BoredShirtless wrote:It isn't my strongest point, but it's still a valid one. But if you think my argument needs it, you haven't been paying much attention.
I'd love to see a person who learned heavy lifting solely from his PE class in high school.
I didn't specify jobs or gym, you assumed I meant jobs. But that's my fault, I should have been clearer.
No, you specified "putting a man out of work" and a "labourer."
Daily exercise relives stress and improves concentration. Say we have two completely identical people, where the only difference is one exercises daily and the other doesn't. The one who exercises daily will have the better grades. Better grades mean more opportunities, where opportunities are the final goal of higher education.
There are any number of activities which can improve concentration and grades. Should we force all of them on students in high school? Students can get by
without PE, which is the bottom line. It is not a
detriment if they don't have it.
Now, back to your implication that high school is preparing students for Uni only. What part of "Schools don't just prepare students for uni, but for life." don't you fucking get? I'm getting a little pissed with your tunnel vision. And I am a little amazed at how fucking stupid it is to assume all students going through high school will either get in or even want to go to Uni. Who the fuck will build our houses? Or weld our metals? Schools are like basic military: no matter which area they eventually specialise in, all military personnel go through Basics. When you come out of your mammas...womb..., you are like an unformatted floppy disk. School is akin to formatting that disk. Laying the foundation for life.
Ah yes, every student who doesn't go on to a university will be thankful for his PE class. PE is and always has been something you learn on your own or through a personal trainer. School PE is an excuse to run around and play sports for 45 minutes in the midst of academic activity. No one ever remembers that shit from high school.
Thank god there are so many unrealistic kids then. Do I really have to point out how fucked up society would be without the entertainment derived from watching sports?
This does not change the fact that less than 1% of those who aspire to play professionally will actually end up doing so.
But is it as fun? People learn best when they are enjoying themselves, and not everyone enjoys class work. And are the same lessons learnt? Lessons like sacrificing potential personal reward for the good of the team, like passing up on a shot at goal to pass the ball to a classmate in a better position, can't really be learnt in something like a group project.
There are any number of other ways for kids to learn these lessons, like theatre for example. I learned infinitely more about team work, project management and the delegation of tasks by being a stage manager for my school's theatre productions than I did playing soccer. This is because that teamwork environment is much more pure. While one player might have a good game in soccer, the team could lose, but that player still gets personal glory. When building a set, if it's done badly or not done at all, it reflects badly on
everyone and
no one gets to claim personal glory from it. There are plenty of other such examples.
It would work wonders huh. Can you use more then just your say so to back this up?
More time to do homework and study means more homework and studying done. My grades certainly would have improved.
Videotapes? What about private tutors? And you can not fucking learn PE from videotapes, don't be fucking stupid.
That's just why golf tapes are so successful.
Smoke and mirrors. Address my point by either accepting it, or arguing against it.
See above. I've never seen a single example of PE having a substantial impact on someone's life after he's left high school to go on to a university or straight into the job force.
Students are NOT JUST ACADEMICS! School is an institution for EDUCATION! Point out where that EDUCATION has to be of an academic nature only. Do you fucking not understand that kids would have fewer career options and lead lesser quality lives if they just had academia thrown at them?
According to you, since schools must educate, they must teach
everything you think they should. Some things simply
are not appropriate for that environment.
And what the fuck is this supposed to mean?
See above. PE is like a single island in the middle of an otherwise totally academic curriculum.
Ok, enough pussy footing around. IMO, your opinion of PE is absolutely, and without question, completely worthless. Why? Because you learnt NOTHING from your own time in PE. You either completely ignored the benefits of PE I listed, or looked at them from one POV only: Uni.
That's right. It was completely worthless to me, and since 90% of my graduating class went on to higher education, it was completely worthless to them as well. I seriously doubt the other 10% came out of it with a differing opinion. PE is a blow-off class.
And I got a health class dealing with sex education, good eating and exercise, and you know what? I took nothing from it. In the midst of studying for math or science, I wasn't going to waste time studying for a PE exam, and no one else was about to do the same thing either. You're enormously exaggerating the benefits of PE.
A week.
I could certainly live with that, but how many terms? Just one?
Quoting me: "No, sex education deserves its own class.". Please pay more attention.
Yes, you unilaterally declared that, I know. But I
asked you why because sex education would seem to fit in with the idea of healthy living, which is what you're encouraging.