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School is all about learning things, and the more you learn, the smarter you’ll be, right? Well, some don’t really agree that everything taught in schools is actually useful in life.

Folks on AskReddit have been listing and discussing things and topics that are taught in schools that are actually pretty, if not completely, useless given what you actually end up using in real life.

Reddit user u/highnrgy asked the lovely people of Reddit what’s the most useless thing they teach in school?, getting over 17,700 responses with nearly 35,000 upvotes on the post.

Bored Panda has gathered the best responses and turned it into a neat curated list below, so be sure to scroll through it and give your two cents on the topic in the comment section.

More Info: Reddit

#1

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group In my experience, the way gym and PE were taught were pretty useless because they never taught us how to train or improve our athletic abilities. It was just weeks of half heartedly playing basketball with minimal adult supervision, and then one day we had to run a mile and the coaches would go out of their way to humiliate anyone who couldn't just get up and run a mile under 10 minutes with no training or preparation. It put me off running and exercise in general for a long time.

evilcaribou , Alan Kotok Report

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#2

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group That your entire self worth is based off of a letter and score.

SnooHesitations3687 , Michael Pollak Report

#3

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group “Cheaters never prosper.” Yeah cheating is bad, but trust me, they prosper.

Paratrooperkid , J Yochem Report

#4

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group That classical literature is the end all be all of reading. I get some books have cultural significance, but that doesn't warrant a 6 week in depth analysis of a book kids can't relate to, with most being about challenges they will never face, culminating in an essay that's basically "I understood it" repeated over and over backed up by quotes.

If you want your kids to never touch a book in their lives ever again, THAT is how you do it.

RedDawnRose , Nenad Stojkovic Report

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NsG
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

And the only "correct" interpretation of a classical work is the one the teacher has the most interest in. Regardless of whether the author has anything to say on the matter (modern classics here obviously).

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#5

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group That learning how to pass tests is more important than actually gaining knowledge.

Ragtimedude77 , Marco Verch Professional Photographer Report

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LeighAnne Brown-Pedersen
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Ok…unpopular opinion, sometimes this one is needed. Like if you are good at X, but freeze during tests but need to pass a certification test for X, sometimes test taking skills are necessary, briefly.

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#6

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group That you have to "ignore" bullies and/or forgive them. In real outside world if you bully someone you will:

- Get slapped across the face
- Get kicked in your butt
- Fired from work Or
- Shunned and made fun of.

SilentZ0ne , Charles Nadeau Report

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Kate
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Or, sadly, promoted. We'd like karma to put bullies in their place in the real world, and we celebrate the rare times that happens, but they're the exception, not the rule.

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#7

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group This is going to sound stupid, but history the way it's taught is basically meaningless.

A long category of dates and events without context or real discussion. The vast majority of history is trivia, because the real story is the cyclical nature of events, the rise and fall of empires, the periods of enlightenment and advance and the reactionary times that bookend them.

You learn that there used to be this thing called "yellow journalism" but you don't learn that what kicked it off was the sudden availability and popularity of newspapers, and nobody draws the EXTREMELY OBVIOUS parallel to our modern blog driven media. If I told you that in the mid to late 1800s (when newsprint was blowing up) that it was extremely common for papers to blatantly copy each others stories with added editorial bias tailored to their viewers...Sounds a little familiar, doesn't it?

Drawing parallels between the robber barons of the late 1800s and the current ones. Drawing parallels between the labor movements of that era, and the ones that are growing again today. S!@#s relevant, and important to realize in context.

But no. Just memorize some f!@#$%g dates and names, so you'll have some s!@t to spout at trivia night later.

notagoodboye , Long Zheng Report

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Mary Rose Kent
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

So totally true. The book that turned me on to history was William Manchester’s brilliant *The Glory and the Dream* which came out in 1974 and covered American history from 1932 to 1972. Those years encompassed the Great Depression, the Dust Bowl, the rise of the industrial state, and was written as a series of events presented in chronological order, showing how one inexorably led to the other. And here and there a person, place, or thing would be highlighted in a small portrait...the Studebaker sticks in my brain as one of these portraits. I think the rise of unions might be in there. I think I’ve read everything he’s written. A World Lit Only By Fire is another great one. If you want to learn history as a series of stories, William Manchester is your go-to author.

