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Rhino <no_offline_contact@example.com> wrote:I wonder if we were wise beyond our years or just too lazy to want to work that hard for something that didn't seem useful to know....On 2025-02-05 10:21 AM, suzeeq wrote:That was actually something we had to do as a test in either late gradeOn 2/5/2025 5:57 AM, Rhino wrote:>If you're in the mood for a bit of a laugh, you might like this video.>
Several teams of two Brits are given a map showing the 50 US states
and are then given 10 minutes to label all of them. (They are also
given a list of the states). They made some surprising guesses.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9GNf51_NvU [9 minutes]
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Several other videos in the same vein show up on my recommended list.
I also saw one where Americans tried to pronounce British place names
(NOT the easy ones like "London"), and another where Brits tried to
pronounce American place names (again, NOT the easy ones). They're all
in good fun.
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I like to think I could label quite a lot of the US states correctly
but I know I'd have trouble with some. Then again, I'm not sure if
most Americans would get them all correct either ;-)
I'd have a hard time placing all the English shires in the correct
place, or even larger cities like Leeds and Birmingham. And I've looked
up some of them on google maps.
You'd do better than me then! I can point to a few places that I've been
but if you asked me where Lincolnshire is or what was in it, I'd have to
look all of that up. Mind you, I understand the shires have no political
significance at all: they don't function like states with their own
governments. There are really just two levels of government, the federal
government and local "councils" whose boundaries are not based on the
shires.
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What about the 50 states? Could you label all of them correctly given a
blank map?
school or early high school.
So I could’ve done it 55 years ago, but I doubt I’d get more than half of
them now. I’d be able to fill in the borders like doing a jigsaw puzzle,
but the middle would remain empty.
This is the perfect example of the stuff we complained about learning in
school that we would never ever need to know and we were right.
I think we're from the generation that actually had geography--in school and learned that kind of thing but I have reason to doubt that
the current generation of school children - and maybe the previous
generation or two as well - got that same information.
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