Teach individuals and not the class

Nilufer

JF-Expert Member
May 10, 2012
9,565
13,540
Most of the teachers do teach the class but not individuals in the class. This leads to many failures especially government schools.

Taking this as an example of the real fact Magufuli is teaching citizens on how to work and get the right needs at right time. He doesn't teach the nation as a whole but nationals.

In order to reach to the apex we need to be taught seriously on how to work hard and tirelessly.

Kikwete was teaching the nation that's why we had had the artificial economy where people did not have income but rather they had money.

Now let's go with Magufuli soon we are going to enjoy endlessly .
 
Most of the teachers do teach the class but not individuals in the class. This leads to many failures especially government schools.

Taking this as an example of the real fact Magufuli is teaching citizens on how to work and get the right needs at right time. He doesn't teach the nation as a whole but nationals.

In order to reach to the apex we need to be taught seriously on how to work hard and tirelessly.

Kikwete was teaching the nation that's why we had had the artificial economy where people did not have income but rather they had money.

Now let's go with Magufuli soon we are going to enjoy endlessly .
I was impressed with the title, But I'm disappointed with the Article.
By the way! I respect your views.
 
It depends and not it depend. Learn english
Okay! So now you're trying to teach me some English! Right!?
Sorry man! That's like my third language and you expect me to be All good at it!?
And I'm happy you did understand what I meant.
 
Collectivism is a problem, in fact one of the problems that got Tanzania where it is today through "Ujamaa".

So I agree with the idea of upholding individualism.

But Magufuli does not know the first thing about individualism.

For one thing, he is a product of collectivism with neither a political philosophy nor a good general understanding of the world.
 
Okay! So now you're trying to teach me some English! Right!?
Sorry man! That's like my third language and you expect me to be All good at it!?
And I'm happy you did understand what I meant.
English is an illogical language anyway.

Much less logical than Swahili, phonetically (no uniformity in pronounciation) and grammatically (half the grammar is rules, half is exceptions to the rules in a ridiculously confusing way).

This is due to the nature of English being a lingua franca smorgasbord of not only Indo-European languages, most prominently Germanic tongues as well as Latin and Greek oriented words, but also the world nature it acquired with the expansion of the British Empire.

Swahili is more logical in that it possesses a more uniform pronounciation structure and a grammar that is very uniform with just a few exceptions.

So, for someone who is fluent in Swahili, learning English is like learning mistakes.

That is part of the reason many Swahili speakers have problems with English.
 
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