off facts and data.

          • @fosforus
            link
            -2
            edit-2
            8 months ago

            Ignoring what we’re fighting about, just think of what you said there. You are saying (correct me if I’m wrong) that we should just not allow people with opinions that contradict you to not have any power

            That was a reaction to them saying that they hope I’m not a parent. Which I am. Obviously not a good reaction, but it happened.

            EDIT: I also hate stuff like this that directly attacks the person with the ideas. I have noticed that the replies to you became a lot ruder after you said that (probably it rubbed off.) I thing it is important to be calm in a discussion

            I feel that I was attacked first and replied with similar energy, but oh well. That’s how everyone feels in these things, right?

        • @Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          -58 months ago

          You’re comparing a TED Talk to school curriculum.

          It was supposed to be an easy to understand example of information being imparted in a more efficient way because it’s made interesting, not a one to one comparison. I felt that “listening to the teacher explain passionately and engagedly about the industrial revolution” was a bit clunky and on the nose.

          I guess I underestimated how literal I have to be when dealing with someone who can’t even imagine that pedagogy other than deprivation works.

          I’m a parent who has witnessed the effects of smart devices on children, and I have made serious mistakes in this area. Those mistakes are from being not restrictive enough.

          No, those mistakes have likely been mostly from increasing the temptation to goof off on their phones by boring them.

          • @fosforus
            link
            1
            edit-2
            8 months ago

            deleted by creator

          • I apologize, but your comments started stuoid and the devolved into ignorant nonsense, and thus poor other fella keeps engaging you like you’re capable of honest debate.

            Education has never been about being more interesting than games or entertainment, and you sound like a nitwit for even suggesting it. Teachers are tasked with educating, and the #1 preventable reason for kids falling behind isn’t “entertain me more!” . . . it’s shit parenting and upbringing.

            Kids lack impulse control worse than anyone – taking away cell phones is an absolute no-brainer.