Wednesday, January 22, 2020
A Critical Analysis of Lies My Teacher Told Me Essay -- James Loewen A
A Critical Analysis of:Lies My Teacher Told Me       "It would be better not to know so many things than to know so many     things which are not so."       -FELIX OKOYE       Out of all forms of literature currently known to man, educational     textbooks are arguably the least interesting. On top of being     incredibly boring, textbooks, especially American history ones,     neglect to include the entirety of the information that it should.     Because American history textbooks wish only to paint the United     States in a bright light, the authors opt to leave out anything that     may hurt its image. What Lies My Teacher Told Me attempts to do is lay     out uncommonly known facts for the misinformed history students of     today. While it does succeed in bringing forth some good points and     fundamental flaws within the educations of the ordinary history     student, it itself fails to correct one of the very reasons it claims     that history books are so bad. The information within this book is     accurate and would be stimulating in every way had it only been     arranged in a coherent and interesting matter. However, after only a     chapter the reader is struggling to stay awake with the incredibly     boring style of writing and is trying to sort through and organize all     of the randomly arranged thoughts that make this more misleading than     the history textbooks it attempts to defraud.       To open up the book, Loewen tried to explain exactly why history     textbooks are so hated. He brings up the very good point that they     are, in fact, boring, and uses that as a launching pad to show that     the only reason they are boring is the fact that they leave out so     much controversy and information that i...              ... less than the rest of the country. While it was still interesting     information, he could have cut many things out which, in a sense, take     away from his message that history neglects to teach certain things     because some of these things were, in fact, taught.       The rest of this book follows a similar pattern of proposing great     ideas without any follow through, or if there is follow through, it is     too boring and misleading to appreciate. While this book had the     potential of being a great in consideration to the teachings of     American history due to its ability to identify little known facts     about the United States, it is too flawed to even be thought of as     anything impactful.         Work Cited       Loewen, James W. Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American     History Textbook Got Wrong. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996.                        
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