¶ … Education My feelings about education are based on my own experiences. They are impacted by variables such as cost, subject matter, outcome, and expectations. The first factor -- cost -- is one that is considerably significant, as the price of attaining a higher education in today's day and age is substantial and will put many young persons into debt for the rest of their lives if they fail to "make good" on their degree and find a good paying job. This factor feeds into the other factors of outcome and expectation, as the outcome of one's education should say something about the worth, value, significance or meaning of education. Moreover, the expectations that one has about one's education can offer a sense of what education is all about. The subject matter -- the thing being studied -- is the final variable: it can range from business to literature to science, etc. -- but, of course,...
For me, education is not described best by any one of these variables or even by their totality. As Graff points out, there are many types of education -- and there are different types of intelligence: the "street smarts" and the "academic intelligence" of the university sphere (957). Other researchers note that there is also the kind of intelligence or education that informs the character -- character education, which is based on the instruction of students regarding principles, values, and how one should approach the act of living, also called "moral education" (Kristjansson 48). Considering all of these ideas about education, it is difficult to define the subject simply. Instead I believe there are different types of education that help people achieve different ends.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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