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Anyone interested in world politics and history. High School students and first year College. Warning on Plagiarism Remember: your teachers can use this service to check. |
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In most countries the history and current affairs syllabus in the schools has been reduced to a small number of topics. This website contains a range of topics a well-educated person ought to know about. Judging by the information I have gained from the tracker, people in schools throughout the world are studying very few history topics. British Empire seems to be the most popular, followed by Yugoslavia (why, I ask myself) and perhaps Feudalism and Black Death. This is not an adequate basis for understanding history. It seems to result in the population as a whole being profoundly ignorant about History. Is that what politicians prefer? The recent events at the Texas Board of Education show that it is not just in nasty dictatorships that politicians want to distort what students learn in history classes. Doctoring the official textbooks is fortunately no longer entirely effective, as at the present time the internet provides information outside the textbooks. I have advertised many books to buy or borrow that will improve students' knowledge. A well-educated person needs to have read many books. The internet can never replace the experience of being well-read. Politicians hope that students will read only the set books. That works in North Korea where the unfortunate population is not allowed to know anything about the real world. Surely it shouldn't work in Texas or any "western" country? I ask myself why, for example, no students are consulting the pages on Afghanistan and Iraq. Is it that politicians are terrified of people learning what is going on in these countries and prefer them to know nothing? In some countries I suspect history teachers are warned not to discuss these topics. But Afghanistan is the source of a great deal of our culture and Iraq is one of the two countries whose early developments are at the root of almost all our culture and civilisation (the other is Egypt). There is no excuse in the modern world for being being ignorant when the whole of knowledge is freely available (at least in civilised countries). Is there censorship in western countries? Yes. See this article. |