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Topic ClosedChildhood Preferences

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Poll Question: Which subject did you enjoy more as a child?
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
10 [34.48%]
19 [65.52%]
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Equality 7-2521 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Childhood Preferences
    Posted: May 25 2011 at 14:50
Simple question to settle a curiosity of mine in a highly scientific manner. Voting is for you as a child please remember.

I was much more interested in the sciences as a child. Eventually schooling made them unbearably boring and took all of the creativity and discovery out of them. I have clearly returned to them later in life.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 14:51
Science and math, easily, and probably fairly obvious for those who know me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 14:51
Always the arts for me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 14:56
History, geography and biology: the dissection of fishes is always a "hit" with children.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 14:57
I have to say reading, although I was also very interested in science. In first grade I wanted to be chemist, although later I changed my mind when I realized what it was chemists actually did. :P

Formaldehyde always made me sick so I couldn't do much of the biology stuff. 

Edited by Henry Plainview - May 25 2011 at 14:58
if you own a sodastream i hate you
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:04
I was more interested in Literature, History, Theology, etc.

But I was a pretty good student until I discovered women..

Iván
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:09
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

I was more interested in Literature, History, Theology, etc.

But I was a pretty good student until I discovered women..

Iván


lol, for me substitute beer for women, but yeah.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:15
Books here. Jules Verne, Alexandre Dumas, the Bible, Jack London, Kipling, ETA Hoffmann, Michel Zevaco, James Cook, soviet adventure & war novels, etc. And especially copious amounts of tales from all over the world - Arab, Persian, Central Asian, African, Balkan, Chinese, the Grimm brothers, etc.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:34
The arts, I suppose, inlcuding history. But I did enjoy cutting up cats and pigs in Biology.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:40
By child I had meant pre-high school, pre-teenage years. I quite enjoyed that also, but I didn't personally have the opportunity until high school.

I did dissect a gold fish that my dad had won for me at a carnival after the fish died (due to an experiment itself of mine), but that wasn't exactly a supervised activity.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:41
The arts no doubt. Except I do enjoy social studies. I am still a child, btw. Tongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:41
I liked science, math, english, art, music, and computers. I guess I was pretty evenly split?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:42
I think most of us liked just about everything. I was a voracious reader of fiction back then. But surely there was a preference in some direction?
"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:44

I was an avid fiction reader as well and I still am but the books are much more existentialist and surreal. Although I did enjoy 1984 at a particularly young age, 5th grade.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:48
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:

By child I had meant pre-high school, pre-teenage years. I quite enjoyed that also, but I didn't personally have the opportunity until high school.

I did dissect a gold fish that my dad had won for me at a carnival after the fish died (due to an experiment itself of mine), but that wasn't exactly a supervised activity.
Gotcha. It would still be the Arts. I still have the weathered and worn copy of Bulfinch's Mythology which I devoured in 5th grade (loved  Norse and Greek myth as well as the Arthurian cycle at the time).
 
We cut up frogs in 7th grade and fetal pigs in 8th, which in Catholic school would still be considered "grade school".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:50
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:

I think most of us liked just about everything. I was a voracious reader of fiction back then. But surely there was a preference in some direction?

It's hard to remember if I really preferred any over the others but I'll vote arts anyways because my dream back then was to become an author.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 15:51
Originally posted by The Truth The Truth wrote:

The arts no doubt. Except I do enjoy social studies. I am still a child, btw. Tongue


It's more about you as you were before being a teenager. Pat also pointed that out.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 17:13

Literature, history, geography etc

who hiccuped endlessly trying to giggle but wound up with a sob
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 18:00
Science, maths and drawing. Through most of my school and college years I had problems with words, but numbers I could understand - they made sense to me so science was something I could simply do because it was just applied maths (except biology, which I didn't care too much for).
 
I guess it was the technical aspects that attracted me to drawing, I wasn't much of a painter back then, (I came 2nd in a painting competition when I was 8, the boy who won first prize had just coloured-in one of my discarded drawings... that amused me at the time and it still does 46 years later), I certainly was not a reader (I didn't become a voracious [great word] reader that until I was a teenager) and I hated having to write anything, but I loved to draw structure and spaces between things - I remember a teacher once chastised me for using a ruler, set-square, compasses and worse of all, an eraser in an art lesson -to me it seemed silly not to. I could have become a draughtsman in later life if I hadn't discovered you could mess around with electronics and get paid for it, but I was just too messy and scruffy to work in a drawing office - what was supposed to be a pristine technical drawing looked more like a charcoal sketch by the time I was finished with it ...


Edited by Dean - May 25 2011 at 18:01
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 25 2011 at 18:10

5th Grade???   Wiki tells me that's 10-11 year-olds... I was reading Edgar Rice Burroughs and H G Wells then, but not much else aside from DC & Marvel comics and an ancient set of The Children's Encyclopedia by Arthur Mee that I used to sit and read for hours on end.



Edited by Dean - May 25 2011 at 18:11
What?
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