Education

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Student studying by Fiach Obroin-Molloy CC-by-sa.jpg

Education is a term that can refer to both the act of learning and the skills and knowledge gained through the process of learning. Education can be divided into two main varieties: formal education and informal education.

Formal education is organized teaching and training; it is the application of pedagogy, a body of theoretical and applied research relating to teaching and learning. This is usually done through schools, universities, colleges and other institutions.

The term informal education may be used to refer all learning that occurs outside the context of a formal educational program. Those who teach get the sort of education traditionally associated with schools and universities under their own direction are called autodidacts. There are many who choose not to send their children to schools, instead giving them a homeschool education, or sometimes even a very non-traditional education through unschooling.

The reasons given for getting an education or requiring that others are educated are plentiful. Learning skills can be vital for certain types of employment, and even education in the humanities is often done for the reason that it demonstrates a mental agility, an ability to creatively solve problems that many in the business world find attractive. Many people learn for learning's sake: because a subject is interesting even if it has no practical or commercial application. Socities often require that a child be given an education to prepare him for citizenship and for employment. Education can be a public benefit in as much as it prevents people from engaging in destructive acts.

Education can also be for perhaps less savory purposes: political or religious indoctrination. The power of educational institutions to influence people's minds has been used by cults and by totalitarian states to push their ideology and beliefs without any question.

Contemporary debates in education

Because of the wide-ranging effects of education and schooling, debates about the best way to educate are often some of the thorniest political issues.

One issue where conflict has arisen is curriculum - what is taught in schools. Political groups often lobby for their particular ideas to be given classroom time: whether that means creationism or intelligent design, comparative religion compared to specific religious instruction, abstinence-only sex education, which parts of history to emphasise or some forms of political correctness. Moral issues like sex, drug abuse and relationships are often of concern for parents.

There has been debate over the value of vocational education, with schools now offering work-based training courses in addition to academic teaching. In the United Kingdom, there is the fear that vocational education is not widely respected or understood, and calls on the government to ensure parity between academic and vocational education. Some politicians have even questioned the value of "education for it's own sake" - former British Education Secretary Charles Clarke one stated that study of the classics - and, by extension, other arts subjects - was "a bit dodgy" and that students "need a relationship with the workplace"[1]. Only a few years later, and companies like McDonald's, train operator Network Rail and airline Flybe have been awarded the ability to grant qualifications[2][3][4], and the British government is planning to roll out a new 'diploma' system which would have academic and vocational qualifications declared equals.

Another debate that has come to fore in the United States, mostly during the administration of Bill Clinton, is that of uniforms. Studies have been conducted into whether or not uniforms reduce gangs, bullying and fashion, while others argue that mandatory uniform or dress code requirements intefere with the free speech rights of pupils.

References

  1. BBC News, Clarke criticised over classics, 31 January, 2003
  2. BBC News, McDonald's serves up 'Diplomas', January 28, 2008
  3. BBC News, McDonald's 'A-level' is launched, January 27, 2008
  4. BBC News, Q&A: What are McDiplomas?