Now that you have had opportunities to practice your writing, consider sharing something you wrote in the discussion forum. Read the work of some other students, and celebrate the progress you have made in your writing journey!
Unit 5 Discussion
Bshsu
The pressure to get into a good university is tremendous for someone like myself, who lives in a third world country. Dollars are an unfathomable amount in my currency, which unfortunately means that I cannot offer over $5000 per year to any American university without accepting a high risk of rejection. My parents are adamant on making themselves feel better about our predicament by insisting that a good university will be the product of my effort and intelligence over money. I don't have the heart to tell them otherwise, so here I am, completing free courses online to put up a semblance of effort.
hi everyone, done with fifth moduleee
it's hard being a poor student.
This course has genuinely helped me in many ways. I now feel more prepared to write essays, especially on personal topics like letters or résumés. As I begin applying to colleges and scholarships, I realize how important it is to use writing to impress the reader. Thanks to this course, I now feel confident in my ability to do that. The information provided was truly valuable and worth reviewing!
Now i can write text paragraph easy and email.
It was useful form.
In my experience, the education system has been ineffective for many reasons. I have been studying for 14 years now and I noticed a pattern in the education system. First, there is a fixation on lower-level learning like memorizing. This is very ineffective for knowledge retention because it pigeonholes our brain to function only through pattern recognition recall. Second, it generalizes the multiple intelligence of different students. Because every student have different specialties, they should not be treated to the same standards as other students. And lastly, it limits creativity with mechanisms like word count limits. So, I believe that the education system failed me because of its fixation on lower-level learning, generalization of multiple intelligence, and limitation of creativity.
Firstly, the education system should move on from lower-level learning. In bloom’s taxonomy, the lower-level learning are memorization, comprehension, and application. While they are useful in learning information at the time they are being absorbed, they do not have redeeming qualities for long-term retention. For example, in periodical tests, a lot of the questions are identification, enumeration, and multiple choices, which only promotes pattern recognition recall. In my experience, I often forget everything that I memorized for a test after the event. In my opinion, analysis, synthesis, evaluation, and creation, should be given more focus because it provides a better scope for a student’s knowledge on a matter. Forming relationships between different types of information is more effective in learning retention than remembering what the powerhouse of the cell is. Students need to be taught how to transform information as opposed to treating them as collectibles.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid,” is what Albert Einstein said. This perfectly encapsulates my second point on the generalization of students’ multiple intelligence. While I do agree that there should be an average standard for each skill, comparisons between differently-able students are harmful to motivation. You cannot compare a mathematics wizard to a literary genius because they fundamentally have distinct specialties. And I know that specialty cultivation may occur in College because students are free to choose their programs; however, I believe that it should be implemented at lower years of education. For example, in elementary, if teachers notices their students’ passion, special activities dedicated to the learner’s skill is a must to further develop them. In simple words, if a student is passionate about something, the education system should reward them with support, rather than ridicule for lacking performance in other areas.
And lastly, the limitation of creativity among learners is detrimental to students’ imagination. The power of the imaginary world through visualization and belief is limitless. However, when teachers imposes things like “minimum or maximum amount of words,” it limits it. One of the main arguments for this is that it challenges us to come up with something despite these limits, yet it only frustrates us because we either have to add unnecessary volume or reduce their thoughts. In my personal experience, the “minimum amount of words on written outputs” frustrates me a lot. As a writer, I believe that the message of a piece is not determined by its length. However, because of this set prompt, I have to add unnecessary lines and stanzas that will ruin the output’s coherence. It is incredibly frustrating because students should be allowed to come up with creative outputs at their own discretion. Because if not, students will believe that they are only as good as the teacher limits them to be.
In conclusion, the education system is ineffective because of a fixation on lower-level learning, generalization of multiple intelligence, and limitation of imagination. All these three factors contribute to how inefficient the learning of the students are growing up. Even after 14 years of being a student, I still cannot remember the lessons I have memorized during Senior High School, I still feel inadequate for not keeping up with best students of other subjects, and I still have frustrations toward the word count limit. If the world wants the students to excel to their highest level, the chains of the current education system should be unlocked to pave way for a better one.