Games & Quizzes
Don't forget to Sign In to save your points
This is a modal window.
PERFECT HITS | +NaN | |
HITS | +NaN | |
LONGEST STREAK | +NaN | |
TOTAL | + |
In lots of ways grown ups can seem very impressive.
But there is a big secret about them: they don't know everything.
Usually an adult only knows about a few things.. One adult might know a lot about trees or car engines,
but know very little about how a phone really works or what happened long ago.
Another might know a lot about books or electricity - but very little about Antarctica or sport.
In fact there are lots and lots of things - even quite important things - that no grown-ups know.
No-one really understands how to make cities very nice, for instance. If they did know all the cities in the world would be lovely.
But most of them are not.. No-one knows the best way to run a school - that's why there are lots of schools in the world that aren't very nice and why not every teacher is wonderful.
This isn't because grown-ups are stupid but because the problems are so difficult.
If you want to see a grown-up looking confused you could ask them what time is
- not what is the time (they will probably know that!) - but what is time itself?
or why are some jokes funnier than others or does a dog know that it's a dog?
They just won't really know. No one knows too well!
Grown-ups disagree about a lot of things. How should the country be run? What should we do about pollution? Who should get the biggest salaries?
You can yourself have conversations about these things and it doesn't matter if you don't know for sure - because grown-ups don't know either.
Grown-ups do know a lot. But - and it's important to keep reminding yourself of this - they're often very unsure about a lot of really important things in their own lives.
They can seem very impressive: they've got a job, they are married to someone, maybe they go on work trips to other countries in huge planes.
But maybe inside they don't really know why they got married to this person (maybe it would have been better with someone else);
/ˈpräbləm/
unwelcome or harmful matter. Questions to show understanding of a math concept.
/ˈlo͝okiNG/
having specified appearance. To appear to be when you look at them; seem.
/ˌkänvərˈsāSH(ə)n/
talk between people. Talking with other people; discussion or chat.
/dəˈsiZHən/
conclusion or resolution reached after consideration. Choices made after thinking; final judgment.