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#8

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group "The bell doesn't dismiss you; I do."

Of course the bell dismisses you. What you're being prepared for, however, is a lifetime of bosses telling you that coming in 15 minutes before your shift, and staying 10 minutes after, doesn't count as overtime and doesn't need to be paid. That it's okay to violate that safety rule on-site because OSHA isn't paying you, I am, and the customer is waiting on you.

Basically, anytime an authority figure isn't following the rules they themselves set for everyone, you are being trained to accept that behavior in your adult life.

SweaterZach , The Man-Machine Report

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#9

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group I graduated in 1991 for context and, while living in Phoenix, they taught us square dancing in gym class. I must say though that the most useful skill that I was taught at that school that I use every single day is typing.

ZappaLlamaGamma , warrenski Report

#10

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group Sex and drug education. The entire lesson plan is:

"Just don't do it."

F!@#$%g bulls!@t.

Ghostspider1989 , romana klee Report

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#11

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group I feel like almost everything has some value, but I really really wished that they taught highschool classes on Operating Systems, Excel, and an introduction to programming and logic.

I learned it all in college, but Excel saved me a ton of time on homework. Programming played a much greater role than I could have imagined, and highschool left me unprepared for that.

Wahots , m.hawksey Report

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Robert T
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Well I did a course when I was 15-16 to learn Word Processing, Spreadsheets and simple Databases, simply to play with the computers. Don't laugh, but I got an 'F'! Mainly because it was assessed on typing accuracy and not my understanding of what I was using. I also didn't take the 3rd module, so the highest I could get was a 'D'. From 17-18 I did a Computing qualification which did actually involve programming, but sadly back in the 1980s, it was a case of teach-the-teacher - my programming skills were already way above what the course was teaching - but at least I got a piece of paper to say that I could do it. I then went on to do a degree in Computer Science. So much better for kids now, learning to program with Raspberry Pi's and the like.

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#12

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group In the U.S., probably the Pledge of Allegiance.

We did that every day from first grade through 12th grade. Let's say it took a minute per day. That's five minutes a week. Every 12 weeks, that's an hour. You're in school roughly 36 weeks a year, so that's 3 hours a year. Multiplied by 12 years and that's about 36 hours of your youth academic career spent talking to a flag.

HomelessCosmonaut , Fort Vancouver National Historic Site Report

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Emma Rodrigues
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3 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Everyone in my class just straight up refuses to do it, we just keep doing the warm up.

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#13

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group ‘You won’t have a calculator in your pocket in the real world!’

Yes, I know how do do math, I’m an engineer and I like math theory, I promise I’m not a brain dead mobile addict.

gaylurking , Pargon Report

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#14

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group The tongue/taste map. Not only useless, but incorrect.

Ravensqueak , Jeffrey Report

#15

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group The way the US public school system teaches it, Spanish. You learn it maybe half a year then forget it over the summer. You’d think with years of education we’d be better Spanish speakers but it’s essentially useless the way it’s taught.

Ferum_Mafia , Phil Fiddyment Report

#16

American history. For gawd's sake most americans can't find one other country on the map so why keep navel gazing, why not teach students about other countries, culture, and language? Met some guy in grad school who was doing his thesis on General Hooker's buttons. Why, just why?

LJRGUserName Report

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J P
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

All countries teach their own history. This is not an American problem. At least in US we were also taught world history.

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#17

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group They mostly taught us to ask permission in order to use the bathroom.

dumbinternetstuff , Cambodia4kids.org Report

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#18

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group I was taught that Columbus knew that the world was round, but everyone else thought it was flat. So, yeah... That.

High_5 , Public Domain Report

#19

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group The amount they teach shakespeare. Like, sure once is probably good, not every year grade 9 to 12.

Generallybadadvice , Public Domain Report

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Eve
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

OMG yes. In Canada it’s unending. But no Jane Austen when I went.

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#20

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group hizzoze said:
That hiding under your desk will keep you safe from bombs and tornadoes. (Yes I know what it's actually for, it's just always been a silly visual.)

vegdeg responded:
That wasn't the lesson you could have learned.

