GadgetGuru wrote:
I'm curious what the others here of, say, age 45+ think about this?
I'm 63. I hated school when I was a kid. I didn't really care about interacting with anyone and since I was relentlessly bullied, I didn't much care for the daily stress of wondering if this was going to be the day that I got my head shoved into a toilet or if something else was going to happen to me.
In thinking about my experiences and contrasting them with younger people who grew up with the internet, I think that as much as I hated going to school, the process of this helped to emotionally toughen me because of all of the experience I got through daily social interactions. If virtual learning had been available and if I hadn't gone to an in-person school, I think my life might have emulated the lives of so many other young people. I would have graduated from high school and gone to college (on-line) and found myself unable to leave my home because my ability to interact with others in-person would have been sadly lacking.
Don't get me wrong.
I absolutely hate having to interact with anyone in-person but despite this, I was able to work as a teacher for 32 years. I don't think I would have had the emotional stamina to do this if I hadn't attended physically attended school.
School is after all more than just a matter of academics. Learning how to interact with others, knowing how to be a productive member of a cooperative group, understanding when to talk and when to listen - these are all valuable social skills which can only be attained in-person through face to face contact.
I can't even begin to estimate how many people I've met via reddit who are unable to leave their homes. Some can't even go on-line to interview for a job. One person I met was a Ph.D. student. He went to elementary school, high school, and later pursued a bachelor's and then a master's online. Part of the reason he became a professional student is that he couldn't handle being in the real world. He couldn't interview for a job. He didn't know how to work with others. By pursuing a Ph.D. he was creating the illusion of being active and doing something important but a good part of what he was doing involved avoidance behavior so that he could defer having to finally find a job.