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by InclinedPlane
4541 days ago
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The responsibility of a teacher is to instill and assess knowledge. Repetition of busywork does not require a teacher, it only requires a textbook. The purpose of having a teacher in the loop is to ensure that students are actually understanding the material, which is why they are graded. If a student can get through a class without acquiring any degree of competency or basic understanding of fundamentals that's a failure on the teacher's part. If "teaching" was just a matter of reading and completing exercises then we could replace teachers with scantron machines. Yet college students pay teachers thousands of dollars per course to ensure that they receive more value than that. If they don't get it then they are being mis-served and cheated. |
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That's an excellent way to externalize personal failure.
A teacher cannot teach a student who doesn't make an effort to learn. Full stop. But it's a symptom of our ever-increasing sense of entitlement that we assume that our role as students is that of the audience for a play. We intend to lie back, and let the education wash over us. If it takes effort to learn, they must not be teaching correctly!
Let me flip around your supposition: if the people in this thread -- all of whom were apparently high-achieving math students -- cannot manage to understand a core principal of elementary trigonometry that is stated clearly in every textbook, the problem is more likely to be with the unwillingness of the students to think independently than the failures of a diverse group of teachers from all over the world to shove the knowledge into their head.
It's far easier to blame the teacher than to do the work of learning.