Examples?
One of the biggest things I learned in school was open mindedness -- how to listen to an argument or somebody else's belief in the context it's presented in, and to support/debate it. That's something that's extremely important.
I also learned extreme time management skills -- I was far more busy in university than I've ever been since, especially in the first couple years. I discovered that I had absolutely no free time for awhile, and learned to deal with it.
That appears to be lacking at my university. If anything, I've learned very biased (left) positions on issues, and have classes that are arranged so that it generally does not matter if I attend, aside from test dates.
You might call me out on my leftist comment, and I'd generally agree, but I have one professor who
does conveniently omit facts from cases (I generally take law related classed) that twist the _entire_ meaning of the case. She is so biased in what she teaches it surprises me (and I', not usually too surprised on campus, because I know the generally population leans left).
One of the biggest things I learned in school was open mindedness -- how to listen to an argument or somebody else's belief in the context it's presented in, and to support/debate it. That's something that's extremely important.
Something no one on this forum can understand!
Crazed seems to come to mind in this argument
Actually, I'm very much so the most open minded person I know. I argue hard-right here, and hard-left at my truck forums, but pretty moderate at my gun site. I argue for the pure enjoyment of argument. I'm a very pragmatic person.
I think Obama's best policy is his health insurance proposition. It makes sense. It's very much like the french system. I love the french health system (yes, I just said I like something french)
Examples?
One of the biggest things I learned in school was open mindedness -- how to listen to an argument or somebody else's belief in the context it's presented in, and to support/debate it. That's something that's extremely important.
That's basically among the only things I got from high school that I actually value. And I've gained a new way of thinking about more practical issues which is very pragmatic/simple... It works for engineering, somehow.
I can safely say that's something I didn't get from highschool -- from highschool, I learned how to listen to authority, do what I was told, answer the way the teachers wanted you to answer, don't argue with the teachers, don't question authority, etc (those are all kind of the same thing, but they're the opposite of open mindedness)
high school taught me jack shit, I didnt pay attention because I was too bored.
University taught me that "everyone lies to you." I'm skeptical of what everyone tells me. Unless I see basic & hard facts infront of me, I'm going to second guess what I'm told.