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by simiones 1365 days ago
I remember being amused by this same observation when my own country decided to reduce mandatory education from k+12 to k+10 (cutting two years of high-school). They immediately began re-arranging the curriculum in high-school, for example to move organic chemistry from 11th grade to 10th grade, on the basis that it's important for students who only finish the mandatory 10th grade to know some organic chemistry as well, instead of the old curriculum which would have only taught them inorganic chemistry after 10th grade (this has the bonus of making the chemistry curriculum inorganic I -> organic I -> inorganic II -> organic II, for maximum confusion).

To me, even though I was barely out of high-school at the time, this was obviously absurd - expecting especially someone who wants to drop out of high-school early to retain any notion of organic chemistry taught in a school year, that they couldn't learn on the job if it was really required, seems so obviously nonsense that I couldn't help but laugh. Especially since the same thing was done to basically every other subject as well, with the same intentions.

One note: in my country, the curriculum is completely centralized; there is some small amount of choice, but it amounts to, at most, 1-2 classes per semester; everything else is fixed.