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I think the most effective method of teaching is to let curiosity run its course. A timer, designed properly, could help cause curiosity.People need to really learn.
I think the most effective method of teaching is to let curiosity run its course. A timer, designed properly, could help cause curiosity.People need to really learn.
If you design it properly to do so. That's why I said design it properly to aid curiosity.A timer, designed properly, would more likely cause laziness and inhibit curiosity.
Curiosity. "Hey, what does this time zone thing do?"Why look it up when it does the work for you?
Even if designed to "aid curiosity" as you so vaguely suggest, the general user will still not be curious to find out more if it does all of the work for him. The calculator example I made before is perfectly valid here. Only a very select few will care enough to find out more, and those people are the type of people that would've done so without the counter existing in the first place.Hakeem said:If you design it properly to do so. That's why I said design it properly to aid curiosity.
See above.Hakeem said:Curiosity. "Hey, what does this time zone thing do?"
I can always split it if it grows big enough.You're the admin, so I'm going to assume that by starting this discussion, you're endorsing it and don't care that it's entirely off-topic to whether the counter will help the arena or not.
We don't have to worry about those people. It's the person that would have not given it a second thought otherwise that we care about.Only a very select few will care enough to find out more. and those people are the type of people that would've done so without the counter existing in the first place.
Yes, very few people will care to use anything but a calculator for math that they care nothing about, and I don't blame them. Calculus only becomes applicable when taking continuous data over time, in my experience. Time itself is something that many more people will be curious about.The calculator example I made before is perfectly valid here.
This might be true if you didn't provide them a countdown in the first place. They wouldn't ask "What's GMT?" if you say "It's this long until the contest is over." Since you've told them that, and that was why they needed to know what GMT was, they won't investigate GMT. If you just say "Lasts until X GMT" then users must really delve into it or they risk missing the deadline completely.Hakeem said:Time itself is something that many more people will be curios about.
People don't like to be forced. They less you force them, the more they will allow their curiosity to explore. "Screw GMT. I have better things to do. (Lie.)" vs. "So that's how long I have. Hey, that isn't the correct time. What's this GMT thing anyway?"It actually serves curiosity better if you don't give them the tools that avert the need to be curious in the first place.
Missing a deadline is only a problem if you are late.
I won't argue that, but they learn that way. I can't really think of many people that like going to school, but them being forced to at least forces them into the position where they can learn. There will always be people that outright refuse to learn when put in that situation, though.Hakeem said:People don't like to be forced.
I meant that only people that are running late worry about a deadline. If you are finished or near finished a good chunk of time before the deadline, the deadline is of no consequence.Pardon the interjection, but how exactly can you miss a deadline without being late?
Nah, all those types of people exist. The question is, which group is biggest?I suppose realistically, it is just a matter of opinion.
I really don't see how forcing causes motivation. The trick is presenting opportunities they don't understand without forcing them in some manner.I feel that forcing people into a situation where they can learn will motivate them to learn, you feel that simply presenting the opportunity to learn is enough.
Ah, but what makes someone have such an opinion of a topic?If the topic is something they dislike or would prefer not to go near.
I think the real issue there is money. Without money, you are very restricted, so no matter what your curiosity or wished motivation, you just have to have money. Curiosity is a major source of motivation. Survival, it seems, is a higher one. I think it goes: Immediate survival, "long term" survival, resources required, curiosity. Other people can affect if, based on the person. Though, depending on the person, curiosity could even be at the top.This new job offers amazing sights and a chance to travel the world...at a cost to yourself, and bringing far below average pay each year. Only the most interested and diligent will stay in this position, atleast for very long.
Motivation is key. Interest and curiosity play second fiddle to this high-roller.
...depending on the person...
I think 12 years is far too big a push. Sure, young children probably may not learn to count without some sort of "school," but when you start getting into the teens, the "push" factor becomes significantly larger.The education system [...] that little push.
No, I don't think I forgot those, I just suggested that we are ignoring the person that can and would learn either way. I listed them as follows:Intelligent said:If I am forced to learn I will, but I will learn better if not forced. I go to school to learn, not because I'm told to. So you forgot one;
• People that learn by force and/or by choice. (These people favor both approaches)
Duragon said:People that would learn regardless. (We are ignoring these)
In this community? Almost assuredly those who only learn by force. Just looking at the attitudes of the hundreds upon hundreds of GUI users on the site, you could discern that.Hakeem said:Nah, all those types of people exist. The question is, which group is biggest?
Just because you don't see it doesn't mean it can't happen. If someone has no choice but to learn something or fail, many times they will learn it in order to get by. They may even go back and thank the person that did it to them later; this is how much of education works, especially in apprenticeship in a trade.Hakeem said:I really don't see how forcing causes motivation.
The attitude can vary by subject, and they've already made it thus far to be competing in (or watching, I guess) a competition, so I think the willingness to learn isn't too rare in this context.In this community?
In order to get by, yes. I wouldn't consider most of them having learning it, because they don't bother remembering it if they don't have to. It just goes on in ear, onto the exam, and out the other, for most people that don't care about the subject. I think the subjects that subscribe to this best are science and moderate math.If someone has no choice but to learn something or fail, many times they will learn it in order to get by.
Though not necessarily in the context of knowledge, I have seen this. I think these people are foolish. They cannot see alternate universes to know if it was really necessary. For all we know, they may well have been better off under different circumstances, but aren't because of what they were put through.They may even go back and thank the person that did it to them later.
Maybe. I think we could tend the systems toward pandering to curiosity a lot better than we do currently.This is how much of education works, especially in apprenticeship in a trade.
This assumes that everyone always knows what is best for them, though. In almost all cases, people don't know what is the best thing for them, so people (teachers in many cases) force it onto them, make them learn it, and then later on they are glad that they were forced to do it. You'd be surprised how much you retain if you study something a lot just to get a good grade on that test, I know I always am.Hakeem said:In order to get by, yes. I wouldn't consider most of them having learning it, because they don't bother remembering it if they don't have to. It just goes on in ear, onto the exam, and out the other, for most people that don't care about the subject. I think the subjects that subscribe to this best are science and moderate math.
And people in the reverse situation could possibly have been better off forced to learn because it had them learn more. The argument goes perfectly legitimately both ways, so there's really no gain from pursuing it on either end.Hakeem said:Though not necessarily in the context of knowledge, I have seen this. I think these people are foolish. They cannot see alternate universes to know if it was really necessary. For all we know, they may well have been better off under different circumstances, but aren't because of what they were put through.
I do agree with this. I find the best teaching methods are a mix of force and curiosity. You poke their curiosity a bit with the introduction and some other details and mix in some other things that the person just needs to know. I've seen it used to tremendous effect.Hakeem said:Maybe. I think we could tend the systems toward pandering to curiosity a lot better than we do currently.
I am the type to retain any and all information, so I can't say that remembering things you didn't want or care to know in the first place is all that common. I want and care to know everything anyway.You'd be surprised how much you retain if you study something a lot just to get a good grade on that test, I know I always am.
Exactly. It is foolish to thank anyone for the way this specific universe turned out.The argument goes perfectly legitimately both ways, so there's really no gain from pursuing it on either end.
That type is so extraordinarily rare, that I somehow doubt you are the perfect human example of a memory sponge. If so, however, that's neat. I'd be curious to know what your experiencing childbirth was like.Hakeem said:I am the type to retain any and all information, so I can't say that remembering things you didn't want or care to know in the first place is all that common. I want and care to know everything anyway.![]()
It's like riding a bike, you never forget. Even if you forget the time you learned it.information