TwilightPrincess wrote:
I think there needs to be designated classes on critical thinking (with a strong basis in humanism) which would include instruction on how to weigh evidence and spot logical fallacies. Sure, teachers try to work that stuff into their teaching, but it’s definitely not enough. People are still too apt to fall for conspiracy theories and other harmful BS whether it’s from the media, social media, or friends and family.
Yes, although it is worth noting, that in the US, the boys get shafted on education and god help you if you point out the stupid things being taught. I never did get an explanation as to why we were being taught that the conditions on 17th and early 18th century slave boats were the cause of black people in the late 20th century having problems with their blood pressure. Nor was there any real effort to justify why only white people in the US can be racist and if I hadn't been that jerk in class, nobody would have pushed back on that notion.
Having a separate class is definitely something that I'd endorse, but there's only so much that a standalone class can do if the rest of the curriculum is rife with just generally lazy and incompetent things like that it was Japanese that the US interned, when that's not exactly right. The Japanese where just the largest group in the camps because of how they were distributed through the US and they were harder to relocate. But, there were other groups in smaller numbers like Germans, Italians and the Chinese that were also sent to those camps. To this day, hardly anybody is willing to acknowledge that and there hasn't been any effort at providing reparations to the others from what I've read.