Every Young Person will be allocated a State-issued Older Person who will fact check from memory and any encyclopedias &c they have lying around.
We're into the last cohorts before all of language just becomes one sound with varying eyebrows, we might as well go out with total employment.
We're into the last cohorts before all of language just becomes one sound with varying eyebrows, we might as well go out with total employment.
Reposted from
Anil Dash
This gets at a thing I'm trying to write about right now, which is that norms are shifting faster than our ability to talk about them. Like, older generations are still saying "double-check what AI tools tell you", but WHERE are younger people supposed to double-check things? In print?
Comments
I guess those people must be curious and engaged with *something*? I'm not sure what. Trends? Sports? I try not to attach a value judgement to that kind of focus, but it sure doesn't seem helpful to me.
i suspect covid era education lapsed in teaching this
and I would recommend maybe leaning in to her interests like what about sitcoms does she like? actors, tv history, the themes of the show?
I don't think it's impossible to teach basic media literacy, but it's now controversial.