February 27th, 2008, 12:12 PM
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#14 (permalink)
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Elite Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Sittin' Here In Limbo
Posts: 8,487
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sputnik
i disagree. i wasn't alive for the french revolution, ancient rome or world war II but i had to study those subjects pretty thoroughly and they sank in pretty well. it all depends on how something is taught - again, if you're only given dates and names to memorise and are just taught random events without putting them in context, then yeah, you'll forget it the minute the test is over, but if you're taught things with an analytical approach, and are shown how these events are relevant and important even today and helped shape modern society, it will create more awareness.
the french revolution was a key moment in the shaping of modern societies, the napoleonic code is still in place in lots of countries, most of our legal systems are derived from roman law, and the consequences of world war II can still be felt today. you can't understand the present without studying the past.
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Because what's past is prologue- William Shakespeare
Of course, your average teen of today would have trouble telling me who Shakespeare is.
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