Isn't it child cruelty to force Shakespeare on kids who have no time for it, struggle with it, fail it, and after leaving school never revisit it.
Why?
Personally I couldn't call it cruelty - it can be a challenge and encourage a different way of dissecting plots and characters but if they found better or different texts to study it wouldn't break my heart.
I loved it and like many I use quotes on a regular basis.
All my working life it was so irrelevant to me and the hundreds of people I worked with. This sentiment carries on with my kids and grandkids and their peers.
Why?
Children only struggle if the teaching is poor. I adore Shakespeare. My daughter was enthused from an early age and is still passionate years later.
That Othello can be set in Camp Bastion says so much about the genius of Shakespeare.
If kids struggle with it then it's not being taught properly. All children love stories, that's all Shakespeare is, and what he wrote about is as pertinent now as it was then, they are just human stories and children learn all sorts of things from it, ethics, morality and human nature etc it's not just English literature.
Perhaps ( or is that perchance ) it stems from childhood - working class family but house full of books and literary quotes abounded and piqued my interest in their origin.