Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
Education: UK
""David G. Bell"" wrote in message .. . On Friday, in article "Jim Webster" wrote: Arts degrees in the not so distant past did prove a certain accomplishment in the ability to think; to research a problem and find, present, and judge the possible answers. My own recollection is that there was a shift in what was expected at different stages in the system. O-level was about knowing the book solutions, whether science or arts. A-level began to bring in the problem of picking the right approach from several choices. And I am not at all sure that anyone could have blathered their way through a decent Arts degree. The blather would at least have had to be a properly-written essay. rather than the near-stream-of-consciousness which fills the modern media. Having said that, and while still wondering if enough was done at my school to teach the skills of structuring an essay, it is perhaps possible to pick up a lot of the skills of an Arts graduate by some sort of osmosis. Read the good stuff, whether Gibbon or Pratchett. And anyone who thinks that there is nothing about writing which cannot be learnt from Terry Pratchett's work probably hasn't noticed how it floats in a sea of literary reference. At its best the arts degree did teach the student how to write and structure an intelligent and readable essay and gave a clarity of thought. It is probable that there are still courses out there that do it, but when you look at what is produced at times then we might as well stick them all in historical philosophism courses at wallaballoo university and have done with it. Jim Webster |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Education tools | Plant Science | |||
Potrait of the president for secular and atheist education in TN.. tha court! | Ponds | |||
Sodium Thiosulphate education | Ponds | |||
OT Education was new Harry Potter film | Ponds | |||
Education: UK | sci.agriculture |