However...
On the first assignment, there was absolutely nothing to differentiate between my new students and old ones. Citations were routinely absent or incorrect, and even bizarrely formatted. I hoped this would be an issue quickly resolved with a brief lesson and reminder after the first essay, but this persisted the entire semester among all of my students, and I didn’t have time to divert from literature to teach citations. And it wasn't limited to citations. I saw students who in one class had improved and excelled, written excellent essays, fall into the doldrums in the next. Near the end of the school year, I asked one of the other English teachers (who retired that year – give you an idea how long he'd been around) if they taught citation. He rolled his eyes and his head and answered: “every year!”
In short, there should have been noticeable differences between the students I had had in composition and those who had not taken composition in my literature course. But there was none. Everything they had learned and practiced was gone.
I've even seen this phenomenon happen in class. I'll teach a topic or how to do something for an essay or assignment, see it implemented in one assignment, but when students should be reapplying these practices in later assignments, it's ignored. It was as if previous lessons and concepts were locked to a respective assignment without any application beyond the task for which they were taught.
Imagine teaching someone to drive. You teach them how best to brake at a traffic light. How much pressure to apply, when to start braking, how close to the light they need to come to a complete stop, so they make a safe, controlled stop. And then, when you tell them to park, they fly right through the parking stall, as if parking and stopping at a light somehow required two completely different operations.
This is the danger of trivializing our education, of seeing each bit of information as isolated and only useful within the context it was first taught and assuming each new context carries with it brand new rules and expectations. It's like saying, “I was tested on it, so what do I need it for?” when that same information will hold value in another context. It's like an architect ignoring every geometry lesson he's ever had, and a surgeon ignoring all of his biology.
Let me give an example both personal and professional. I have taught at five different universities and colleges. Each school has different standards and expectations. On my end, I have my education, training, and experience that prepared me to teach and adapt to new circumstances. Give me a set of expectations and requirements and I'll produce a curriculum to match it. However, if I took everything I already knew and set it aside and acted as if I needed a brand new set of information, I'd be an absolute pest to the rest of the faculty as I ask them things I should already know. They'd kick me to the curb as soon as they could find a replacement. Or just cancel the classes and get rid of me.
So don't confine your education. Don't leave what you learn in the classroom. Value it by practicing it, by looking for new ways to employ it, by experimenting with what you've learned. Transfer your knowledge from one area to another. And Don't trivialize it.
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