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Ask HN: What skills should we teach our kids to prepare them for the future?
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1 points
by hoppster
5166 days ago
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I mean, specifically, what useful skills should our kids acquire that are above and beyond what they're likely to be taught in public school (before college). I don't want to hear about teaching them values, character traits, or philosophies. I am really just interested in hearing your suggestions for hard, tangible skills that will give kids a better opportunity to succeed. I'll start with a few... - fundamentals of programming
- understanding/calculating risk
- important words to understand
- media literacy
- budgeting
- investing
- business start-up
- small business economics
- real-estate economics
- fundamental of robotics
- creative/lateral thinking
- critical/rational thinking
- system thinking
- study hacks
- memory hacks
- and... |
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In response to your list:
+ numerical literacy - risk, budgeting, and investment all stem from this. The value of approaching a problem numerically (as a ballpark estimate or exact answer), and general guidelines for doing so.
+ Negotiation, and corresponding traits of empathy. Even if you don't agree or sympathize with another person's view, being able to navigate an agreement is hugely important, and , I believe, largely lacking in today's society.
+ The value of lawyers, contracts, and "getting it in writing".
+ The value of lawyers, and not talking to the police without one. (this particularly applies to U.S.)
+ Common scams to avoid. In the same vein, how to recognize and avoid medical quackery and bad investment advice (or scams). Some would lump this under 'critical/rational' thinking. Arguably, it's a subset of that, but the differences are having a specific framework, awareness of the problem, and the intention to actually apply the critical thought.
one quibble:
- fundamentals of robotics. I'm a big fan of robotics, and I agree that fundamentals of programming is an important concept. (specifically, I'd say 'procedural literacy', the understanding of a process or computation, critique it, and create processes in code)
That said, while robotics does have huge potential in industry and everyday life, I don't think it's so fundamental that everyone has to be familiar with the fundamentals. It could be argued, in the U.S., that everyone should be capable of driving a manual transmission automobile or riding a bike, but I wouldn't expect the average person to know how to build a car. (car repair is a middle area, arguably a good life skill to have, even if not a fundamental)