lol this guy. america you can have him if you want. the worst sort of demagogue we currently have in uk politics.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/201 … curriculum
bastard.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/201 … curriculum
bastard.
Define "student education." What if they were building a new dining hall, hotel (UCLA hotel management school lulz) or football field? Does taht fall under education?Macbeth wrote:
The College Student Rebate Act is making its way through congress. It would require universities to spend 80% of student's tuition on education or else they would be required to refund all enrolled student's tuition. This is targeted at for profit schools like University of Phoenix that charges $30,000 a year and uses most of it to pay dividends on their stock. I doubt this will pass congress though.
it's a good sentiment / aim in reform, but i don't know if it's totally in tune with the nature of the private research institution in america. the larger world-renowned ones basically operate as corporate entities in-themselves, with boards and shareholders and all sorts of financial investments spread around in a 'portfolio' to ensure the institution's longevity+diversity. look at stanford, for example, and its close ties to silicon valley. 80% on students is quite a ridiculously high number to aim to spend, every single year. what about years, for example like a few years back, when they had to rebuild the entire hospital/medical school facilities? that surely doesn't count as 'spending on students', to build a privately-operating hospital.Macbeth wrote:
The College Student Rebate Act is making its way through congress. It would require universities to spend 80% of student's tuition on education or else they would be required to refund all enrolled student's tuition. This is targeted at for profit schools like University of Phoenix that charges $30,000 a year and uses most of it to pay dividends on their stock. I doubt this will pass congress though.
Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-03-22 09:20:14)
Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-03-22 11:32:06)
No, you're afloat because you are the banking and investment hub of Europe. All those MBA's you denigrate are putting food on your table.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
it is kind of structural, on the level of a society's development. america's big push for STEM degrees was obviously in the post-ww2 boom years, when everything was go, and new technology and invention was helping to power the american technological gap over the rest of the (pretty much obliterated) developing world. when a country reaches a certain level of comfort, though, you tend to get people studying the more reflective and cultural degrees. it's definitely a luxury. i doubt there are many people growing up in india who can genuinely aspire, with any pragmatic sense, to go and study philosophy or ancient history at an american university. it just isn't the way up the ladder. with that said, western countries like the US and the UK do talk a lot nowadays about 'knowledge' and 'cultural' capital being just as operative parts of a nation's running/success as pure capital itself. the UK still stays afloat on the world level because it is essentially a place of educational and cultural prestige. so it's not as if the maturation into the luxuries of 'liberal arts reflection' are all bad and decadent.
"I know how to tell people what to do. They're the ones who know how to do it." - My grandfather, MBA, said in an interview with myself age 12.Jay wrote:
No, you're afloat because you are the banking and investment hub of Europe. All those MBA's you denigrate are putting food on your table.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
it is kind of structural, on the level of a society's development. america's big push for STEM degrees was obviously in the post-ww2 boom years, when everything was go, and new technology and invention was helping to power the american technological gap over the rest of the (pretty much obliterated) developing world. when a country reaches a certain level of comfort, though, you tend to get people studying the more reflective and cultural degrees. it's definitely a luxury. i doubt there are many people growing up in india who can genuinely aspire, with any pragmatic sense, to go and study philosophy or ancient history at an american university. it just isn't the way up the ladder. with that said, western countries like the US and the UK do talk a lot nowadays about 'knowledge' and 'cultural' capital being just as operative parts of a nation's running/success as pure capital itself. the UK still stays afloat on the world level because it is essentially a place of educational and cultural prestige. so it's not as if the maturation into the luxuries of 'liberal arts reflection' are all bad and decadent.
Sounds like social science to mewikipedia wrote:
as the country industrialized and companies sought out scientific approaches to management.
Last edited by Spearhead (2013-03-22 13:22:53)
I'm not saying they're gods, I'm just saying that he should be realistic about who is paying the taxes that subsidize his college education. He was right that it's a luxury to study things like literature and art, but he should also give credit to the people that actually do 'real work' and pay the bills. It's not prestige that puts food in peoples bellies, it's money and the people that earn it.Pochsy wrote:
"I know how to tell people what to do. They're the ones who know how to do it." - My grandfather, MBA, said in an interview with myself age 12.Jay wrote:
No, you're afloat because you are the banking and investment hub of Europe. All those MBA's you denigrate are putting food on your table.Uzique The Lesser wrote:
it is kind of structural, on the level of a society's development. america's big push for STEM degrees was obviously in the post-ww2 boom years, when everything was go, and new technology and invention was helping to power the american technological gap over the rest of the (pretty much obliterated) developing world. when a country reaches a certain level of comfort, though, you tend to get people studying the more reflective and cultural degrees. it's definitely a luxury. i doubt there are many people growing up in india who can genuinely aspire, with any pragmatic sense, to go and study philosophy or ancient history at an american university. it just isn't the way up the ladder. with that said, western countries like the US and the UK do talk a lot nowadays about 'knowledge' and 'cultural' capital being just as operative parts of a nation's running/success as pure capital itself. the UK still stays afloat on the world level because it is essentially a place of educational and cultural prestige. so it's not as if the maturation into the luxuries of 'liberal arts reflection' are all bad and decadent.
