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steele2 on scored.co
18 days ago4 points(+0/-0/+4Score on mirror)3 children
Epstein is somewhat correct.
Scandinavia countries show children cartoons only in their original English language, which results in children learning English [second language] rapidly.
Also, Kanji isn't hard to learn with or without titties.
I think the insidious thing here is that he's talking about programming kids, not education them.
NGL, I've thought about making games like this for years and even made a few prototypes. Nothing inherently wrong with it.
But actually learning things is only *half* of education, the other half is teaching students *how* to learn. A (good) human teacher, even in a room full of kids, is able to help them get over blocks, where to find resources, or even provide specific information they need to understand larger concepts; in short, all the skills they'll need to learn things for themselves as an adult.
Video games can't do that. They can test problem solving skills and drill facts but the way they do that is specific to games, or even the game itself; it doesn't apply to anything else.
This is part of the whole "raise kids in pods with only the specific skills they need to serve the 150,000 elite" plan.
17 days ago-4 points(+0/-0/-4Score on mirror)2 children
and how has this served them? last I checked all of europe is full of soyboys and fake countries. while us 'dumb' single-language USA men rule you and tell you what to do. stop lying to yourself. check the scoreboard. focus on what actually matters and not what strokes your ego.
Scandinavia countries show children cartoons only in their original English language, which results in children learning English [second language] rapidly.
Also, Kanji isn't hard to learn with or without titties.
NGL, I've thought about making games like this for years and even made a few prototypes. Nothing inherently wrong with it.
But actually learning things is only *half* of education, the other half is teaching students *how* to learn. A (good) human teacher, even in a room full of kids, is able to help them get over blocks, where to find resources, or even provide specific information they need to understand larger concepts; in short, all the skills they'll need to learn things for themselves as an adult.
Video games can't do that. They can test problem solving skills and drill facts but the way they do that is specific to games, or even the game itself; it doesn't apply to anything else.
This is part of the whole "raise kids in pods with only the specific skills they need to serve the 150,000 elite" plan.
The cartoons are just there to help what's going to happen anyways.
You are too edgy or stupid to waste my time on.