The real lesson was that people tend to panic, and panicking causes unpredictable and dangerous behavior. When you drill an action that makes a population feel like they have self control over a situation, they will tend to follow that.

Same as with patients and a disease - so often there is conflict between clinician and patient because the clinician will see it as the patient not being able to do anything (medically proven at least) - whereas the patient is looking for some agency, some self control over a situation, even if that is drinking carrot juice or whatever. This helps explain the multitude of holistic medicines and why they are popular - because there is always something you can do (or feel like there is) to have agency in a difficult situation.

As others have said - the lesson wasn't always literally the subject matter/what was being taught.

hizzoze , Joel Report

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ƒιѕн
Community Member
3 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Yes, always duck and cover when being overtaken by fast flowing lava.

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#21

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group That conduct grades matter. I have a friend whose child got a "needs improvement" conduct grade. WTF is that about? If her 8 year old is causing problems, address it then. Why wait 9 weeks and slip it onto the report card? My friend is also a teacher and completely agreed with me. I got plenty of "unsatisfactory" conduct grades in school and yet I still managed to get a college degree and have a career. Screw that nonsense.

aca901 , Michael Pollak Report

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Jeweled Dragon
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I was graded on "friendliness." I got " unsatisfactory" for several years. Well excuse me for being bullied every day and having major trust issues and social anxiety because of it. Damn positivity project.

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#22

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group They don't do it anymore, but back around 2000 in health class we all had to plan a wedding. Like, pair up and budget out a rental space, food, rings, etc.

Looking back: What. The. F@#k?

myheartisstillracing , Robert Kintner Report

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NsG
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Maybe the subject matter (a wedding) is a bit skewed, especially if it's repeated, but event planning such as this is a hugely important skill. We did a cookie business - come up with a recipe, work out prices, including overheads and advertising, put forward a business case for a loan (even though in reality it was our parents providing the materials). Then bake and sell and report back how successful we were. To be honest, I would have preferred the wedding planning as I was partnered with someone who could burn water!

Stephanie Did It
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

But not how to apply for a job, budget and manage expenses, balance a bank account, use credit, shop, buy a home or do taxes.

Kylie Mountain
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Sounds like someone thought they could combine the 'fake baby as birth control' concept with an exercise in personal budgeting, and came up with something that accomplished neither goal. Not knocking the general concept - I think schools should do a lot more to teach us how stuff like budgets and student loans work, but the execution on this attempt just makes it vaugely creepy. It wouldn't be hard to fix, either. You just ditch the wedding, with all its skeevy-feeling 'heteronormative sexual abstinence' implications, and say 'okay, you guys are roommates splitting the cost of an apartment and you have to budget for the two of you for a month. Go!'

Candia Lee
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I definitely prefer your "roommates" approach. Getting paired off for fake weddings could be cringy.

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Nia Loves Art
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I actually really like this. It teaches important skills like budgeting and weddings are a big money suck for a lot of people.

Don't Look
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I suspect that is home economics - something they didn't even have when I was in high school (1996-2000). It was decided that there was no time left in the curriculum so it was tossed.

Kylie Mountain
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We sort of had it in middle school, but it was only a semester, and the way our gifted program worked at that time was that you replaced some or all of the four single-semester classes (home ec, music, art and 'tech ed') with a seminar from the gifted program, so I never had to take it. Or music, or art. Tech ed was pretty good though.

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MaggieWest
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Sounds potentially useful, actually. Give kids a certain amount of money, let them plan the wedding. Then introduce the "How to buy a home" unit. What's that? Spent too much money on the wedding and don't have enough for that down payment? Life lesson learned!

CincyReds
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I think this maybe like for an accounting class. Like having a budget, and sticking it to it. WE got to pick what we wanted to plan and stick with a budget. I planned my dream vacation!!

Yehudit Hannah Cohn
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Well, clearly, they were trying to keep you from getting married too early, by introducing you to economic reality, bridezillas not withstanding.

