• danielton@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I learned that the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell. And that busywork and adhering to the rubric is far more important than learning or producing anything useful.

    • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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      I mean learning to follow a rubric actually was useful for me. Projects have scopes and expectations. Rubrics are those.

        • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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          It can cost you a government contract as an adult. Also, it’s learning to format in accordance with instructions. It’s stuff like margins early on, but later it’s stuff like section headings and citations in APA or MLA. The margins are free points that you’re leaving on the table

  • Shanedino@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I went in hoping to learn some cool knew facts and already knew them all. Feels bad man.

    Also seemed like more so myths than stuff that was actually taught and then later revised.

    • MiraLazine@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, that was my big issue with the sites content. I wanted to find a list of obscure things taught wrong by decade, but all I could track down were a few myths that were shared across many different decades, so it led to the current (and imperfect) result.

      I want to try and update the site to be more focused on what you mention - things that were taught and later revised, but the only way I can think to do that so far is track down old textbooks and compare them to what’s known now, which I’m not sure the best/most efficient way to do that, or even where to find textbooks by year.

      All this to say, hopefully I’ll be able to improve the site in due time to make it better represent different facts and whatnot

  • Faceman🇦🇺@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    It’s a neat website, but it is very America specific.

    For example, I’m Australian and I wasn’t taught about slavery or genocide of our native people in high school. Hell, I was taught that the Stolen generation was a misnomer and children were only taken voluntarily or as an act of mercy… I graduated in 2008 so it wasn’t exactly the dark ages. Referring to the planned exterminations of the natives as “battles” and “conflicts” at best was another one. they didn’t even mention the shit that went down in Tasmania.

    it’s not just the dumb stuff like food pyramids and taste zones, even in schools today history is being glossed over

    • Pregnenolone@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’m also a 2000s Australian high schooler and we had a notorious lack of Australian history taught to us. My school preferred to teach us the histories of pretty much every other country but our own. We didn’t learn a single thing about indigenous history at all, bad or good.

    • sanpedropeddler@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I had a history teacher in (US) high school who was not afraid at all to tell his students the whole truth about stuff like this. Its too bad he was the only one not allowed to teach government classes.

  • nucleative@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Strange. The site doesn’t quite work properly for me. I set my decade, then changed it so I could see my parents and all the myths were the same.

    Then I clicked around and they are the same for every decade that I selected.

        • eoddc5@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Same

          I close the tab and repopen. Same results. It’s like it’s cached and stuck

      • HandwovenConsensus@lemm.ee
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        I think it’s possible that people are simply confused because the answers are the same for most decades. But one thing I would try maybe is setting the “value” of the different options, since that’s what you’re reading.

        As I understand it, if no value is set, the browser should return the name instead, so the way you have it should work, but that may vary depending on browser.

        EDIT: I tried to give an example, but lemmy keeps filtering out my explanation even if I enclose it in code tags. Hopefully you know what I mean.

    • MyDearWatson616@lemmy.world
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      Same for me. Everything on the list was stuff I already learned was bs so I went back a couple decades and it was the exact same list.

  • einlander@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I graduated in 2003. My DARE teachers basically taught drug abstinence and telling an adult about people offering you drugs. The really didn’t talk about gateway drugs and what it does to your brain. This was in Illinois.

    • MiraLazine@lemmy.worldOP
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      You’re not the first person to mention some regional differences. Think this is opening up a bigger research project of year graduated to region!

    • methodicalaspect@midwest.social
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      I graduated a few years before you, also in Illinois, and can confirm that.

      I can also confirm that I have not resisted the devil’s lettuce.

  • MiraLazine@lemmy.worldOP
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    1 year ago

    Update with context for you all since this post is unexpectedly taking off,

    This was a small project I made in 5 hours as just a “huh, this would be neat to make!” and as a first coding project. I mostly shared it expecting a little bit of feedback but nothing too major, clearly I underestimated what to expect from it lol.

    There’s been a lot of really good suggestions for how to improve the site and make it better, so thank yall for that! Things I’m planning on doing are:

    -Making open source so people can edit. Its just basic HTML and JavaScript so nothing too complex there

    -Suggestions box on the site

    -Some type of regional variations listed on the site

    -If possible, more obscure myths and more tied to the curriculum of schools

    -Optimizing the site for mobile

    Probably more to come as well, but no estimates on a timeframe since I’m very much so new to this haha

    Edit: Additional clarification, yes this site is only viable for Americans right now. Would love to help make it work internationally but I’m sure not the person to try and say what people in other countries were taught in school, so if someone wants to help with that lmk!