This self aggrandizement goes too far sometimes Jay. The MBAs are another cog, sure, but they're not the gods you like to believe. I'd take the economics PhD over a dime-a-dozen MBA any day.
Well, technically speaking the prestige of the tourism industry is exactly what puts food on the table. The curators of museums and galleries don't hold MBAs, but somehow they survive (and often well). I can safely say that almost all of the wealth puts zero food on the table for anyone except the bankers (similarly rich). It doesn't help society. I'm not saying you have to help society, but I am saying you should accept that you don't.Jay wrote:
I'm not saying they're gods, I'm just saying that he should be realistic about who is paying the taxes that subsidize his college education. He was right that it's a luxury to study things like literature and art, but he should also give credit to the people that actually do 'real work' and pay the bills. It's not prestige that puts food in peoples bellies, it's money and the people that earn it.
Nah, you're clueless, honestly.Macbeth wrote:
MBAs and business degrees are going the way of law degrees. There are way too many lawyers already because everyone saw it as the ticket to wealth and success. Supply and demand. Once the congress decides to give visas to foreign STEM degree earners in this latest round of immigration reform then wages for engineers are going to bottom out. You will find yourself 40 with 3 kids, a large mortgage, and replaced by a team of Chinese kids who are related to me by marriage and willing to kill themselves for a quarter of your salary.
All things considered you should do what makes you happy.
You don't think you are replaceable?Jay wrote:
Nah, you're clueless, honestly.Macbeth wrote:
MBAs and business degrees are going the way of law degrees. There are way too many lawyers already because everyone saw it as the ticket to wealth and success. Supply and demand. Once the congress decides to give visas to foreign STEM degree earners in this latest round of immigration reform then wages for engineers are going to bottom out. You will find yourself 40 with 3 kids, a large mortgage, and replaced by a team of Chinese kids who are related to me by marriage and willing to kill themselves for a quarter of your salary.
All things considered you should do what makes you happy.
Not really, no. Any monkey can do CAD drawings, sure, hell, most of the work is done by design programs already. Draftsmen went the way of the dinosaur unless they are protected by a strong union like electrical workers are. You could hire a roomful of Chinese introverts and they'll produce flawless drawings for much less than I would work for, but that's the thing, they're introverts. You'd probably be surprised based on the type of students that normally walk the halls in engineering schools, but the companies that hire engineers go out of their way to hire the ones that can actually talk to people without wetting themselves. They're the ones that become project managers and interact with customers, you wouldn't want a Chinese kid doing that.Macbeth wrote:
You don't think you are replaceable?Jay wrote:
Nah, you're clueless, honestly.Macbeth wrote:
MBAs and business degrees are going the way of law degrees. There are way too many lawyers already because everyone saw it as the ticket to wealth and success. Supply and demand. Once the congress decides to give visas to foreign STEM degree earners in this latest round of immigration reform then wages for engineers are going to bottom out. You will find yourself 40 with 3 kids, a large mortgage, and replaced by a team of Chinese kids who are related to me by marriage and willing to kill themselves for a quarter of your salary.
All things considered you should do what makes you happy.
Really? Books and libraries cost a fortune. Also, most engineering programs pay significantly higher tuition. Plus science departments have industry contracts and build equipment for other departments at universities. That's total nonsense. Most of the equipment you use at university has been there for years and years and cost next to nothing compared to salaries.Macbeth wrote:
Liberal art majors subsidize all the other majors. All you need for a history class is a lecturer and a projector. No labs or machines needed.
You're pretty spot on about chinese kids being introverts. I blame the parents pushing their kids k-12 who go to school from 7am-5pm EVERY DAY, come home with a ton of homework and prepping for the weekly exams. They wonder why their kids end up being burned out and producing shitty results in uni.Jay wrote:
Not really, no. Any monkey can do CAD drawings, sure, hell, most of the work is done by design programs already. Draftsmen went the way of the dinosaur unless they are protected by a strong union like electrical workers are. You could hire a roomful of Chinese introverts and they'll produce flawless drawings for much less than I would work for, but that's the thing, they're introverts. You'd probably be surprised based on the type of students that normally walk the halls in engineering schools, but the companies that hire engineers go out of their way to hire the ones that can actually talk to people without wetting themselves. They're the ones that become project managers and interact with customers, you wouldn't want a Chinese kid doing that.Macbeth wrote:
You don't think you are replaceable?Jay wrote:
Nah, you're clueless, honestly.
Besides, I'm in a protected industry firewalled behind licensure requirements. Only a licensed engineer can sign off on drawings, and only signed drawings can be used for construction. The project I've been working on with my current company is coming to a close so I tossed out my resume last week and I've already had four interviews and two job offers. I'm not worried