Salty Wild Hair
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Family Living course is what they called it. I remember learning to plan a healthy meal, shop for it, and cook the meal. Field trips to the grocery stores to learn unit pricing and how to ask the butcher for proper cuts of meats instead of just buying whatever was there. We also learned to sew, housekeeping, laundry, and basic home repairs. We learned how to do resumes, interview for a job, budget, and calculate taxes. We had a segment on all financial stuff, from credit cards to investing. A homework assignment was to balance your checkbook and create a portfolio in a fake stock market. Then we did the life planning part where there were segments on sexual education, health, and relationships. This is where we planned the wedding as described above. And later, EGG BABIES!!! hahah I still use the sewing, cooking, and much of the financial information I learned. I would have never known how to cook even basic things as I did not have this at home growing up.

Brenda Spagnola
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We had to "buy" stocks plan for retirement. In 9th grade. All forgotten

Rei
Community Member
3 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Well, why not? It teaches you realistic market prices for stuff and organisational skills. Planning a wedding is quite a task, really, speaking from experience. It would also at least help most people preparing for their own future wedding, wouldn't it? It could also be a future career for others.

Kendra Miller
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

It was still happening every semester at my high school 2008-2012 (Canada).

David Lavers
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I always though David was the lamb of God. A love stuck fool has no place in nature. I am a David if you didn't get that.

That_One_Frog
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I honestly really want to do this. I love stuff like that where you have to come up qith stuff.

nothingisreal
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We did that too, but it was in a life skills class. We also learned how to balance a check book, basics of cooking, and some parenting skills.

John Dilligaf
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

how to budget money, how to make a plan to respond to a projected event, how to estimate needs vs resources available. Lots of learning going on here

Johnny U
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We had to create and run a small business. Both are real life skills. Nothing to complain about.

Lara Verne
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Sound pretty weird, but it might teach you usefull skills, that you can use later. I would choose to plan something else and not wedding, though.

Robin Roper
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Wedding no - but yes, learning how to budget is important. Learning to do this with another person is important as well - almost everyone lives with someone else so they need to learn cooperation and compromise.

A Jones
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Me trying to avoid the project: "The couple got their marriage certificate at the courthouse in secret as their families have a feud with each other."

Kanuli
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I wish they taught us any planning ahead really. Budgeting, and so on. Luckily I managed to learn this by myself, my 60k in debt brother didn’t.

Bexxxxx
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Event planning is a great skill to have. Maybe they just picked the easiest subject they could come up with, but sometimes these “wtf” projects in school actually have life lessons.

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#23

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group My biology teacher was supposed to teach us evolution, but had us memorize a bunch of birds in the process?

A pop quiz would be him walking into the classroom with a boombox, hitting play, and he'd play some chirping noises that he recorded himself. He'd ask us to write down the scientific name of the bird. Or he'd show us a drawing of a bird and tell us to write down the common name of it. It was a mix.

But that's it. There wasn't any question about evolution on the quiz at all. It was entirely about memorizing birds.

This was the class that broke me. When we studied the cell, I got a 97 for the semester. When we studied evolution, I felt like a dog jumping through a hoop on command and decided I wasn't going to memorize birds. F@#k you, flunk me.

I would leave the quizzes blank on purpose.

aintnufincleverhere , Phil Fiddyment Report

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#24

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group I grew up in Massachusetts, so maybe this is skewed because of the proximity to early settler and revolutionary war sites, but EVERY year in history, from like 1st grade to 12th, we learned the same stuff on the early settlers to revolutionary war. That would be the majority of all history classes. Yes, it’s very important history (and I do thoroughly enjoy history and that time period in particular) but when it’s all that’s covered and everything else is glossed over, it doesn’t feel like we learned as much as we should have. It was also always taught through rose colored glasses.

whatsurgentsays , Tony Fischer Report

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Jaguarundi
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I didn't learn about the "Spanish American War" until I was out of school and an adult. CT schools.

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#25

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group They taught competitive cup stacking in my elementary school. Still have no idea why. This was in central Canada, but clearly it was widespread across a lot of North America.

smango19 , CJ Sorg Report

#26

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group Hi, language teacher in the uk.

This is more what they don't teach but....

They often teach the rise of the British empire but seldom about the fall. Which leads students with a very British centric approach to a lot of their studies. I'm aware of this in languages but I've seen this in history, RE and even English language. I'm not blaming the teachers or the students, the curriculum is f!@#$d. But as a result from this I hear way too often "learning X language is pointless, everyone speaks English!"

