Originally posted by iam416
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Originally posted by Kapture1 View PostI just don't think the taxpayers should be on the hook for that 200,000 barista degree lol
Georgia doesn't limit the degree choice with the Hope Schollie. I think it has worked out fine. And it's lottery dollars more than tax dollars.
I think that the x factor here is the schools giving full and honest disclosure on being able to be gainfully employed in the chosen field upon graduation along with the parents giving their kid good counsel. Hand your child the sunday classifieds and tell them to find you 5 jobs listed for someone with a gender studies degree or whatever. When they can't, ask them how they plan to buy food food, pay rent, have a car, a phone, and internet. Most kids will see the light given appropriate guidance.
"The problem with quotes on the Internet is that it is sometimes hard to verify their authenticity." -Abraham Lincoln
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Originally posted by froot loops View PostThe room and board is the killer expense of college. Some of the academic scholarships a school might give are dependent on living on campus. The tuition prices get the press but it isn't the whole story.
"The problem with quotes on the Internet is that it is sometimes hard to verify their authenticity." -Abraham Lincoln
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Georgetown was picked from a hat. Substitute in Xavier.
I wouldn't limit degree choice, either. But one very plausible scenario is that state universities will lose the ability to raise tuition and instead get block funded from the State/Feds. They'll have to make do with what they get. They'll also be judged on outcomes that include obvious metrics. One such metric won't be self-fulfillment or knowledge for knowledge's sake. Funding will be tied to outcomes. Universities will up their focus on "practical" degrees and take resources from nonsense. And in that way major choices will winnow.
Another alternative is that schools emerge that fast track traditional 4-yr degrees or state universities start offering such degrees. One can certainly argue that humanities-based general ed requirements aren't necessary to a chemical engineering degree. So, schools will start offering 3-yr tracks for various degrees -- engineering, computer science, accounting, etc. That will suck dollars from humanities departments which depend, in part, on the general requirement classes.
In any event, to be clear, I'm absolutely against "free" higher education. However, as far as the Democrat [Socialist] agenda of "free" stuff goes, it's probably the thing I find least objectionable. And it's interesting to think about how that particular model will affect higher education. Certainly more interesting than Mueller or Manafort.Last edited by iam416; August 1, 2018, 11:07 AM.Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.
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I am not in favor of eliminating humanities from the core curriculum. The issue imo is the notion that every class or subgroup of classes needs a terminal degree and that is the cause of some of these soft, dead-end choices students make. Sure, offer women's studies classes, but manufacturing a terminal degree out of that is not necessary."The problem with quotes on the Internet is that it is sometimes hard to verify their authenticity." -Abraham Lincoln
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The fact is a lot of corporate jobs depend on a degree, but not necessarily any type of degree. Even the STEM stuff contains a ton of superfluous courses that will not be of use. A lot of the soft skills you learn in a multidisciplinary program come in handy even in a STEM job. Being able to write well, communicate well is pretty big. Of course the most important thing is RTFM.
Once you get a couple of years under your belt, the degree is just a line on the resume but is an important line. It is a signaling measure for companies, but it's not going away. Show me a barista that is 200k in debt and I'd say give it a few years, probably just got out of school and finding a real job is a pain. I delivered pizzas for a few years after college because the economy was in the tank and nobody was hiring. I used to keep the stack of rejection letters, ha. Learning how to interview should be a college course, that's as important as RTFM. If you can't sell yourself, you'll starve for awhile.
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Setting aside the value of specific degrees as we see it through our own eyes, it is my very strong opinion that *if* the federal government does it into the business of funding higher education they *will* want to measure results and I think the metrics are fairly obvious. If women's studies is a big launching degree to law school then a gainfully employed schyster then it will show up in the metrics. If not, then it won't. And how the federal government uses the metrics and results is just my speculation. But, I have little doubt that they will reach exactly that point.
I could be wrong. Could be one of those $70B public good programs that the govt doesn't care about.Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.
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Originally posted by AlabamAlum View PostI am not in favor of eliminating humanities from the core curriculum. The issue imo is the notion that every class or subgroup of classes needs a terminal degree and that is the cause of some of these soft, dead-end choices students make. Sure, offer women's studies classes, but manufacturing a terminal degree out of that is not necessary.
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I am not in favor of eliminating humanities from the core curriculum.
Maybe employers will demand the general ed background; maybe we'll find out that engineers that don't take two semesters worth of humanities are just as proficient as those that do. Maybe we'll find out that history teachers that don't take two Math classes and two science classes teach history just as well as those that do.
I know which outcome I'd bet on.Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.
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Talent is probably right on wanting metrics of an individual that is going to a 4 year school, that is sensible. I don't think it's the whole story, it's probably half the story. That would the micro-economic approach. The argument for upping the overall education level of an area or the country is you get more innovation and you create a lot of businesses from the collaboration between local communities and the local universities. It is something you can see in the rear view mirror in explaining places like Silicon Valley, but that is long term vision and I'm not sure how you measure that.
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When we complain that millenials lack common sense, maybe it's possible that what we really should be doing is complaining about the death of exposure to those topics. I know at the Big Four there's a renewed emphasis on hiring rounded candidates out of school. They want to take kids who know how to think and train them on the job. But that's just one type of company. It's going to vary.
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