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[-] Yurt_Owl@hexbear.net 47 points 11 months ago

What actually is the focus on memorising for? Like even my English lit exams i had to memorise the quotes i was going to use for an essag question i didn't know yet.

How does this serve capitalism?

[-] Shinji_Ikari@hexbear.net 44 points 11 months ago

to grind you down for a life time of "because i said so"s at work.

[-] muddi@hexbear.net 25 points 11 months ago

Related to liberal philosophy and psychology, I think, the whole "rational actors" perspective of the human being. That we are machines that take some input and spit out an output in reliable and accurate ways. The ones who don't are ignored as part of humanity to maintain the definition.

Another way to look at education is that it is a factory line to output workers to exploit for labor. The defects are discarded, and the ones who make it out are the ones who somehow take any input and reliably accurate and exploitable output (labor)

Which is why graduates of most fields have no experience and function on cultivated instincts like memorization. Only when a worker works with their actual hands, so to speak, do they learn real knowledge of their labor. This is how education used to be, an apprenticeship sort of model, which you still see in certain trades and fields like the medical field.

[-] Chapo_is_Red@hexbear.net 19 points 11 months ago

Memorization predates capitalism. So I'd look for reasons in pre-capital societies

[-] usernamesaredifficul@hexbear.net 16 points 11 months ago

As I understand it we imported it from China because it was a system that allowed education at greater scale than Europes previous system of having a conversation with the examiner. It lets lots of people sit the same exam at once

to say capitalism strives for greater efficiency is false it strives for greater scale

Now we stick with it because we've been doing it 200 years and people are used to it

[-] Sopje@hexbear.net 15 points 11 months ago

It’s much easier to make and grade an exam that’s based on memorisation than on understanding. Such exams are also less prone to biased grading.

Even bourgeois media has an obsession with memorization. What do Hollywood writers do when they want to quickly get across that a character is smart? They have him (usually a man) quote some old book/play word for word, often at length. Turns out memorizing things is a skill that almost anyone can learn and get good at. But it’s treated like some super power.

[-] MF_COOM@hexbear.net 26 points 11 months ago

Looking forward to the Communist utopia where doctor has to look up the difference between glucagon and glycogen

[-] unperson@hexbear.net 44 points 11 months ago

This but unironically, double checking prevents errors and you make more mental connections when you look things up.

[-] redtea@lemmygrad.ml 14 points 11 months ago

That's it. I don't intentionally memorise anything. Never could. I realised that path was not for me as a six-year old with a key part in the Nativity who remembered some of their lines but none in the right order. When it comes to my work, though, I'm like an encyclopaedia because I meaningfully engage with the same content so often that it sticks. (At least, I think that's what you're saying, minus the Nativity part.)

[-] wombat@hexbear.net 26 points 11 months ago

the maoist uprising against the landlords was the largest and most comprehensive proletarian revolution in history, and led to almost totally-equal redistribution of land among the peasantry

[-] Vncredleader@hexbear.net 23 points 11 months ago

Honestly good. Students learn to just memorize what they need for the test and no further, then dump most of that afterwards. "memorizing" and retaining are different things

[-] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 21 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

If modern China's not bourgeois then explain this Dengists smuglord

[-] TheDialectic@hexbear.net 17 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

The Prussian model of memorization and taking notes worked back when it was a small number of students learning from experts in niche areas. Now that we have printing presses and you are not expected to reference your college notes in your professional career the model has outlived it's usefulness

[-] ElChapoDeChapo@hexbear.net 15 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Is this really a thing is China? Holy shit, I knew our education sucked but I wasn't aware how much better it was elsewhere (probably because of said education system failing me)

[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 41 points 11 months ago

This is a very Mao thing, he hated people being too obsessed with reading and quoting rather than understanding and exploring. I don't think it's especially representative of modern China though, which has moved back towards the bourgeois memorization fetishism

[-] Fishroot@hexbear.net 28 points 11 months ago

Nowadays, no. GaoKao is basically all memorizing except for essays part of the exam. Even then, you have memorization to do to for the essays (structure, arguement, etc.)

this post was submitted on 02 Dec 2023
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