    It should work better on mobile devices now, but if there’s any repeated issues let me know and I can try to fix them.

    It should also be public on Github, check out the description tab on the website for more info. My first time making a project open source (or even having one at all) so lmk if there’s any issues!

    • Chobbes@lemmy.world
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      One thing that’s kind of funny to me about this is the 1940s, which has a lot of the ones from modern times…

      You were probably taught at some point that we’d never be able to map out the entire human genome due to its complexity. However, in 2003, we documented the first 92%, and in 2022 we documented the remaining 8%.

      I could be wrong (and I’d be super interested to hear if this was the case), but… Were we teaching kids about the human genome before we even knew the structure of DNA and before we knew that DNA carried genetic information? I know we knew DNA existed, and it was probably hypothesized that it could play a roll in genetics before the Hershey-Chase experiments in 1952, but I’m not sure whether most schools would talk much about anything resembling the human genome in the 1940s? What would have been in the curriculum then? It’s actually kind of wild how much the scientific landscape has changed since then.

      • MiraLazine@lemmy.worldOP
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        From what I could trace, the 1940s myths were most likely spread around then (a lot were circa 1930s), just perhaps less commonly. I can definitely attest that at least in the scientific literature then, that was a common enough idea to be inaccurate since, so I’d assume that it was taught to students when approaching biology too. If I’m wrong on this though I can remove this from the site

        • Chobbes@lemmy.world
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          The human genome one was the one that stood out to me. I’d be curious to see a source from the time if you’ve got one!

  • qaz@lemmy.world
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    Cool site, maybe you can open source it, so people can contribute improvements. I have a few ideas myself:

    • Add continent or even country selector
    • Display facts in a table
    • Full text search

    I could add those functionalities myself if needed.

      • qaz@lemmy.world
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        Cool, I’ll have a further look at it tomorrow when I’m home.

        Open source is defined differently by different people. Some define it by the code being open to see for the public. Some define it by it’s license. In your case both the code is open and an open source license is used.

        blank.docx i added this file by accident how do i delete a file in github

        I can see you’re a bit new to it 😁. There is a button with … dots with the option to “delete” the file. Keep in mind that it will stay be retained in the history.

        • MiraLazine@lemmy.worldOP
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          Haha yeah, I ended up figuring out how to delete it but kept the original text because I thought it’d be a good bit. And thanks for the info! Glad to know its like that either way

  • octoperson@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Did anyone else learn that eggs are dairy products? (Meaning, the word ‘dairy’ encompasses both eggs and milk. Not that eggs are somehow produced by cows)

    • Vacationlandgirl@lemmy.world
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      Yes! Never really thought to question it though… now I’m re-thinking everything I thought I knew about food clarification!

    • ThisIsNotHim@sopuli.xyz
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      I had attributed that to our fuzzy food categories. Some of which are due to how ingredient usage doesn’t map well to botany, some is just marketing.

      I suspect the perception of eggs as dairy could have shifted for practical reasons: lactose intolerance became more visible, and we needed a short way to say milk and milk products, without using the word milk.

  • mateomaui@reddthat.com
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    A fun fact about taste for you - there is actually no such thing as a ‘taste map,’ or the idea that different areas of the tongue result in you tasting different things. At most, there’s just different regions of sensitivity to taste!

    Always thought this was weird and didn’t make sense to my tongue.

    You might’ve been taught that lemmings are known to commit suicide because they’re just that unintelligent. Turns out, this isn’t true - they’re smart enough to stay alive!

    I blame the video game.

        • nocturne213@lemm.ee
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          The game was made as it was because of the myth perpetuated by the documentary. On Linux, there was no lemmings game, it was called pingus and it was penguins you killed instead (there may have be a lemmings for Linux, but the first version of Linux I installed myself had pingus already installed).

            • three@lemm.ee
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              i don’t think you do.

              hey! somebody post an even longer paragraph including the history of lemmings and at least 3 barely related anecdotes.

              • mateomaui@reddthat.com
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                I actually do understand the point, my responses now are specifically to annoy know-it-all assholes who insist I don’t get it.

