My peers all knew how to learn and study . When I asked: Did you have to memorise things exactly? They said no.
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Replying to @o_guest
How to learn is still something people have to figure out on their own, but the curriculum is maybe one that makes that easier
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Replying to @DRMacIver
Of course. But the instructions might be pro or against exploring your own ideas and critically looking at stuff.
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Replying to @o_guest
TBH I don't think any school system is *pro* critically looking at stuff. Some of them just stamp down on it more than others.
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Replying to @DRMacIver
I never claimed such a stark thing. It's a spectrum. But you can say I'm from a disadvantage.
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Replying to @o_guest
yeah, for sure. Not trying to say you're not - only that our system has a hell of a lot of room to improve too.
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Replying to @DRMacIver
Ah ok fair but I'd have given anything to have grown up in UK. Anything. Hence why I made it a loss goal to move and live there.
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Replying to @o_guest @DRMacIver
*life goal. I planned it from childhood.
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Replying to @o_guest
FWIW a lot of where I think our perceived(?) disagreement is that I spend a lot of time looking at the flaws in the UK system.
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Replying to @DRMacIver
But the context was my experience? Maybe I often overlook context. I assumed my tweet set it but I can see that you can have diff context.
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I think I'm very tired of my experiences being white washed by British people's complaints when I try to talk. Perhaps boring to outsiders!
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