MagentaPyskie , Peter Mackey Report

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#27

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group For me it was social studies, specifically politics that only really focuses on the 50s-70s and ignores everything else and tries to use the period of time where people literally couldn't lose money on anything and use it to justify trickle down economics of today's society as a good blueprint for running a country.

MyWaterDishIsEmpty , Alan Levine Report

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Leo Domitrix
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I'm too old for this, but I can totally see how this would work. "Oh, see that nice way it worked that we totally skewed for our trickle-down economic fantasy?"

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#29

My 1st grade teacher told us if you go outside and stand really still, you can feel the earth rotating...

FixFalcon Report

#30

Three simple words... "Five paragraph essays."

English being the only class that is/was required during all four years of high school, we had it constantly drilled into our heads that it was the only way to submit short papers and that we would need to perfect the application if we wanted to succeed in collage.

First day of Comm 101 in collage while the professor was going over the syllabus, and that everything needed to be submitted in MLS format, someone asked what MLS was. The professor stopped, "Let me say this to all of you that graduated high school last year and are just starting your collegiate lives... if ANYONE turns in a paper in five paragraph format you will fail the assignment."

Found out from everyone I knew that was taking other professors for English or Communication classes that they got told the same thing.

InfiniteChanges Report

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#31

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group My secondary school made us all take religion up to GCSE level, that was so f!@#$%g pointless especially when you had limited choices on what subjects you could take.

Ginja_101 , William Murphy Report

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DennyS (denzoren)
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We had this until form 3...every Tuesday afternoon. We would split into different groups. For primary school, everyday 8am to 9am.

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#32

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group Memorizing the specific names for groups of animals (gander of geese, murder of crows, etc.)

I knew some ESL friends that had to memorize them for English classes.

Cromanti , OiMax Report

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Claire Stanfield
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

These sorts of idioms are helpful in an ESL sense. It's a little troubling to hear 'murder' outside of the context of actual killing, better to know that it has more than one meaning.

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#33

We were living in south Jersey at the time the Eagles went to the super bowl in 2004. And my elementary school taught us the eagles fight song.

Had a whole school assembly by grade level to teach us the Philadelphia Eagles fight song and we weren’t dismissed til we all knew it.

ellen_water-melanin Report

#34

I still have yet to encounter algebra in the real world despite my math teacher’s insistence that it would be something I’d use every day. Coming up on my tenth anniversary of the last time I’ve even seen an algebraic equation let alone use one.

Impossible-Mix-8882 Report

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Claire Stanfield
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

If you've ever had an amount of cash or in your account and tried to figure out how much you could buy with it, congrats, algebra.

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#35

We had to sift through owl pellets (aka owl puke) to find and reassemble shrew skeletons. I guess if I’m ever called on to identify a shrew mandible, I will delete this post.

Hero_of_Thyme81 Report

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Eve
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

That’s real science though. It’s probably super boring, but that’s what scientists actually do. So at least you learned you don’t want to be a wildlife biologist. 🤷🏻‍♀️

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#36

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group According to my son, apparently everything...

KoalaDeluxe , Yesiamsebi Report

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Mary Rose Kent
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3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Your son needs a teacher who’s really committed to conveying the excitement of whatever subject is being taught.

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#37

30 Things Taught In School That Raise The Question “What Was The Point?” As Shared By People In This Online Group Cursive. I have never used it outside of signing my name.

onthetrn , Mike Finn Report

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Guy MacGregor
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Funny. Everyone I know write in cursive. It's just the standard way of writing. And I have lived in different countries. Belgium, France, Greece, Sweden... Cursive every time.

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#38

MLA formatting

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Helen Haley
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Uuuugh MLA formatting. What is their obsession with this? Where, outside of academia, is this really useful?

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#39

UnlicencedAccountant said:
I before E, except after C.

SICRA14 responded:
Now off to s*cie*nce class

LuigiTheMaster also responded:
With Mr. *Kei*th

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Lightningstar
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I before E except after C and when sounding like A as in neighbor and weigh and on weekends and holidays and all throughout May and you're always gonna be wrong no matter WHATCHU SAY

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