Difference between revisions of "Depictions of learning in The Blue Lagoon are awful"

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The Blue Lagoon is a film about two children who survive a shipwreck and grow up on an island. The film explores education and discovery using many different examples -- learning survival skills from the old man Paddy (e.g. how to build a hut, which foods are safe to eat), discovering sex, breastfeeding, parenting, managing a relationship, etc. There is even dialogue about wanting to understand how the world works. Despite this, I thought the film missed the opportunity to explore how education/learning works. Seemed like it was focused more on the emotional/aesthetic side of things, rather than taking this hypothetical seriously and exploring what happens.
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The Blue Lagoon is a film about two children who survive a shipwreck and grow up on an island. The film explores education and discovery using many different examples -- learning survival skills from the old man Paddy (e.g. how to build a hut, which foods are safe to eat), discovering sex, masturbation, menstruation, breastfeeding, parenting, managing a relationship, etc. There is even dialogue about wanting to understand how the world works. Despite this, I thought the film missed the opportunity to explore how education/learning works. Seemed like it was focused more on the emotional/aesthetic side of things, rather than taking this hypothetical seriously and exploring what happens.
  
 
[[Category:Learning]]
 
[[Category:Learning]]

Revision as of 02:06, 25 March 2021

The Blue Lagoon is a film about two children who survive a shipwreck and grow up on an island. The film explores education and discovery using many different examples -- learning survival skills from the old man Paddy (e.g. how to build a hut, which foods are safe to eat), discovering sex, masturbation, menstruation, breastfeeding, parenting, managing a relationship, etc. There is even dialogue about wanting to understand how the world works. Despite this, I thought the film missed the opportunity to explore how education/learning works. Seemed like it was focused more on the emotional/aesthetic side of things, rather than taking this hypothetical seriously and exploring what happens.