Lesson One Twelve Things l Wish They Taught at School | ||||||||||||||||||
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1 I attended junior and nior high school, public institutions in New York and New Jery, just after the Second World War. It ems a long time ago. ① The facilities and the skills of the teachers were probably well above average for the United States at that time. Since then, I've learned a great deal. One of the most important things I've learned is how much there is to learn, ② and how much I don't yet know.③ Sometimes I think how grateful I would be today if I had learned more back then about what really matters. In some respects that education was terribly narrow; the only thing I ever heard in school about Napoleon was that the United States made the Louisiana Purcha from him. ④(On a planet where some 95% of the inhabitants are not Americans, the only history that was thought worth teaching was American history. ) In spelling, grammar, the fundamentals of math, and other vital subjects, my teachers did a pretty good job. But there's so much el I wish they'd taught us.
2 ①Perhaps all the deficiencies have since been rectified. It ems to me there are many things (②often more a matter of attitude and perception than the simple memorization of facts) that the schools should teach — things that truly would be uful in later life, uful in making a stronger country and a better world, but uful also in making people happier. Human beings enjoy learning.③ That's one of the few things that we do better than the other species on our planet. ④Every student should regularly experience the "Aha!" — when something you never understood, or something you never knew was a mystery, becomes clear. 3 So here's my list:
Pick a difficult thing and learn it well. 4 The Greek philosopher Socrates said this was one of the greatest of human joys,and it is. While you learn a little bit about many subjects, make sure you learn a great deal about one or two. It hardly matters what the subject is, as long as it deeply interests you, and you place it in its broader human context. After you teach yourlf one subject, you become much more confident about your ability to teach yourlf another. You gradually find you've acquired a key skill. The world is changing so rapidly that you must continue to teach yourlf throughout your life. ①But don't get trapped by the first subject that interests you, or the first thing you find yourlf good at. ②The world is full of 长的英文wonders, and some of them we don't discover until we're all grown up. Most of them, sadly, we never discover.
Don't be afraid to ask "stupid" questions. 5 Many apparently naive inquiries like why grass is green, or why the Sun is round, or why we need 55,000 nuclear weapons in the world — are really deep questions. ① The answers can be a gateway to real insights. It's also important to know, as well as you can, what it is that you don't know, and asking questions is the way. To ask "stupid" questions requires courage on the part of the asker and knowledge and patience on the part of the answerer. ② And don't confine your learning to schoolwork. Discuss ideas in depth with friends. ③ It's much braver to ask questions even when there's a prospect of ridicule than to suppress your questions and become deadened to the world around you.
Listen carefully. 6 ①Many conversations are a kind of competition that rarely leads to discovery on either side. When people are talking, don't spend the time thinking about what you're going to say next. Instead, ②try to understand what they're saying, what experience is behind their remarks, what you can learn from or about them. Older people have grown up in a world very different from yours, one you may not know very well. They, and people from other parts of the country and from other nations, have important perspectives that can enrich your life.
Everybody makes mistakes. 7 Everybody's understanding is incomplete. Be open to correction, and learn to correct your own mistakes. The only embarrassment is in not learning from your mistakes. Know your planet. 8 It's the only one we have. Learn how it works. We're changing the atmosphere, the surface, the waters of the Earth, ①often for some short-term advantage when the long-term implications are unknown. ②The citizens of any country should have at least something to say about the direction in which we're going. ③If we don't understand the issues, we abandon the future.
Science and technology. 9 You can't know your planet unless you know something about science and technology. School science cours, I remember, concentrated on the unimportant parts of science, leaving the major insights almost untouched. The great discoveries in modern science are also great discoveries of the human spirit. For example, Copernicus showed that — far from being the center of the univer, about which the Sun, the Moon, the planets, and the stars revolved in clockwi homage — the Earth is just one of many small worlds. ①This is a deflation of our pretensions, to be sure, but it is also the opening up to our view of a vast and awesome univer. Every high school graduate should have some idea of the insights of Copernicus, Newton, Darwin, Freud, and Einstein. (Einstein's special theory of relativity, far from being obscure and exceptionally difficult, can be understood in its basics with no more than first-year algebra, and the notion of a rowboat in a river going upstream and downstream. )
Don't spend your life watching TV. 10 You know what I'm talking about. Culture. 11 ①Gain some exposure to the great works of literature, art and music. ②If such a work is hundreds or thousands of years old and is still admired, there is probably something to it. Like all deep experiences,③ it may take a little work on your part to discover what all the fuss is about. But once you make the effort, your life has changed; you've acquired a source of enjoyment and excitement for the rest of your days. ④In a world as tightly connected as ours is, don't restrict your attention to American or Western culture. Learn how and what people elwhere think. Learn something of their history, their religion, their viewpoints.
Compassion. 12 Many people believe that we live in an extraordinarily lfish time. But there is a hollowness, a loneliness that comes from living only for yourlf. Humans are capable of great mutual compassion, love, and tenderness. The feelings, however, need encouragement to grow. 13 Look at the delight a one- or two-year-old takes in learning, and you e how powerful is the human will to learn. ①Our passion to understand the univer and our compassion for others jointly provide the chief hope for the human race.
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