…if any? » Essays

Some thoughts on Education

I’m taking French classes at the moment, preparing myself for a bachelor in computer science taught primarily in French. It’s been a while since I was last sitting in a classroom being educated and it’s not exactly easy to adjust myself to the situation.

I’ve been having a real job with real responsibilities for a while and it strikes me how different the approach of education versus work is. In a typical classroom situation, we each get a copy of an excersise sheet to practice some particular grammatical rule or subset. We then all answer identical questions with hopefully identical answers until the teacher stops us and we each give an answer or two. She then, corrects it if it’s wrong, and proceeds to the next person if it isn’t. We might talk a little further about a specific grammatical rule afterwards, and there is a possibility for us to ask any questions regarding the topic we might have. Usually nobody asks about anything.

At work if I needed to learn something new, the situation was reversed. Instead of sitting in my seat, waiting for somebody to teach me what I need, I would usually try to judge the situation at hand and figure out what I needed to know to solve the problem. To attain that knowledge it would be up to me to look for it in the right places or ask somebody competent, and when I found something relevant I would have to try my best to apply it to my particular situation by trial and error.

To me the main difference between the two scenarios is how I at the language class passivly receives the same knowlegde as everybody else, why I in a work situation actively try to find the specific knowlegde that I need. There are of course many differences between solving a particular coding problem and learning another language, but I can’t help to wonder why a voluntary language class is based around an learning method where I have no say in my own learning.

If we all were perfect clones with similar capabilities and equal needs, then it would make sense, but we aren’t. In fact we are quite an add bunch from around Europe with different backgrounds in French and different needs and expectations for the course. Personally I speak French very well but couldn’t spell if my life depended on it, while many in my class has endured years of writing in French classes. Wouldn’t it be an advantage if we, instead of filling out the same worksheets, actually used each other and the teacher as a resource we could draw on to take responsibility for our own learning. Would that be impossible?

I don’t want to be promoting pure educational anarchy, but what I imagine is a situation where the teacher reviews our individual needs, provides tools, projects and knowlegde to help us achieve them, and makes sure that we take use of our collective knowlegde as a class. To make the time spent feel worthwhile the whole deal could possibly be packed up in a project that each person or seperate groups present in the end. This way the teaching is suddenly in our own hands, and we would get just as much out of our education as we put in it.

I suspect that when students are taught to passively receive knowlegde instead of actively gaining it, they will most likely end up doing the exact same thing in real life. I think that’s a shame, especially because it means I’ll be sitting through lots of boring lectures in the weeks to come.


Salobreña

In a couple of weeks I’ll be moving out of Salobreña. It’s been around 7 months since I moved here, and however short that might be, I know I wont forget this stay anytime soon. This town has a way etching itself into my memory with it’s Andalusian charm.

It all started last year when I by chance got a programming job in a quiet pueblo 45 minutes south of Granada in the Spanish province Andalusia. Having formerly lived in Toulouse, southern France, I longed to get back to mild climate, and relaxed lifestyle of southern Europe.

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What makes a good concert?

This question went through my head a couple of times during Roskilde Festival, where I had the pleasure of seeing my fair share of concerts, both huge and minuscule. From this empirical basis I can quite clearly conclude that the bigger the concert is, the more likely it is to suck. No matter how good the music or artist is.

To understand the conclusion, it’s in place to think about what going to a live concert actually gets you as opposed to sitting in your comfortable home listening to a studio record.

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Helpless and Naïve

I don’t know about Wall-E. It’s well done and beautiful and funny and stuff, but It still makes me cringe with all this cuteness.

So what could I expect, watching a kids movie and all? not much I guess, but still… Just let me ask this question out loud:

Why does the good guy in kids movies so often have to be helpless and naïve?

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Minimalism

There is a fancy wave of minimalism sweeping over the internet at the moment. It’s based on an idea that instead of littering pages with menus and banners and widgets and the like, we leave only the essential to be displayed. Off with all the crap and in with the stuff people are actually viewing.

Of course any purists would take this fad to the extreme and remove content as well (check out perdu.com, purple.com or tired.com for a couple of great examples), but instead of going all fundamentalist on the idea, I figured it would be more appropriate to view the whole process as a balance between form and function with a central focus on content. To figure out where that balance was, I let myself inspire by a couple of interesting blogs and articles

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Hypocrisy is overrated.

I don’t get it. Why is it such a surprise that people don’t do what they say?

As if it were any news that politicians lie, that corporations earn money and that human beings are primates driven by emotional responses. But nevertheless self righteous indignation arises every time it happens.
Aren’t it we raising the bar uncomfortably high for our fellow man, when we think he should live his life by the same bullshit ethics he is raised to believe in?

When we are taught to act in manners that conflict with who we are, and are shunned upon if we daresay differently, it can’t really be anything else than blatantly obvious that ‘a hypocrite’ is the perfect definition of modern man. And yet being a hypocrite is just as sinful as all of the reasons why you are one.

So answer this; isn’t ultimately every accusation of hypocrisy in itself hypocrisy?


I'm saved

My life hasn’t been the same since I found the road to nirvana through ever increasing consumption.

The years wasted on worries and insignificant problems are now long gone, and ahead lies a future blessed in the nature of the purchase. A future where the small dull realities I used to face in my waking hours will be replaced by grand illustrious schemes granted to me one transaction at a time.

So brother, why walk through rain and dust, when sun is shining above you reflected by billboards and neon. Let the rays enlighten you, and be a part the dream you so stubbornly refuse.

Through consumption you too can forget. Through consumption you too will feel the light shine brighter. You too will learn to love the smell of a newly unpacked product, and you too will learn to yearn for more.

The transaction is our manifestation. Therein lies our time, our choise, our identity. What we buy is what we are, and what we are is what we buy. We are one with our consumption defining our existence on this planet through the products we own, and we would never have it any differently. In the transaction the dream of the product becomes one with ourselves, and the path to nirvana lies straight ahead.

When you buy to live, you live to buy.


An essay about errors and why you should make a lot of them

Our society is based on errors. We all make them now and then and if we didn’t we would never learn anything.

Some people have a knack of making gigantic errors all the time, while others tend to safeguard their chances a little more. They play it safe and never really get the hang of doing something wrong.

It’s my firm believe that the day we look back on life the universe and everything with conclusive eyes, we will find that it’s always the people making most errors who’ve come furthest. Read more…


Global Warming for the Rainforests

Let’s start with the facts:

All rainforests on earth are situated along equator, the only place on earth where the climate is humid and hot enough to support them.

With global warming we have an unique opportunity to raise the temperature of the earth, increasing the water evaporation and thus potentially increasing the areas of earth capable of supporting the rainforests. (Or in worst case bringing those areas up north.)

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6 reasons why Democracy sucks

I don’t condone dictatorships or tyranny, but I don’t think democracy is the perfect government either. Instead of blindly accepting it as the only way a country can be lead, I think it’s important to become more aware of the flaws that exist in the modern idea of democracy.

This list is actually provoked by a new proposed amendment in Danish anti-terror-laws stating that outspoken opponents of democracy will not be allowed to enter the country. Well banish me, because here are 6 reasons why democracy sucks: Read more…