    • Justchilling@feddit.nl
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      The theory of a taste map had no scientific basis, i remember funnily enough writing in a school paper that the taste map didn’t exist and got a lower grade for getting my answer wrong even though in hindsight i was the one who was right and i got forced to believe in a medical myth.

      • mateomaui@reddthat.com
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        Have to wonder how many more of us thought it didn’t make any sense, but didn’t push back because adults said it was so and it was in the textbooks.

        • Justchilling@feddit.nl
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          I was just far too skeptical for my age and it caused me to have worse exam performance usually having me go from an A to a B- just for defying the teacher. School is more about following authority than anything else I believe.

          • mateomaui@reddthat.com
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            True. I didn’t openly question things in that class too much for some reason, but I definitely got in trouble for being argumentative in other classes.

            • Justchilling@feddit.nl
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              I think it’s ridiculous that you can lose a full grade just for being disobedient. I get that school is made for the child to grow up to have a good job but this stops people more inclined to innovate to get far academically.

  • Igloojoe@lemm.ee
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    When I was in school, Pluto was still a planet. And it still is in my heart!!

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      I’ve never understood this obsession. Odds are you’ve never heard of Ceres, but it was once called a planet. It’s now considered a dwarf planet, like Pluto. Pluto is also less massive than Eris, so if you include Pluto you should also include Eris. None of these have cleared their orbit though.

      I understand it’s frequently just a joke, but it’s always rubbed me weird because some people actually became science skeptics because “suddenly Pluto isn’t a planet” or whatever. Really the reason is because the list would get really long if we included everything.

      • Igloojoe@lemm.ee
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        Ceres and Eris weren’t talked about at all when i was in school. They were like a family relative that nobody talks about.

        I understand the reason behind the change, its just fun to say that earth kicked them out of the league of planets.

        “You heard about Pluto? Messed up, huh?”

      • reagansrottencorpse@lemmy.world
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        Since you seem to be knowledgeable and I’d like to continue discussion, do you think there are “earth like” dwarf planets that could support life?

        • PetDinosaurs@lemmy.world
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          Probably not. At least not earth like. Planets have to be sufficiently large to maintain an atmosphere.

          It may be possible for one like an ice moon to harbor life, but it needs something to generate heat and prevent the ocean from freezing solid.

          I suppose there could also be a situation where the planet is sufficiently large to retain an atmosphere, but somehow hasn’t cleared it’s orbit.

        • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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          Earth like? No. They’re too small to hold any reasonable atmosphere. That doesn’t rule out life, but it’s unlikely. They’re also likely too small to have subsurface oceans or things like that without being tied to a planet and having strong tidal forces squishing it, in which case it’d be a moon not a dwarf planet.

  • Knusper@feddit.de
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    You were probably taught at some point that people in the time of Christopher Columbus all thought the world was flat. However, this is a myth that pervades history - most people knew the earth was a globe! (Source)

    Goddamnit! I’ve heard that so often already.

    And then I learned separately that even the Greeks already knew not only that Earth was round, but even its circumference at a pretty good accuracy.

    These two ‘facts’ genuinely had me thinking we must have lost a ton of knowledge from the Greeks…

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      The Renaissance was fueled in part by the fall of Constantinople and all of the Greek texts that came with those who fled to Italy.

    • Justchilling@feddit.nl
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      The real truth is that the catholic church purposefully wanted people stupid and uneducated and that’s why people started believing in the flat earth even after the Greeks. but they don’t teach you that in school!

    • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz
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      A lot of their knowledge was from the Sumerians and other ancient civilizations anyway. Sumerians were doing trig thousands of years before the Greeks did; the Greeks’ records were just the ones that were preserved.

  • ElderWendigo@sh.itjust.works
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    It just listed a bunch of myths and old wive’s tales that no one at the time thought were very credible anyway. Literally all of the “facts” they list were common chain letter/email memes that everyone trotted out at parties to sound smart and hip. Nobody ever believed what DARE told us, we always knew Christopher Columbus was an asshole, and every first aid class I’ve taken recommended against the whole tilt you head back thing.

