If a teacher cannot teach all subjects to some students, how do you expect the student to learn all of em.
Answers
Explanation:
But teachers also learn all the subjects when they were young but tbh some lessons are useless hahhhahaha /j
Answer:
Funny Question I see but still I will answer you…
Explanation:
Because at the start of their educational journey no-one knows, including the pupil herself, which they will enjoy or excel at, So it is only fair to offer them as many as possible.
No-one is expected to, or capable of, studying all the subjects. Nor are they given the chance. Consider languages. Very few schools offer more than two foreign languages, out of dozens of modern languages that are examinable. Only one school in Lincolnshire teaches Theatre arts, Music is elective (and probably chargeable) if offered at all, and subjects like Cookery (“Home economics”, ” Nutrition”, “Catering”) have vanished from the curriculum. Theology, Latin, Mechanics, Politics, Civics, Law, Rhetoric, Philosophy, have all vanished from the school environment within my lifetime (No one school offered all of them to every participant, of course).
No-one at a school is learning everything about a subject, just an introductory smattering. Your teachers will be graduates in their specialities, understanding far more than they are required to impart to you.
Education is not a catechism, to be learned in rote; it is a buffet at which you can gorge, or pick, or sample, or evade, as suits you. It is not something to be endured, but something to be enjoyed, something full of surprises, unexpected stimuli, thrills (and disappointments), and self-discovery.
Please mark me as brainliest