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by nunez 2 days ago
rising tides lift all boats

school wasn't compulsory for most of human history. private schooling was the norm, and private school, like now, was very expensive. as a result, most people worked physical jobs and gained limited skills beyond this.

the idea of public school where everyone had a fair shot of developing skills for knowledge work was an extremely progressive concept in the beginning. what you're asking is the impact of undoing this. many states are essentially trying this through private school vouchers funded by public school dollars.

i think is a very unfortunate regression; unfortunately, it takes a generation of change for impacts to realize.

1 comments

> what you're asking is the impact of undoing this

I was being sarcastic. But this could become a serious question: in the (near) future, if academic skills no longer matter for the vast majority of jobs, then the State's responsibility to fund public education will be called into question -- maybe it would stop at 14 when kids can read/write and do basic math. If you want more, do it on your own dime.

I hope not, but we already have the Trump WH trying to chip away at public education - and that's without AI in the picture.