-
The Connection between Smart and Wise
Reviewed by CrossRef Jun 19, 12:55am ( 9 reviews ) • independent.co.uk
-
unD
unD
1,196 Favs
-
Sighfer
Sighfer
7,071 Favs
-
AllenSentance
AllenSe...
2,309 Favs
-
mikaguy
mikaguy
9,616 Favs
-
eelsmann
eelsmann
3,328 Favs
-
CrossRef
CrossRef
4,064 Favs
-
daaz
daaz
3,117 Favs
-
jstarling14
jstarli...
107 Favs
-
Bakuhatsu
Bakuhatsu
2,012 Favs
Recently online -
srblc
srblc
16K Favs
- 5 reviews
- Reviews of the site
-
Join StumbleUpon or login to add a review!
-
Reviewed by commerican on Jun 22, 6:01am
I've heard of brain-state memory loss, so all those good grades made in school and on legal speed might not reflect knowledge retained.
-
Reviewed by dist0rtedwave on Jun 20, 6:57pm
There are a few problems for sure. Getting good grades by being able to power through more work won't necessarily make people smarter. My biggest problem is that by encouraging the use of brain enhancing drugs, you are effectively removing the student's ability to choose if they want to take them. If a teacher knew that their kids were on performance enhancing drugs, I am sure they would modify their assignments accordingly. This would quickly lead to an environment where you have no choice but to take performance enhancing drugs. I feel like we currently have a situation where you can have bad grades and poor work habits, good grades and good work habits, or good grades, bad work habits, and drugs. This is an oversimplification of course, but many people who find they benefit from drugs would probably benefit just as much from better time management skills.
-
Reviewed by Metzker on Jun 20, 6:36pm
Skip Ritalin, do Speed.
-
Rated by AllenSentance on Jun 19, 8:35am
The power of the mind has always fascinated me, and I actually study it......................(Fisherman)
-
Rated by CrossRef on Jun 19, 12:55am
The Connection between Smart and Wise
