• tim wood
    9.3k
    It seems a reasonable observation that philosophy is always about learning. But neither learning - nor teaching - is easy, notwithstanding that it sometimes seems easy, or that some people think it's easy.

    The idea of this thread is that we restrain ourselves from theorizing about either learning or teaching, but instead briefly describe learning experiences we've had, to the end of allowing others to read them and draw from them what lessons they may on both learning and teaching.

    Both learning and teaching because we're always already both learners and teachers - of ourselves if no one else, but usually of more people than we might imagine.

    I'll start with two experiences. 1) In the third grade I had to create a report on the heart. To do this I had to recreate in my mind, so I could represent it in drawings, text, and speech what the heart is, what it's for, and how it works. In this act of "mind-on" recreation I learned a good deal that I have never forgot, and that more than half a century ago.

    2) When I was four, I stuck my finger in a live electric light socket. I learned from that a lesson I've also never forgot, and that needed no repetition.
  • Jake Tarragon
    341
    My university education (maths degree) consisted of rather bad lectures with lots of copying from the board into an exercise book. Modules seemed deliberately to be composed so as not to follow any particular textbook, thus making it difficult to access good printed material. I didn't do very well, but no doubt the idea was to force a spread of grades, because the education system was, and still is, self serving and propped up by the minority who manage to emerge well.
  • T Clark
    13.9k
    The idea of this thread is that we restrain ourselves from theorizing about either learning or teaching, but instead briefly describe learning experiences we've had, to the end of allowing others to read them and draw from them what lessons they may on both learning and teaching.tim wood

    I was a kid - 5th grade? Not sure. I have always loved reading newspapers, especially the comics and especially on Sundays. There was a comic called "The Phantom" which was about a crime fighter who fought crime in purple tights and a black mask. I always call it "The Pontom" to myself. I guess I'd never heard the word out loud. Then one day I heard some one pronounce it "The Fantom." I felt two things. One - I was happy I'd never made a fool of myself by saying "Pontom" out loud. The other was that I found out that I can be really wrong about something, even though it seems obvious.

    Second story - same lesson. I was a senior in high school, in Physics class. We were learning about gravity and acceleration. When you throw a ball up in the air, the force of gravity pulls it down until it stops and falls back down. I was talking about it with a girl in the class. She explained that at the peak, the ball had zero velocity but was accelerating. I knew that couldn't be true and I was really mean to her. I think I called her stupid. Later on it just came to me - of course you can have acceleration when the velocity is 0. Otherwise, how would the ball turn around. I've always felt bad that I didn't apologize to that girl.
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