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The End Of Education Summary

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Sugata Mitra, a TED prize winner and Professor of Educational Technology at Newcastle University, England, once exposed a sad truth about our educational system: “We cannot continue teaching with the methods of the 19th century and hope to prepare our children for the 21st century.” Twenty-first century students, like myself, agree with Mitra as nineteenth-century teaching methods often feel suffocating. Most often, we have to sit impatiently in a confined traditional classroom and mindlessly stare at the board for hours. In addition to typical 7 hours spent in school, we have to laboriously endure through an average of 4 hours of homework, innumerable community service hours, and insufferable extracurricular activities. As a result, a whopping 98 percent of students said they were bored in school according to a survey of more than 81,000 students in 110 high schools across 26 states by Indiana University’s High School Survey of Student Engagement (HSSEE) (Bryner, Jeanna.).
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