Uncontrolable
Member
- Location
- Tucson Az
I'd teach history or english.
What kind of history?
I'd teach history or english.
Whatever the curriculum called for, World, U.S., Regional, State, Boardwalks in Tombstone, whatever.
I agree. My back ground is Sociology and medicine. With medicine it is almost all memorizing facts and procedures with a smattering of, who did it and why, kind of history. In Sociology there is a much greater emphasis on the history of various theorists and their theories. In my discipline we thought about the nature of conscious. So we might have studied the history of religion based on how religious people view and respond to the world. Or, how does the average man respond to religion. Actually, there is a Sociological text titled "The Sociology of Religion".An element of history should be included in every subject - history of science, history of computing, of exploration including space exploration etc. My husband taught Engineering Science and the students had to research for themselves something from history of bridges, or bicycles etc To appreciate the present we need to know what it took to get us here.
Some bias is unavoidable, it's human nature. You have three hundred million people in a country, how many biases can you have? You have to have some standard, you can't teach everyone's opinion. That is, I suppose, why they say the victor gets to write the history of wars. If we didn't have a rough collective standard there would be no need to teach a subject, teach chaos instead, And I don't think we can teach the history off everything. We might throw it all in to a barrel and teach Bias to show that it colors every other facet of life. We're all different but we have to submit to some common goal.
Me, too. By talking books, do you mean 'books on tape or CD? If so, I'm trying to adjust to that format. Thanks for the conversation.History can be a wonderful subject. I think despite the bias.
At that time they had books mostly on tape. Now you can find a great many books on CD. There are also books available on flash drives that just plug into your computer. I am lucky in a way. Since I have become blind I get books for free. There are thousands of books I can listen to. Your local library should have a good collection of free books.Me, too. By talking books, do you mean 'books on tape or CD? If so, I'm trying to adjust to that format. Thanks for the conversation.
Again thanks for the comeback. I'm blind only in one eye but it has effected my reading, my eyes weep more my reading has slowed down, and I tire from reading more readily. but the change from reader to listener is not always an easy one unloosed forced on us. Enjoyed, take care.
I would teach painting or writing. And I too, want to know, Falcon, what is ESL??
I would love to teach a creative writing (poetry) class. Psychologist or not, in my heart, I think of myself as a poet first. Language continues to bring me great joy, and I would love to share that journey with others.
I used to teach music and I thought I might like being an English teacher. But at this point, I'd want to teach financial literacy and retirement planning.
My wife is blind in one eye. She reads between 3 and 5 library books/week. How she does it, I don't know. But, she certainly enjoys her reading... full sighted or not.Again thanks for the comeback. I'm blind only in one eye but it has effected my reading, my eyes weep more my reading has slowed down, and I tire from reading more readily. but the change from reader to listener is not always an easy one unloosed forced on us. Enjoyed, take care.
Your wife has likely become a faster reader with time. If she has the time to read she might read 500 to 800 or more pages in a day. I found I was a fast reader even with a text book. But, you must glean detail from a text and have to take notes, so even the fastest readers have to slow down. I stopped reading books because they started to bore me. When I discovered talking books the whole world changed for me. Talking books can be like a knowledge injection. You listen in 8 to 10 hours what it might have taken 2 eight hour days to read. Most people cannot devote that much time to it. You wife, if she reads her books with some retention, she is a fast reader indeed, but my hunch is that she never stops reading. So she spends two to three times the time that other people can spend on their reading. That is wonderful. I am spending a lot of time with senior forum and I try to get out of this place often as I can. You might become a fast book listener and may be able to challenge you wife to speed book contest.My wife is blind in one eye. She reads between 3 and 5 library books/week. How she does it, I don't know. But, she certainly enjoys her reading... full sighted or not.