Doing math on paper with marks made in pencil by humans following algorithms was abandoned for important calculations in the middle of the 20th century largely because it was slow and error prone. I’m always curious about why math education has failed to realize this.
What should be the actions if a public employee parks their vehicle at work, and it displays messages some interpret as offensive or threatening on bumper stickers?
“Critical thinking” should be an outcome of every class for every student. Teachers who do it well will not be popular amongst leaders, however, as their students will ask uncomfortable questions.
In the days when telegraphs dominated communication over distances, codes like “shf” were used to shorten messages like “stocks have fallen.” This part of our "modern" communication is not new.
James Gleick (in The Information) tells of people who took hand written notes to be “sent” by telegraph. They objected when the note was still in their hands.
All those assumptions upon which you base your decision... some are wrong... if you consider the assumptions from divergent viewpoints, then they are likely all wrong.
“The problem with computers is often people.” Yup, sure seems accurate to me. At least as accurate as switching “computers” and “people” in the statement.