Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids learned them in 2nd, but short segment. I don't know if they retained the knowledge. Will have to quiz them and see?
Detroit, MI
Cleveland, Ohio
Philadelphia, PA
NY, NY
Orlando, FL
Seattle, WA
LA, CA
Easy peasy. Should I keep going? I always get stuck on East Carolina though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Memorization makes many kids who enjoy learning think they don't like learning.
Wrong. There are many kids who love knowing things, DS included.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't worry about it. It's not important.
Ladies and gentleman, may I present the living embodiment of a dumbass.
Anonymous wrote:Memorization makes many kids who enjoy learning think they don't like learning.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't worry about it. It's not important.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't worry about it. It's not important.
Are you kidding? It's basic geographical knowledge. And why would they deem it important enough for the AAP kids to learn, but not Gen Ed?
No. I'm not kidding. AAP kids don't need it either. They will never, ever again be asked for that information. Geography teacher porn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How pathetic that some of you actually believe Google is a substitute for actually knowing geography. Few things demonstrate ignorance more acutely than trying to have a conversation with someone who has no idea where anything is located.
Knowing geography involves so much more than simply identifying a place on a map. You have to know something about history and culture as well. The kids who impress me the most are the ones who compete in Geography Bees - schoolwide on up to the National Geographic Bee. These kids have such a vast range of knowledge - the questions they answer deal with economics, history, language, science, culture, politics, and current events. If you don't know geography, chances are you don't know much about any of those subjects.
Google will never take the place of actual knowledge.
Memorizing capitals indicates almost nothing about understanding geography.
Anonymous wrote:How pathetic that some of you actually believe Google is a substitute for actually knowing geography. Few things demonstrate ignorance more acutely than trying to have a conversation with someone who has no idea where anything is located.
Knowing geography involves so much more than simply identifying a place on a map. You have to know something about history and culture as well. The kids who impress me the most are the ones who compete in Geography Bees - schoolwide on up to the National Geographic Bee. These kids have such a vast range of knowledge - the questions they answer deal with economics, history, language, science, culture, politics, and current events. If you don't know geography, chances are you don't know much about any of those subjects.
Google will never take the place of actual knowledge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids learned them in 2nd, but short segment. I don't know if they retained the knowledge. Will have to quiz them and see?
Detroit, MI
Cleveland, Ohio
Philadelphia, PA
NY, NY
Orlando, FL
Seattle, WA
LA, CA
Easy peasy. Should I keep going? I always get stuck on East Carolina though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't worry about it. It's not important.
Are you kidding? It's basic geographical knowledge. And why would they deem it important enough for the AAP kids to learn, but not Gen Ed?
No. I'm not kidding. AAP kids don't need it either. They will never, ever again be asked for that information. Geography teacher porn.
Anonymous wrote:My kids learned them in 2nd, but short segment. I don't know if they retained the knowledge. Will have to quiz them and see?