• @[email protected]
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    -72 months ago

    You didn’t address my point at all — I’m talking about remote schooling, which I believe studies showed did not do well.

    I agree with you that the WFH “productivity” studies are suspect since it’s difficult to measure productivity in any meaningful way.

    • @funkless_eck
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      102 months ago

      you were drawing a conclusion - so it seems - that as education suffered, so would work

      • @[email protected]
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        -62 months ago

        Indeed I was! I’m not sure the studies you linked would either confirm nor refute that point. I agree with your supposition that studies on Indian call centers probably don’t generalize particularly well.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 months ago

          Schooling is

          1. Targeted at children, who are famously awful at conceptualising consequences, so given a chance to slack off they most likely will.
          2. Mandatory, so there is no risk of losing your ability to get an education.
          3. Not directly related to earning and quality of life in the immediate future.

          Schooling and work are not congruous at all. The people participating are too different, they’re there for different reasons, and they get a different payoff with a different timing on its turnaround.

          Remote work translates to being able to take your coffee break at home and possibly do a load of laundry while you’re waiting for a reply on an email, and being able to do a grocery run instead of commuting at the end of the day. Otherwise for most jobs it’s fundamentally identical or straight up better.