Monday, February 4, 2013

Democracy, a general rant and thoughts on the matter


30/1/2013

Democracy is hard.  It is hard to implement in an effective, balanced way.  The balance between discussion, and taking the opinion of everyone, and making decisions that get things done is very sensitive.  Americans are often more on the side of getting things done quickly, rather than discussing small issues for days on end.  And this can be our downfall sometimes.  Rash action can get us into tough situations.  And efficiency can hurt peoples’ feelings.  Sometimes, the decision which is come to is not going to be liked by everyone.  But at some point, that will always be the case, and a continued discussion about this is not going to go anywhere. 

On the other hand, democracy is taught from a very young age.  How we make rules for schools and classrooms in the US often involve the students (or at least pretend to let the students feel some power and input).  This helps them learn how to deliberately deliberate about what is needed in a classroom or social structure, critically think about necessary guidelines, and effectively implement the rules and consequences for infractions.  In actuality, by involving students in the rule making and writing process, they are learning how to operate in a democratic society in a thoughtful way.

Teaching a class on Art and Culture is interesting, because it makes me think critically about what Americans value. Like when we are in school, we are taught to ask why things are the way they are.  In fact, and maybe this is just a personal learning technique, when I know more about why things happen the way do, and there is justification for the reasons, I know them better. I like knowing the background.  But here, what the teacher says should be believed and not questioned. Holy major cultural differences, batman!

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