You miss my point.
STEM research has plenty of room for mundane, boring, routine work.
A great deal of real science is patiently sifting through shitloads of data, looking for the correlation that ties it all together, or the one "Aha!" spike in the data buried inside a billion other useless points.
I'm also not saying 'close all the arts & humanities programs!'
There is a real need for those professions in the world.
Just not in the numbers that current universities try to produce.
Perhaps 1 A&H:100 STEM ratio seems more sane.
B.Sci degrees (usually) have a good number of arts & humanities courses in the syllabus.
For the vast majority of people, of vastly average intellect, they are more useful to society as work-a-day drones in STEM careers.
A little exposure to arts & humanities to round out their intellectual development, but a larger portion of the syllabus devoted to useful careers.
We really don't need anymore Starbucks waiters with a masters degree in Sociology or Philosophy.
The universities here are producing far too many graduates with arts & humanities degrees.
They are loading delusional kids up with student loans, preying on their dreams in career fields that are grossly oversaturated.
Would you rather read another hand-wringing derivative paper on just how badly the Algerians had it?
Or would you rather fund engineering projects to make things better there (water, food, infrastructure), or medics and doctors to go over there?
Might need one or ten good journalists to bring the matter to public attention, but then you need another 100 or 1000 STEM drones to go actually fix things.
STEM research has plenty of room for mundane, boring, routine work.
A great deal of real science is patiently sifting through shitloads of data, looking for the correlation that ties it all together, or the one "Aha!" spike in the data buried inside a billion other useless points.
I'm also not saying 'close all the arts & humanities programs!'
There is a real need for those professions in the world.
Just not in the numbers that current universities try to produce.
Perhaps 1 A&H:100 STEM ratio seems more sane.
B.Sci degrees (usually) have a good number of arts & humanities courses in the syllabus.
For the vast majority of people, of vastly average intellect, they are more useful to society as work-a-day drones in STEM careers.
A little exposure to arts & humanities to round out their intellectual development, but a larger portion of the syllabus devoted to useful careers.
We really don't need anymore Starbucks waiters with a masters degree in Sociology or Philosophy.
The universities here are producing far too many graduates with arts & humanities degrees.
They are loading delusional kids up with student loans, preying on their dreams in career fields that are grossly oversaturated.
Would you rather read another hand-wringing derivative paper on just how badly the Algerians had it?
Or would you rather fund engineering projects to make things better there (water, food, infrastructure), or medics and doctors to go over there?
Might need one or ten good journalists to bring the matter to public attention, but then you need another 100 or 1000 STEM drones to go actually fix things.