One of the greatest benefits of being a person who studied education and history in college is that, despite my proclivity in fact to the “hard sciences,” I never developed my understanding of them, and consequently, I find many things to be completely miraculous. In some ways, I still live in the Stone Age, because I’m marvel at many things around me, that someone who took biology or chemistry or physics might just think are painfully boring and monotonous. And if you’re student, you’d find them impossibly anxiety-ridden, as many of you were assessed on their knowledge of those subjects through examinations that seemingly determine your fate altogether.
Overcoming the impossible with Mary
Overcoming the impossible with Mary
Overcoming the impossible with Mary
One of the greatest benefits of being a person who studied education and history in college is that, despite my proclivity in fact to the “hard sciences,” I never developed my understanding of them, and consequently, I find many things to be completely miraculous. In some ways, I still live in the Stone Age, because I’m marvel at many things around me, that someone who took biology or chemistry or physics might just think are painfully boring and monotonous. And if you’re student, you’d find them impossibly anxiety-ridden, as many of you were assessed on their knowledge of those subjects through examinations that seemingly determine your fate altogether.