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I remember learning most of what is posted in high school. Accounting, Law, basic first aid, etc. And this was the 90's. School(grade school) is about teaching accountibility and responsibility IMO. You hone in on what you want to do after school in Grade 11 and 12 and focus on that to prepare for post secondary. The life skills you're talking about can be learned once you learn about the internet; which in today's society should be about 5 or 6 years old. |
I can see where Timpo is coming from, to a certain extent. (Wow, that's weird typing that) When a student leaves highschool he/she will be 17 or 18 years old. I do feel that they should know how to: -File their T4 -Contribute to RESP/RRSP -File for EI -Knowledge of banking (TFSA, GIC's, LOC's, Mortgages) -MSP / Dental (What is and is not covered) Once I left highschool, I was completely in the dark in most of the above and had to figure it out myself or get the limited help from my parents. Most people will say "oh it's the parents problem" yet when you are 18 and your parents are breaking into their late 50's, there is a big ass generation gap where things have changed. This picture relates to all of this: http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-UUHPo3coPG...2Bbathroom.jpg |
Most of the crap Timpo listed is covered in schools already, but the problem is the same problem you'd have if they taught everything in school: most kids won't pay attention. Even if they do they're learning it years before they'll use it, so by the time they do go to use it either they've forgotten or the way it works has changed. |
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IMO the school system does a much better job educating children than most parents do. Perhaps those that develop the curriculum are under the impression that parents will teach their kids what a mortgage is etc. |
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Things must be different now in elementary school...no more cursive writing...many schools don't do spelling tests any more (thanks to spell checks), and the days of going to the library to do research with enclyclopedias must be long gone. |
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Jobs/Careers is basically what CAPP class is for, though for some reason it also contained sex ed in my school. DIY is shop/wood working/cooking classes. Those are all electives, but are usually available at most high schools. That said, I do know some schools don't offer those courses any more. My high school didn't offer any sort of courses for accounting/banking or law. Mind you, I went to school in a very affluent part of town, so I guess the general thinking was that Mommy or Daddy will either support you or look after your accounting needs. There was a St John's field trip we could take if we wanted first aid training, but it wasn't set up as an actual class we could choose. We did, however, have countless art, drama, band and film classes to pick from. |
they should teach all of that, while you fucking go through some sorta bootcamp for 3 months. the society stuff so you know how to navigate through life's paper work and bureaucracy system. and the fucking boot camp so you're not a god damn pussy that's never had to push their physical and mental self to failure. people would god damn vote if they had to work hard to earn that right they would care about the judicial system and the political system if they had to be part of it. there's no patriotism, because there's no sweat and tears that they had to put into earning their rights. if they were given stuff, and taught where it came from, and who contributes, and then they were forced to participate and contribute to earn the right to receive those benefits... they would fucking care. everyone would fucking care. lol. |
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"But my child learns different" Tough shit, pay for private school or a tutor |
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