Four stupid extrapolations in a row is quite possibly a new record, even for you, Mincey.
It just seemed more polite than Nice anecdote. What's your point?
You wouldn't understand. Well, you've shown no sign of doing so this far, anyway.
My points were... children need adults to guide them, both in terms of their own safety
and education (all forms). And if you let a child (in this case, me) do what it wants, whenever it wants, it will chose fun over education and learning every time. And that I'd never have chosen to do technical drawing because it sounds boring, and not as much fun as playing football or watching telly. I also picked up more than a "little knowledge" of the subjects I went on to study at O-Grade (Scottish O-level) exam level, and a lot more at those I took to Higher (A-level) standard. I passed all eight of the former (all 'A's) and all five of the latter - enough qualifications to get a place in most universities in the UK at the time. Instead, I took a job as a sub-editor on The Beano comic, and six years later began my cartooning career now in its 36th year. Had I been home-schooled by my eminently-qualified parents, I'm absolutely certain I would not have been allowed to make the same choices, and I'd have been a very different character by the end of it. Perhaps you might have seen the prospect of me being a doctor or a lawyer as a more desirable career, but through
my own choices (yes, I got to make them...even at school!), I've not only had a successful career in cartooning, but a whole lot more fun that I'd have had as either a doctor or a lawyer (other occupations were available). I'm not for one second decrying either (or any other) occupation, but I know I would never have been cut out for them.
It would be easy to dismiss the schooling I had as irrelevant to my life beyond it. I needed only Higher English to get my comic job, and that was only a technicality (I'd already got the job based on my application letter). I didn't need my Higher Art to be able to draw cartoons. But I don't regret anything I learned at school, and in particular those out of class social aspects that I outlined earlier, and which led me to the meeting I had this morning at my old secondary school (first time in over 40 years), in order to discuss our forthcoming reunion. If the school 'retarded my progress', I can only thank them for it.
IT'S NOT ABOUT THE KIDS!!!
IT'S NOT ABOUT THE PARENTS!!![/quote]
Yes, in this debate, I think it is.