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How Wikipedia & search engine culture are killing future start ups

2 pointsby tapnealover 12 years ago

3 comments

unimpressiveover 12 years ago
I'm not sure that this is such a great metric for determining the critical thinking skills of students. I mean; being honest here, who actually <i>liked</i> any of their grade school assignments? (Excepting the odd coincidental collision of interest or interesting elective, I know I'm certainly not enjoying them right now.)<p>I can't blame high school or even middle school kids giving into temptation and taking the path of least resistance. After all, if the instructor will take that information at face value, then why should the student take it any more seriously?<p>At any rate, considering that wikipedia ideally cites their sources, there's no reason to cite them unless it's from an inaccessible resource.
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rkalitaover 12 years ago
Great article. I think critical thinking is the differentiator for the US compared to the rest of the world. I don't think we can afford to lose that edge.
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reczyover 12 years ago
interesting article, Neal.