onesteptwostep
Junior Hegelian
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- Dec 7, 2014
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A very interesting and insightful take.
That's what happens when you stop using logic.The problem is that K-12 education in the US has gone down the drink.
You have to convince people that they want to be logical, before they would be willing to change the system.So that needs to be fixed before any discussion on college would make any sense.
Are you guys able to get credit over there?
The problem is that K-12 education in the US has gone down the drink.
So that needs to be fixed before any discussion on college would make any sense.
Yes, people are stupider today than they were 50 or 100 years ago.
The problem is that K-12 education in the US has gone down the drink.
So that needs to be fixed before any discussion on college would make any sense.
Yes, people are stupider today than they were 50 or 100 years ago.
Agree your education system is broken, but are you sure people are stupider?
The general trend in IQ in the USA is remarkably positive (though this trend is possibly in decline now?), with scores across the board being at least one entire standard deviation higher than 100 years ago (and as high as two).
If someone scored today as low as the average 100 years ago, they would likely be diagnosed with a cognitive disability. Likewise, if the average person time-traveled back to 1922, it would be a real-life idiocracy scenario.
That's what happens when you stop using logic.The problem is that K-12 education in the US has gone down the drink.
You have to convince people that they want to be logical, before they would be willing to change the system.So that needs to be fixed before any discussion on college would make any sense.
As I said in @Animekitty's thread, if someone is neurodivergent, then an IQ test is not going to be a good metric for intelligence. As such, it puts the whole validity of IQ tests into question as far as measuring intelligence is concerned.
People certainly had more common sense back then.
I agree with the question.Agree your education system is broken, but are you sure people are stupider?
I gather that's the general understanding of the Flynn Effect. But that is what we've been told. In science, we go by evidence.The general trend in IQ in the USA is remarkably positive (though this trend is possibly in decline now?), with scores across the board being at least one entire standard deviation higher than 100 years ago (and as high as two).
If someone scored today as low as the average 100 years ago, they would likely be diagnosed with a cognitive disability. Likewise, if the average person time-traveled back to 1922, it would be a real-life idiocracy scenario.