    • musicmind333@mastodon.social
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      @ElderWendigo @MiraLazine agree to disagree, a lot of those things I was definitely taught - if not in school then at least by adults who thought it common knowledge. Especially the nosebleeds (I had them all the time as a kid, and the amount of blood I ended up swallowing is… A lot.) and knuckle cracking (my guess - started by teachers annoyed by kids making knuckle-noises during class)
      Christopher columbus was definitely taught as an “American hero” up until he wasn’t.

      • ElderWendigo@sh.itjust.works
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        Pretty much all of these examples were pretty often and commonly debunked by all of my teachers, parents, and adult mentors. But that’s exactly why lists like this are garbage, both of our experiences are anecdotal. You just can’t make blanket claims about things like this about entire generations.

        Columbus was more a lie of omission than outright falsehood. That item on the list was probably closest to a universal truth taught across the US, as long as you ignore any school with an indigenous student body. But, most of our teaching about any historical figures in grade school is a near obscene over-simplification of the actual people and events.

    • MiraLazine@lemmy.worldOP
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      Any suggestions for more widely spread myths? Wanna incorporate more but had trouble finding them as being definitely taught in schools

      • ElderWendigo@sh.itjust.works
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        widely spread myths

        That’s your problem. You can’t seriously argue that these myths were being taught as fact in school because they weren’t. They’re all myths spread by common idiots through word of mouth. Common public misconception on the facts can and does happen very independently of actual education, as evidenced by antivaccers lately. The only things you could honestly add to a list like this would be some scientific theory that has been definitively disproven or amended. Maybe something like changing training about CPR would qualify also.

        But those kinds of things are boring. It’s much spicier to claim that people were taught that Columbus’s contemporaries thought the world was flat even though that was just an over simplified story told to 5 year olds to explain why they got out of school on Columbus Day. Meanwhile anyone that didn’t sleep through trigonometry should learn that Eratosthenes showed the world was round about 1700 years before Columbus. I would believe that there are some lazy educators out there that would teach such myths as fact, but to claim that it was at all universal is silly. The whole premise of “old generations dumb, look what they believed” is just so smug and offensive. I must be getting old.

        • tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip
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          You can’t seriously argue that these myths were being taught as fact in school because they weren’t.

          One of my elementary teachers taught us the taste bud map myth.

        • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz
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          They were. Most of the history we were taught was nothing more than pro-America propaganda.

          Like for example, the true horrors of slavery aren’t actually commonly known, nor is the true extent of the effects of post-Civil War racist policies like redlining. Or that “crimes” like loitering and trespassing are actually holdovers from fucking Jim Crow laws. Or that American Mixed people originated as the rape babies of slaves.

          Or even colonization. Did you know the stupid fucking goddamn Belgian government was the root cause of the Rwandan genocide? They purposefully pitted the Hutus and the Tutsis against each other by giving the Tutsis special privileges and land and shit decades beforehand, playing on their flimsy understanding of the cultural order Hutus and Tutsis already had, enraging the Hutus. And the Belgian government never owned up or took responsibility for it. It wasn’t just France. Macron legit did apologize for the French government’s role but Belgium never did.

          Who here was taught about how the U.S. overthrew legit governments in South America and replaced them with dictators?

          Or that Libya was bombed to hell and back not because their dictator was a dictator but because he wanted to start selling oil in gold and not U.S. dollars?

          Who is ever taught the true nature of any of this shit?

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    “Probably didn’t know we could map the human genome… but in 2003…”

    I graduated high school in 2003, and had already heard the human genome had been mapped before entering high school. It may not have been true at the time, but I never once heard that it wouldn’t be completed due to the complexity. lol

    Actually quite a few of these were already being taught at my high school before it was more common knowledge. Like the stuff with Columbus and Edison. Which now makes me think my school was actually more progressive than I initially thought.

  • seaQueue@lemmy.world
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    I remember my little brother coming home from DARE convinced that my dad was an alcoholic for having a single beer after work then said little brother breaking down in tears over it. Good times.

    • sin_free_for_00_days@sopuli.xyz
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      LOL, I cracked a beer open one night and my kid laughed, pointed, and yelled out,"You are a Homer!!"

      EDIT: I also remember when DARE came to my school and this cop had a big baggie of weed on his table. I said,“Damn! That’s a lot of weed!”

      Then the cop replied, very seriously,“THAT’S ENOUGH MARIJUANA TO KILL YOU!!”

      My friends and I just laughed and walked away.