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2 minute read
As the world evolves so should a society of people
DIANA ASHJIAN STAFF WRITER DA725@CABRINI EDU
Along with every new generation come new changes. The country in which we live is constantly evolving, but I’m not sure into what. Accordingly, the ways in which we communicate, construct the roles of each other within our society, assemble and utilize our values and morals, interact socially, and learn have revolutionized and become what we know as, “The Information Age.” In this country, educators are very well aware of this and strive not only to keep up with the incessant changes, but also to stay aware of what their purposes are so that they can perform their job more effectively. So, what is an educator’s purpose? And how should an educator educate?
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Long ago, communication was based on reading, writing and conversations either personally or via the telephone. Before that communication and the ways in which people learned were orally, by word of mouth or by the written word and a trusty chalkboard. Now, our boundaries have exploded and allowed us to explore much more advanced means of communication. Today we are taught to do academic research on the Internet. We now have networks that provide us with the kind of technology that make the old mathematical and grammatical classroom seem so outdated, but are these furthered networks curbing humanity and making networks out of us?
Students need guidance to understand that as individuals in society, they eventually need to separate themselves from stereotypes and decide where their place will be in the world instead of merely accepting false identities placed upon them. I really don’t think that teaching a group of 30 students all in the same way could be effective to all of them. Even varied techniques wouldn’t reach everyone because the less attention from a teacher to a student who is a child, to me, means less trust.
And classrooms that are becoming increasingly technological may be expanding resources, but at the same time could be trading in real objective and a real passion for learning for teachers who, as a result, are neglecting a more empathetic approach at constructing real person-to-person contact in the classroom.
It is not enough for the youth of America to digest the words, the thoughts and the ideas of another. Maybe the purpose of initial American schools was to mold a people into citizenship, but now America’s youth is expected and might soon be forced to go into other countries and risk their lives to help build governments that agree with the values that have continually spiraled South of where they started, right here in the U.S. So, doesn’t that mean that we need new and more profound goals? It takes more than hype about a political campaign to promote liberalism and more than memorization of the preamble of The Constitution to encourage patriotism. I’m just not sure exactly what would.
What is the point if what is learned by that same youth that will be asked to fight, than, is not too much more than how to make a “works cited” page and how to calculate a mortgage. Maybe a proposed deeper kind of digestion should start with the dissection of “The Pledge of Allegiance.” When is the last time any of us has had to say it? And when and if we still do, do our right hands flutter to our chest consciously to make a pledge or is it out of old habit? What I’m saying is that it is questionable whether or not our