More for Worldbuilding/Culturebuilding: Education Freelance Traveller (22 Sep 2014 14:19 UTC)
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Re: [TML] More for Worldbuilding/Culturebuilding: Education
Timothy Collinson
(22 Sep 2014 20:59 UTC)
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Re: [TML] More for Worldbuilding/Culturebuilding: Education
Freelance Traveller
(22 Sep 2014 23:52 UTC)
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Re: [TML] More for Worldbuilding/Culturebuilding: Education
Ian Whitchurch
(23 Sep 2014 03:50 UTC)
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Re: [TML] More for Worldbuilding/Culturebuilding: Education
Timothy Collinson
(23 Sep 2014 09:16 UTC)
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Re: [TML] More for Worldbuilding/Culturebuilding: Education
Bruce Johnson
(23 Sep 2014 15:41 UTC)
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Re: [TML] More for Worldbuilding/Culturebuilding: Education
Timothy Collinson
(23 Sep 2014 19:50 UTC)
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Re: [TML] More for Worldbuilding/Culturebuilding: Education
Timothy Collinson
(23 Sep 2014 20:12 UTC)
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Education can be carried out in many different ways, and still have the same results. The Traveller rules generally assume that it will be conducted in a way that is reasonably mappable to the current Western postsecondary model - that is, the student attends classes at an institution of education for roughly four standard years, and comes out with a piece of paper certifying that Eneri Gaashiba has met the requirements of the University of Gamuusha-Rakii, East Iish-Kabiibal Campus, to be called a Disciplined Lettered-Scholar of Theoretical Thumb-Twiddling, or what-have-you. Other models are possible. Herewith some basic description of those models, with type-names of convenience, to add flavor to your education: Medieval/Renaissance model: Colleges are largely communities of scholars, teaching and exchanging knowledge without regard to specificity of discipline. Students study under one or more masters, for specific subjects, paying the masters rather than the institution, and moving on when they feel they have learned an adequate amount, or if they feel that the master is no longer the appropriate teacher for them for a subject. A degree is conferred by a college upon examination of the student by a board of masters (all of whom hold the highest degree possible); if the student demonstrates an acceptable level of mastry of the subjects associated with a degree, the degree is conferred. (In the Renaissance, the subjects were those of the Trivium and Quadrivium, q.v. on Wikipedia.) The student need not have studied under any of the masters on the examining board, nor under any of the masters at the particular college that has convened the examination board. Talmudic model: In pure form, students study written works on subjects in pairs (chavruta), each reading independently, then debating the meaning of what they have read, their understanding thereof, and what the significance of the differences in interpretation are. A master is available to provide answers to questions that the students feel cannot be resolved in debate, but such answers are intended to provide data for further debate. In modified form, small groups (chabura) may meet, rather than pairs, and in further modified forms, the bare essence and raw facts may be presented by the master prior to reading and debate. This model is used almost exclusively for philosophical subjects, rather than "hard sciences", but can have a place where there are multiple interpretations of observed fact, with no current conclusive thought on which is correct. Apprenticeship model: Generally used for crafts and professions, rather than for pure academics. The student is bound to a master (and is treated as a member of the master's household) for a period of years, during which time he learns the craft/profession under the master's tutelage. The master is also responsible for seeing that the student spends adequate time learning supporting material (e.g., book learning/ theory). The student/apprentice works for the master and under his direction as payment for tutelage, room, and board, and when the master judges that the student has adequate competence to work under minimal or no supervision, the student is granted journeyman status. As a journeyman, the student may not open a business of his own, but may work for other masters than the one under whom the apprenticeship was served. The journeyman is not part of the master's household, and works for some combination of wages and commission, depending on normal usage for the craft or profession. The journeyman generally may not work independent of a master (may not open a shop, or take on independent contracts), nor may the journeyman take on apprentices. During the journeyman period, further study will be undertaken, under different masters, to learn techniques and gain broad but intense experience in various subdivisions of the craft or profession. At some point, the student will face an examination by a board of masters of the craft/profession, with the objective of demonstrating sufficient competence to be declared a master of the craft or profession. Masters are entitled to work for themselves (i.e., open a shop of their own, for crafts; act as an independent contractor rather than working as an employee, for professions), and may also take on apprentices and teach them the craft/profession. -- Jeff Zeitlin, Editor Freelance Traveller The Electronic Fan-Supported Traveller® Fanzine and Resource editor@freelancetraveller.com http://www.freelancetraveller.com http://freelancetraveller.downport.com/ ®Traveller is a registered trademark of Far Future Enterprises, 1977-2014. Use of the trademark in this notice and in the referenced materials is not intended to infringe or devalue the trademark. Freelance Traveller extends its thanks to the following enterprises for hosting services: CyberNET Web Hosting (http://www.cyberwebhosting.net) The Traveller Downport (http://www.downport.com)