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You can't teach people everything they need to know.
I don't know western education system but IMO the point of education is to show _how to think_ + some baseline knowledge.
Who defines the "right" direction for every given individual?
This is a really lame excuse. Now almost any information is a couple of clicks away.
No, you don't have to teach them everything. You only have to actually teach them something. Further, that something should indicate what else is out there.
The definition of "right direction" is really very simple. It's the information necessary to find the information you want/need. In an education system this means you at least need to offer a class on every topic. This usually doesn't happen until high school (and even then it's usually done poorly.) So even just expecting people to know that they might want to learn about programming is completely unreasonable.
Lastly, not knowing what you need to know isn't an excuse. Let alone a lame one. It is simply impossible to perform a search for information that is undefined. It doesn't matter if the information is easy to learn or if it is widely available. If you don't know what you want to learn then you can't learn it.





Member since:
2010-03-11
How is it too much to ask the education system to educate people?
Of course, the bigger issue is that the school system makes everything boring. If people are discouraged (as I was) then there's no inclination to "open a book" to learn more. Nor does it help that the education system doesn't even point people in the right direction. It doesn't matter if a subset of linear algebra can be learned in a day, if you don't know that that's what you need to know.