Keeping Learning in Perspective of Life’s Big Picture

A Message to Students Who Say They Hate High School

Recently I wrote an article saying that algebra was useless and shouldn’t be taught in high school.

The hate mail that followed (written mostly by math teachers) was unbelievable. They accused me of being irrational and incapable of thought and stated that math teaches people to think. This is pretty funny because if math is supposed to teach one to think, as they argue, they might have looked me up and discovered that not only was I a math major in University, but I was also a professor of computer science.

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Of course, it is not only high school math I am against. I believe that every single subject taught in high school is a mistake. What I write here will infuriate teachers, but teachers are not my enemy. It isn’t their fault. They are cogs in a system over which they have no control. I believe there are many great teachers, and I believe that teaching and teachers are very important.

That having been said, in honour of the coming school year, I have decided to give students some ammunition. Here are most of the subjects you take in high school, listed one by one, with an explanation about why there is no point in taking them.

Chemistry:

A complete waste of time. Why? Do you really need to know the elements of the periodic table? The formula for salt? How to balance a chemical equation? Ridiculous. Most of the people who take chemistry in college, by the way, intend to be doctors. While there is chemistry a doctor should know, they don’t typically teach it in college. Why should you take chemistry? Simply because someone is making you. Otherwise don’t bother. You won’t remember a thing, except NaCl.

History: Yes, those who don’t remember history are doomed to repeat it. I guess no US president ever took history because they have all forgotten the lessons of the Vietnam war, the history of Iraq and the history of foreign incursions into Afghanistan. I once attended a class for Army officers at the Army War College in which the lesson being taught was that every single fight with Muslim- inspired troops has ended badly. This is history that is worth knowing, but that, of course, is not taught in high school. You may learn untrue facts about the Revolutionary War, the Civil War and World War II, all meant to teach that the U.S. is the best country in the world. Forget what they teach you in history. Read about it on your own if it interests you.

English: This is a subject which has its good points. There is exactly one thing worth paying attention to in English. Not Dickens, unless of course you like Dickens. Not Moby Dick, or Tennyson, or Hawthorne or Shakespeare, unless of course, you like reading them. What matters is learning how to write well. A good English teacher would give you daily writing assignments and help you get better at writing and speaking. By writing assignments, I don’t mean term papers. I mean writing about things you care about and learning to defend your arguments. Learning to enjoy reading matters as well but that would mean picking your own books to read and not having to write a book report. Lots of luck with that.

Biology: Now here is a subject worth knowing about. Too bad they won’t teach you anything that matters. Plant phyla? Amoebas? Cutting up frogs? It can’t get any sillier. What should you be learning? About your own health and your own body and how to take care of it. But they don’t teach that in biology. They teach some nonsense part of it in health class which is usually about the official reason that you shouldn’t have sex, whatever it happens to be this year.

Economics: This subject in high school is beyond silly. Professional economists don’t really understand economics. The arguments they have with each other are vicious, and when the economy collapses there are always a thousand explanations none of which will matter to a high school student. What should you be learning? Your personal finances. How to balance your cheque book. How much rent and food cost. How you can earn a living. What various jobs pay and how to get them. A high school student needs economic theory like he needs another leg.

Physics: Another useless subject, that could in fact be quite important if the right things were taught. To hit or throw a baseball a knowledge of physics is required. Oops. I meant the mind has to have an unconscious knowledge of physics. The formulas they teach in high school physics won’t help. To drive a car one needs knowledge of physics. Same deal. Nothing they teach in a physics course will help. But it really does matter that you understand why tyres skid in the rain or how a brake works or why looking at your target will help you throw a ball more accurately. We use physics every day of our lives, but the formulas they make you memorise and facts about that the earth’s rotation, and names of planets? Not so much. The Wright Brothers did not have any theory of flight by the way. They simply tinkered with stuff until their plane flew. That is called engineering. Trying stuff to see what works. The physicists came later and explained it. It didn’t help the Wright Brothers. Why don’t they teach engineering in high school? Because engineering wasn’t a subject at Harvard in 1892. (You could look it up.)

French: Another complete waste of time. Why? Two reasons. The first is that you cannot possibly learn a language any way other than being immersed in it and talking and listening and talking. In school they teach grammar rules and nonsense to memorise so that they can give you a test. My daughter could not get an A in English when we lived in France despite the fact that she was the only kid in the class who spoke English. Why? Because she didn’t know the grammar rules of English. The same thing happened when we came back to the U.S. She could speak perfect French (a year in France will do that) but still couldn’t get an A in French. Grammar is like physics formulas: Nice in theory but useless in practice, because the practical knowledge we use is not conscious knowledge.

The second reason is more subtle. School happens not to teach the French that people actually speak. No one says, “Comment allez- vous?” in France. They say, “Ca va?” But we don’t teach speaking so who cares how people actually speak? The same is true in the opposite direction as well. The French learn to say “good-bye” which no one actually says in English. We say “bye,” “see you,” and a million other things but rarely say goodbye, except maybe on the phone.

If you want to learn a language, immersion is the only way.
A couple of days ago an interview with me was published in a Barcelona newspaper. I say in this interview that the only way we can learn is by doing and to do that we must practice constantly. Schools rarely teach doing, mostly teaching abstract theories that will never matter to 99% of the population.
There was no outcry about this in Spain. Quite the opposite. The public seems to be genuinely sick of school in Spain. Sorry that is not the case in the U.S.

Learn that. Temporarily memorise nonsense if you want to graduate but have a proper perspective on it. Nothing you learn in high school will matter in your future life.

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Dr Roger Schank


Roger Schank PhD.
Roger Schank, Ph.D., is Chairman and CEO of Socratic Arts, a company that delivers Story-Centred Curricula to schools. He is also the Executive Director and founder of Engines for Education. Roger has served at multiple universities, including North-western, Yale and Standord. He is the founder of Cognitive Science Society and co-founder of the Journal of Cognitive Science. He has authored more than 125 arti-cles and 30 books. If you’d like to contact Professor Schank, visit the websites for Socratic Arts or Engines for Education.