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Article created by: Denis Krotovas

There are some things we learn at school that are accurate at the time yet are found to be false later. At the same time, some things are already incorrect, but we are taught them regardless because the teacher lacks knowledge or their information is outdated.

Most people will likely have had this experience. And because it’s always fun to share and read about these things, when one Reddit user raised such a question online, the post blew up, with people bombarding the comment section with replies. Scroll down to see what they wrote. And if this list doesn't satisfy your hunger, have no worries because we have two more of these for seconds and dessert!

More info: Reddit

#1

Smartphone calculator app open on screen, representing now-false facts taught in schools. the we wont be walking around with a calculator in our pockets

Need_Bacon , Mohammadreza alidoost Report

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    #2

    Brown and white eggs in a straw-filled box, a symbol of now-false facts taught in schools about egg color nutrition. Eggs are bad because of cholesterol.

    Lucius_Funk , Nick Fewings Report

    #3

    View of Earth from space, showing continents and oceans, connected to the topic of now-false school facts. When I was in junior high in the mid 80s, our Earth Science textbooks had continental drift, and our teacher said, "Okay, so I need you to ignore all of Chapter 4" (or whatever it was). "Plate tectonics has been the accepted theory taught in colleges for 10 years now, but K-8 textbooks haven't caught up yet." I feel like the version of plate tectonics I learned was a tiny bit garbled compared to what kids learned 10 years later, but my teacher was directly pulling from college texts and published scientific papers and distilling it down for 6th graders, so more power to her!

    AliMcGraw , NASA Report

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    #4

    A woman speaking at a microphone, wearing sunglasses and a patterned dress; illustrating now-false facts. We were taught that Rosa Parks didn't get up from her seat because "she just got tired one day"; that the entire action was the spontaneous action of a lone woman. In fact, the entire thing was scripted and choreographed. While Parks was a seamstress, she was also the secretary to the president of the local NAACP chapter. She was recreating the protest done by Claudette Colvin. The NAACP wanted Parks to recreate it because Colvin was very dark complected, and a single mother. The NAACP thought Parks, who was lighter skinned, would appeal to white audiences seeing this on TV

    StillSilentMajority7 , Unseen Histories Report

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    #5

    Person stressed at laptop with notebooks, reflecting on now-false facts previously taught in schools. Respect those in authority. The government, your company, your boss have your best interest at heart. If you work hard and play by the rules, you'll get ahead.

    Pour_me_one_more , energepic.com Report

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    #6

    Colorful fruit bowl with strawberries, kiwis, pomegranate, and muffins. Healthy eating contrasted with past false facts. the food pyramid

    loquacious_avenger , Jane Doan Report

    #7

    Buffalo standing in a grassy field, covered in mud, representing outdated facts once taught in schools. I've got 2 good ones. I had a social studies teacher tell me that Asian eyes were slanty because it was a defense mechanism for sand blowing in the wind. This was who taught topics like history and geography. She also said some other racist stuff against Asians that I won't repeat here. That same teacher told us that the city of Buffalo was named by taking the original native American name for the land Belle Fleuve (which is French for beautiful river or something) and "mucking it up". I never questioned why native Americans were giving things French names. Anyways, in hindsight I now realize she was a terrible teacher.

    716green , Antony Trivet Report

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    #8

    Hands crafting leather on a cutting mat, stitching details visible, illustrating traditional skills taught in schools. Humans are the only animals that use tools.

    bullet_proof_smile , Anna Tarazevich Report

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    #9

    Books on a wooden shelf, representing now-false facts once taught in schools. I was taught that in college you will spend all of your study time in a library reading and researching using books and reference catalogs. The internet was evil and full of lies and not a valid resource for academic research.

    Begany11 , Iñaki del Olmo Report

    #10

    A handwritten "Thank you" note on lined paper with a pen nearby, exploring now-false facts once taught in schools. You’ll use cursive forever.

    CharmyFrog , Towfiqu barbhuiya Report

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    #11

    Komodo dragons on a beach, overlooking the sea with a mountainous backdrop, illustrating now-false facts about biology. Komodo dragon bites were deadly due to high concentrations of bacteria, not venom. Turns out that they are, in fact, venemous

    actual-hakim , Jeffry Surianto Report

    B. Briggs
    Community Member
    10 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Not so fast - herpetologists are still debating that.

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    #12

    Yellow measuring tape coiled on a table with sewing supplies, illustrating concepts of “now-false facts” taught in schools. In the early 80’s we were told that soon we would soon use the metric system in the US. Still waiting .

    Low-Argument3170 , Darling Arias Report

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    #13

    Cat with black and white fur sticking out its tongue, illustrating now-false facts once taught. The tastebud zones thing.

    keepinitrealzs , Don Hassan Report

    #14

    Smiling child with curly hair and colorful necklace, representing past school-taught facts that became outdated. "putting aboriginal children in schools was okay at the time (I was taught ) and they wanted their children to go. The aboriginals were treated with respect and their traditions and values were protected." - Canada in the 90's, more specifically my social teacher in grade 6 or 7. Pretty sure now that's not how it went down.

    brkuzma , Zakaria HANIF Report

    #15

    Dinosaur statue in a lush park setting, illustrating now-false facts once taught in schools. When I was little, I was taught about the brontosaurus, mighty long-necked plant eater of the dinosaurs. Later, I was taught that, whoops! They accidentally stuck some random bones together and there was never any such animal. Later still, I recall hearing that, oh, actually, there was a brontosaurus after all! Or was there? To this day, I am still, as a 42-year-old man, unclear on whether or not there was ever such a thing as a brontosaurus.

    sosomething , Vaibhav Pixels Report

    #16

    Assorted spices and ingredients in small bowls on a leaf background, related to historical facts taught in schools. I remember learning that MSG (sodium glutamate) was really bad for you. It was one of those things I heard both at school and in my family to the point where we wouldn’t buy any product that had MSG in the ingredients.

    There have been multiple studies showing no evidence of adverse health effects from MSG. There is a subset of people that report hypersensitivity to it. But in double blind experiments, their symptoms tend not to show up when they don’t know they’ve eaten it. Conversely the symptoms DO show up when they think they’ve eaten it but haven’t actually.

    Conclusion: MSG is literally just salt and glutamate protein, which is separately in just about everything you eat anyway. 

    Approximatl , Elina Sazonova Report

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    #17

    Astronaut floating above Earth, representing now-false facts once taught in schools. Where did we end up on “you can see the Great Wall from space”? Because at different points that was both true and definitely disproven in various textbooks I had.

    anthonystank , NASA Report

    #18

    Workers moving boxes in a large warehouse aisle, illustrating logistics and storage efficiency. God damn, I'm gen x. We learned that given then-current rates of productivity, we'd all be working 3 day weeks by 2010. Without being told we'd be *paid* for 3 day weeks, or that our labour would be offshored to Chinese prison camps.

    Sauterneandbleu , Tiger Lily Report

    #19

    Fresh carrots with green tops, a commonly taught false fact relates to their impact on vision. That carrots make your eyesight better. This was in the early 90s.

    show_pleasure , Nick Fewings Report

    #20

    Dinosaur statue in a lush park setting, symbolizing a once-taught but now-refuted fact from school education history. Dinosaurs are cold blooded.

    LinearFluid , icon0 com Report

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