Smoke
Ignore-Amus
had some fun today, life is way too busy to spend with this place. Lifes much richer than a tree.....Go start one. I bet Smoke will come and post in it. That it what he wants to see. The trees!
had some fun today, life is way too busy to spend with this place. Lifes much richer than a tree.....Go start one. I bet Smoke will come and post in it. That it what he wants to see. The trees!
Awwh- I am happy to hear from you though.had some fun today, life is way too busy to spend with this place. Lifes much richer than a tree.....
Thank youAwwh- I am happy to hear from you though.
You think people become 'mindless drones' when they don't have unnecessary difficulties and struggles while learning things like say their electronic engineering degree?
Maybe they will come back if someone starts a new "Is Bonsai an Art" thread... (funny how much debate that always stirred when the answer seems so simple.)It is the nature of the Internet and life. I don't doubt that half of the people who were members here the first five years don't even keep bonsai any longer. Or they get tired of the arguments, or repeating the same content over and over, or any number of other annoying things that come with an Internet forum. That said, the art of bonsai is almost uniquely well-suited towards a forum format - because you can have threads that last for years, if not decades. And I have always felt that this site plays a unique role as a springboard into the art form - and as a conversion path to get people to go from a Home Depot mallsai to taking an intensive with Boon. Heck, some of the members here have gone on to apprenticeships in Japan. But at the end of the day it IS a social platform, and many of the people who come here are often just here for the camaraderie. I still learn things here every day - it keeps me hopping. The most recent - how to get a tree DNA tested at the University of Utah
Great way to start a pissing contest.Start a thread for it. Seriously. That would be fun to watch. Let's see everyones' four or five best trees.
You think people become 'mindless drones' when they don't have unnecessary difficulties and struggles while learning things like say their electronic engineering degree?
they don't have unnecessary difficulties and struggles while learning things like say their electronic engineering degree?
unless you want a society of drones that dont think for themselves
It depends on what you mean by "unnecessary difficulties and struggles."
I think there is a difference between memorizing then regurgitating everything out of the book and lectures to pass the class and learning through actual experience and critical thinking.
I think there is a difference between memorizing then regurgitating everything out of the book and lectures to pass the class and learning through actual experience and critical thinking. Parroting everything out of the book and lectures only gets you so far and its debatable as to how much is actually learned.
The best way to learn is to create a safe space . . .
Well that wasn't really the argument, was it? You realize the whole 'we are spoon feeding people' is a straw man? And that saying that "society of drones that don't think for themselves" is absurd in itself.
Did such a society ever exist? Care to give an example?
It wasn't an argument about passive vs active learning. It was one of tough love and blood, sweat and tears vs learning being too easy.
Maastricht University learning is quite controversial because it is also a cost-saving measure of just putting a bunch of students inside a room with a stack of paper make them study by themselves, without teachers to inspire them.
Additionally, constant group work also has issues as some students get a free ride and learn very little. In a way, this mirrors how the real world works as well, I guess.
We already know how to best teach students. The problem is, it is too expensive to do so. The whole stick about students becoming brainless, not thinking for themselves, that's as old as the Greeks and Romans, and in practice is never really an issue.
I think Germany and India are very known for their more passive learning traditions, where hundreds of people just sit and listen to a lecture.
The best way to learn is to create a safe space, have a good expensive inspiring teacher with the students as often as you can, then chunk knowledge into easily digestible bits and spoon feed it to them. And then challenge them to solve problems, be creative and do something by themselves that is fun with the knowledge that they just learned. Problem is, this is too expensive. Especially when hands on experience means a student works on an expensive bonsai together with a bonsai master, or works on expensive scientific equipment or meaningful samples, together with a scientist with good teaching skills.
Giving students a textbook they won't read, then making them listen in a huge lecture hall with hundreds of people to 2 hour lectures with one way communication only, then giving them a dry exam is not good teaching.
Neither is dividing students in groups, give them a case study, ask for a deliverable that can be evaluated, give them a PhD candidate tutor to supervise them, give them a tutor space to meet, use a computer, access the internet, then have the students rate each other's work at the end, and have a teacher only sign off on the grade at the end. Both are cheap. Both are bad teaching methods all by themselves. Both are used a lot.
Anyway, cryptic posts may be fun to post here. And no one is obliged to hand out free teaching here. So if you think it is fun to be cryptic, no one is going to object. But don't say it is good teaching 'because I had a hard time learning so others should have a hard time learning as well'.
And what people like Joe Harris and Ryan Neil had to endure in Japan is not healthy. When you are a grown ass man and you have to cry because they make things so hard and because what you are made to do makes no sense, something is wrong.
Bonsai isn't some Navy seal training where you try to make your apprentices quit. It is nice that they have fond memories of it now and that they feel it was a spiritual experience of some sort. But them talking about how many Japanese apprentices were there one day, then suddenly quit after being there for many years because they couldn't take it anymore, that doesn't make a lot of sense to be honest.
The fact that in the last 5 to 10 years, people seem more inclined to believe conspiracy theories and what see and read on social media rather than actual evidence indicates to me that critical thinking is a lost skill and we are becoming more a society of drones.
Sorry if that's too cryptic for you but otherwise would result in going down a rabbit hole we don't want to venture into.
So let's just leave it at that please
Teaching styles are what they are. In the end, it is not the teacher. It is the student. Motivated students learn in any environment. They read, they talk to others, they experiment and learn from mistakes and disasters (I've had a few of those). They are hungry and determined to find things out.
I can't speak for Glaucus, but my idea of a safe learning space is one of mutual respect. The best learning experiences I've had were with teachers who gave respect and therefore were respected, while the worst experiences were with teachers who demanded respect but gave none.What do you mean when you say to create a safe space? I'm not aware of the existence of any classroom that isn't an extraordinarily safe space, relative to the degree of safety of the surrounding community. Well, except maybe the schools caught in the middle of a war zone, but at that point, they cease to function as schools. For that reason, I assume you're using it in the "woke" sense of the term, meaning something like, "a place where students can be themselves without being challenged about their sense of identity." Is that correct?
Mutual respect on the Internet? Um, prolly not...and FWIW, one of the best teachers I ever had was one who demanded respect, but was stingy with returning it. If you're looking for a 'safe' space, the Internet ain't it. Also FWIW, in-person, one-on-one lessons hardly ever have overbearing teachers. Quite the opposite.I can't speak for Glaucus, but my idea of a safe learning space is one of mutual respect. The best learning experiences I've had were with teachers who gave respect and therefore were respected, while the worst experiences were with teachers who demanded respect but gave none.
SO yes, good schools are woke and bad schools are not. Everything has to be 'woke', btw. Don't let people tell you there is a woke ghost acound the corner about to grab you.
So the 'personal responsbility through more education and critical thinking' won't ever work.