They were trained on memorizing useless information. We have photocopiers for that job. Cheaper and better. They were trained on executing tedious procedures. We have computers for that job. Cheaper and better. So, what do we need them for, huh? — alcontali
So, what do we need them for, huh? — alcontali
I'm guessing some useless graduate programs those computers. — Hanover
How were you able to transcend your useless education and gain such wisdom? — Hanover
Hence, programming is an aptitude similar to composing music. It is not possible to "teach" it. Either you manage to figure it out by yourself, or else, you will never be able to do it. That is why most programmers cannot program. — alcontali
Most computer programmers have degrees from universities — Hanover
there are also schools that teach music. — Hanover
That you find it easier to self teach says something about you, not about the world generally. — Hanover
It also sounds like you struggled in school, although maybe you didn't, but that's what it sounds like. — Hanover
Also "coolness" which can roughly be calculated by multiplying appearance value with wealth value divided by reputation; access to drugs and alcohol and other 'taboo' and infamous experiences being the ultimate deciding factor. — Grre
I do not know if things have changed recently but last I checked those receiving degrees in education were in general at or near the bottom of their class. — Fooloso4
Parents tend to take the side of their children when it comes to discipline problems and will blame the teacher if the student is failing. — Fooloso4
Some years back I did some reading on the philosophy of education and it was a dismal affair. Schools would change their approach to education often and sometimes radically based on questionable theories of education and research that seemed to be designed to confirm whatever assumptions it intended to prove. — Fooloso4
based on questionable theories of education and research that seemed to be designed to confirm whatever assumptions it intended to prove. — Fooloso4
Higher education has adopted a business model sometime in the seventies and since the bottom line is now the most important thing, a major concern is retention. — Fooloso4
This has contributed to grade inflation. Instructors bear the brunt of the blame from both students and administration if students fail or get poor grades. Students expect to get A's of B's for doing minimal work of poor quality. There is an enormous sense of entitlement. — Fooloso4
Some years back I read something by a professor whose evaluations by students were always low. The most common complaint was that he was too demanding. And so he decided to treat the class as if it were kindergarten. He even brought cookies for snack time. He praised them for whatever they said or did. He made sure all assignments were easy and if they could not handle even that he still graded them as if they were the exceptional students they thought they were. He quickly became teacher of the year. — Fooloso4
Adjuncts are often as qualified as tenured faculty but are paid very poorly and must teach multiple courses at several schools and take other jobs on top of that if they are to live above the poverty level. The are academic migrant workers. No contracts and no benefits.This is not an exaggeration. No matter how qualified they cannot keep up with the amount of classes they teach. It is one of higher educations dirty little secrets. — Fooloso4
IN terms of numbers: in the seventies, X percent of high school graduates went on to study in post-secondary schools. Our current rate of Y percent, where X < Y shows robust reinforcement of that policy.
However, the good students of X (GX) was a greater percentage of X than now. Similarly, the good studernts of Y (GY) are greater in numbers, than GX. Despite the huge amount of graduates that are basically good for nothing.
The economy can be driven by the good graduates, and populated by the poor achievers, who are like fillers with the mandated task to spend money but without getting in over their heads in debt.. — god must be atheist
Don't these adjuncts just have more freedom to pursue their other interests when they are paid on a 'per classes taught' basis? — ZhouBoTong
I have gotten the feel from both of you that you may be agreeable to American libertarianism? — ZhouBoTong
I think you are using 'economy', when you mean 'progress of the human race'? Those brilliant people that drive progress forward actually are not the point of education...those people will be just fine. Also, what are the rest of us paying for when we go to college (can I get a decent job without a degree? can everyone?)? I am not saying you are wrong, but should the bottom 50% just shut up and eat our crappy existence because those few 'producers' deserve all the benefits of their own brilliance? — ZhouBoTong
If you are referring to me then no I am not a libertarian. — Fooloso4
Traditionally, adjuncts were experts working in other fields who brought their knowledge to the classroom. — Fooloso4
They rarely have the time or energy to pursue other interests. — Fooloso4
Since there is now a shortage of academic jobs and there are several financial advantages to the university, adjuncts are taking the place of full time instructors. They would prefer a full-time position but they are few and far between. The workload carried by an adjunct may the about the same as a full-time faculty member, but since adjuncts are so poorly paid and there are no healthcare and other benefits they must either work full time doing something else or work at multiple schools with a workload that far exceeds full time faculty, and still make only a small fraction of full-timers. — Fooloso4
I hope you caught that I was joking — ZhouBoTong
Is not good and needs fixing. — ZhouBoTong
ZhouBoTong, thanks for the help with the referencing of users.
It was very helpful. — god must be atheist
My post was strictly about why education works, very well, from the point of view of the economy as a whole. — god must be atheist
I didn't. There are some who think it is an easy way to make a living with lots of free time. — Fooloso4
I don't know what will bring about change but as long as there is a pool of qualified people willing to teach and an administration unwilling to hire full-time, let alone tenure track, faculty the problem will persist. — Fooloso4
Yes, and unfortunately, in America, people would tell those qualified people to get out there and do something (those who can do, those who can't teach). — ZhouBoTong
I think that if potential students and their parents are aware of the problem and make clear that they will not apply to schools with a high percentage of adjuncts things may begin to change. — Fooloso4
Grad students teaching courses is another problem — Fooloso4
An excellent PhD adjunct instructor in Classics at the U of Minnesota said back in the early 1980s that college teaching was turning into 'migrant labor' because one could never put together enough jobs at one institution. One would end up running all over town. — Bitter Crank
They are academic migrant workers. — Fooloso4
I assume that it was a conservative push to reduce government expenditures ...Or maybe it was born out of a basic hatred of college professors. — Bitter Crank
I wonder what they think those with a PhD in philosophy should do. Be like Socrates and harass people at the mall? — Fooloso4
I think that if potential students and their parents are aware of the problem and make clear that they will not apply to schools with a high percentage of adjuncts things may begin to change. — Fooloso4
So, I would take your evidence as showing that education works for maintaining a 2-3% increase in GDP every year. — ZhouBoTong
What percent of students are actually there to learn anything anyway? — ZhouBoTong
As a result I somewhat take a step back when it comes with children, I speak to them like they are adults — Grre
even make casual conversation and small talk about things in my own life (like telling them my baby fish died), but in no way do I pretend to be their friend or talk baby talk to them. Children are smart, curious, and honest, and I try to let their natural capacities guide them; I ALWAYS answer their questions honestly, and I NEVER tell them to stop asking questions or "because I said so" or "that's just the way it is — Grre
Question-asking, or "inquiry" as educational theorists have described it, is so important to maintaining critical thinking skills (philosophy skills!) — Grre
by claiming that all facts are absolute, memory-based testing ect. vs. open discussion and exploration as more encouraged today — Grre
focused so heavily on stigmatizing the "bully" and romanticizing the victim without examine external circumstances and pressures — Grre
The biggest defining difference between "coolness" as perceived among children and "coolness" as perceived among adults is that adults are more often forced to interact, collaborate, and put up with people regardless of their "cool" factor. Therefore, there is more room for heterogeneity and interspersion-I am friends with people I consider less "cool" than me because we have other common interests or were forced into similar or close-working situations. — Grre
Is it presumptuous of me to presume that you were not considered "cool" in school? — Grre
This is the lousiest (also inconsequential) post I wrote this forum. — James Pullman
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