In a way this term has to do with studying, but I'm not sure what the speaker wanted to say with "this would be its own course"? Any help is welcome
Rather than pouring knowledge into people's heads, and declaring them to be educated for having done so, somewhere in there we need to train people how to think, how to analyze, how to interpret... how to be skeptical of information and then how to recognize when sufficient data has been put forth to turn something that you might be skeptical about into something that is a newly established, objective truth. That is not taught in the schools, this should be a class just on what science is and how and why it works and that would transcend the physics class, the chemistry class, the biology class, the geology class, the general science class this would be its own course.
That is poorly punctuated. I guess it is the transcript of a speech. "This would be its own course" means that among the courses taught in school would be a separate one that is only concerned with teaching the student how to think like a scientist.
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That is poorly punctuated. I guess it is the transcript of a speech.
"This would be its own course" means that among the courses taught in school would be a separate one that is only concerned with teaching the student how to think like a scientist. How to Think 101 would be a course of its own.