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Depends on the teacher, really.
I agree with you to some degree on that point, actually. A student teacher filled in for the professor in my college Psychology class today. As opposed to learning lots of interesting stories, we are now learning actual material that will go on the quizzes. As well, I would not be surprised if this student teacher is on the autism spectrum.
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I've learned math almost exclusively from textbooks
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It's nice to come across someone else who reads textbooks for fun
There's a MC68000 Assembler language book I want to get my hands on. Also, I have checked out a Geography textbook and read that for fun. I'm thinking about checking that out again, since I love its postwar, Cold War era writing style. I paraphrase from this book:
In Soviet Russia, agricultural output rivals that of the United States so the United States better do something! In Soviet Russia, the government controls everything and the individual is destroyed in the name of the state! Also, not just looking at the stylistic writing, I find it interesting to read information that is now truly quite the opposite:
China has very little manufacturing--what little factories it did have were shut down after the Boxer Rebellion--and is a largely agricultural nation; however, since the Communists took control, their government has become intent on becoming industrialized. In the American South, after the Civil War negroes remained on the fields, and poor whites moved to the hills, [so they are hillbillies,] where they became further economically depressed.
Last edited by hyperbolic on 19 Oct 2006, 6:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.