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Being Well Educated
Febraury 13, 2010
Patricia Ricks-Armstead

In exploring what it means to be educated one must take a closer look at how we seek and acquire knowledge beyond the traditional sense. If you take a closer look you will discover that there is an evolution of how knowledge has been shared and obtained throughout human history. And it is with this discovery that we will learn that acquisition of knowledge is not a “one-size-fits-all” process that has dominated most educational institutions in the recent decades. Being well educated does not always mean that you know everything all the time. If that was the case, we would all be perfect. I feel that everyone has a bit of ignorance in them. To define ignorance so no one will be offended; it is the lack of knowledge: lack of knowledge or education, unawareness: unawareness of something, often of something important. Synonyms are the state of unawareness, inexperience, illiteracy, unfamiliarity, obliviousness, witlessness. Now if you look at this, I don’t know how to fly a plane so therefore I am ignorant to that fact but it definitely does not mean that I am not well educated.
Some people would argue the ignorant factor asuming that this is a way of calling them stupid. Like it says in the "What does it mean to be well educated story", the husband talks about how his wife is very knowledgable when it comes to medicine and anthropology; she freezes up when you ask her what eight times seven is. (Kohn, 2003). So does this make the wife ignorant? Or is she well educated in her field of study? From grade school to high school we focus on several different subjects, such as reading writing, mathematics and sciences. These subjects are whats required to graduate. A certain amount of these subject are needed to go on to college. Once the required classes are aquired most persons move on to study courses that are required of thier degree program, so that they become proficient in the area of the career path they have chosen. Having said this, if a person has high acheivements in thier area of studies but is oblivious to other areas of expertise does that make them a well educated person or ignorant? Some would say that to be well educated you have to knowledge about all things. Some even feel that attandance to a certain school makes a person well educated. I have had the pleasure of meeting some very knowledgable people who have had no formal education. But through hard work, perfecting thier craft and picking the brains of some of our so called well educated people, they have gained a wealth of knowledge. What category would they belong?
I say to be well educated is to be the best at what it is you have chosen to do. Not be intimidated by others who may have degree after degree. Bell well informed enough to carry on a formidable conversation with any and everyone you meet. Because you see even some of the so called best educated people in world are not capable of having a simple conversation with the guy next door.

Outline

I. Introduction A. How educated you are depends on the person looking. B. You don’t have to know everything to be well educated. C. We are all ignorant in some way. II. Knowledge A. What areas did I study? B. Define Ignorance C. Are You Perfect?

III. People may argue the fact that we are all ignorant to some point A. I’m not stupid B. Revisit the definition of ignorance, it does not mean stupid. C. Pilot story

IV. Conclusion A. So education is important B. Get all you can get C. Ignorance is not stupidity

Reference

Kohn, A. What Does it Mean to BE Well-Educated? Retrieved February, 2010. www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/welleducated.htm Proofreading Checklist

PART 1:

Read through your paper and check the appropriate boxes on the chart below. If any area of your paper needs revision, make sure you correct it before submitting your final draft. One of the best ways to proofread your writing is to read it backward to forward, sentence-by-sentence. This helps you to see words and ideas you may have missed. Another very successful tool for proofreading is to read your work out loud to someone else. Students often think that handing their paper to someone and asking them to read it is the same thing, but it isn’t. Instead, ask them to listen while you read your own words. You will immediately hear what you missed or want to improve in your writing.

Feature (Instruction from Lessons 1-8) | Successful | Needs Revision | Clearly shows my opinion | | | Tells a story that reflects my opinion | | | Contains pathos (emotional) appeals | | | Contains ethos (values/belief) appeals | | | Contains logos (factual) appeals | | | Title reflects my issue and opinion | | | Contains appropriate header for my discipline (MLA, APA, Turabian) | | | If using APA, contains properly formatted title and abstract pages | | | Double-spaced | | | Margins are 1 inch wide on all sides | | | Font is New Times Roman 12 | | | References/Works Cited page includes all sources used for this essay. | | | Spellchecked | | |

PART 2:

When you are satisfied with the quality of your essay, post it to Blackboard via the Turnitin link for grading. Do not forget to write your degree program and whether you are using MLA, APA, or Turabian in the “Submission Title” field when submitting your paper.

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