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NOTES ON EDUCATION
1. If you really want to know something that the professors
want to teach, then the American educational system is rather
effective. Even when, as is often the case in high schools, the
teachers don't know much, the subject can be learned from text books.
2. On the other hand, the system at all levels is rather bad
at inspiring a desire to know. Perhaps we kid ourselves and our
students when we claim that the liberal education is good for them.
They don't want to know it, and there is no reason why it will be
good for them to do so. The apparent evidence to the contrary is
merely evidence that people who can bring themselves to do what the
educational system requires of them can also do what the other
institutions of our society require.
3. New technology, especially computer technology, has many
important applications in education and will revolutionize it when
the technology becomes cheap enough. However, the area where
improvement is most cost effective is the textbook. Here are some
possibilities:
1. The text should speak from the expert in the field
directly to the student. It should bypass the teacher as much as
possible, because it is impossible to get enough teachers who know
the subject well, can teach well, and can afford the time to pay
individual attention to the students. Any improvement in texts can
be multiplied by the printing press.
2. Texts need to be debugged. Students should be set
to learning the subject from the text without the aid of the teacher.
Their progress should be monitored perhaps by having them work
through a computer. When students have difficulty, this means that a
section of the text needs to be redone.
3. A difficulty arises when there is a need for the
student to absorb a lot of material before he gets a chance to do
something he couldn't do before. Experiments might be made in
teaching the informal notion of the derivative and in teaching the
epsilon-delta definition of a continuous function.