Inside College — By The Numbers
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quote:Originally posted by RJM:
And if the US can't produce the talent these immigrants have every right to come here and fill the void.
quote:Originally posted by RJM:
It means regardless of any feel good stories kids born in America and attending public school are getting robbed of a quality education due to the political agendas now creeping into schools. Others are emigrating to America and taking their place at the top universities and top technical and scientific jobs. Once the immigrants are citizens it's just padding the stats against the reality of the situation.
quote:Originally posted by bostonbulldogbaseball:
IMO, based on sending two kids to college, is there are kids who shouldn't be going to college but finding a trade school, joining the military, or finding a job.
quote:Originally posted by bostonbulldogbaseball:
I looked at the D1 school my son attends and 80% of the graduates are liberal art majors. The rest are engineering, math, sciences.
quote:Originally posted by JPontiac:
For one, I've hardly heard of a college that gives scholarships to international students. I'm sure these things exist, but if a non-US citizen wants to go to school in the United States, chances are they will have to pay for it on their own, regardless of their income. Perhaps there is aid in their home country or something like that, but there are just a few merit dollars available to international students and basically zero need-based dollars like are available to US citizens.
I also echo the sentiment that you need not chastise those that get non-trade, non-science degrees...AKA the liberal arts. Just because someone lazy majored in philosophy, this does not make the philosophy major useless. If the kid majored in philosophy and cannot articulate how his education could make him an asset to an employer, then he didn't deserve the degree. As someone mentioned with the rampant grade inflation common to universities (why didn't I go to a school with grade inflation? ), chances are the kid hardly did a thing while he was in college...
And unfortunately there is a lot of waste going on when it comes to college costs. I don't know how to fix the lack of affordability of a decent college education (I have my own opinions about what a decent undergraduate education entails). I will say that it certainly favors those with quite a bit of money. I was the kind of high school student that you'd be shocked had to pay for college and I'll be graduating with about 40k in debt, and I went with my cheapest option (not including junior colleges).
As far as what is required to get a job, I'm not sure if it is so clear cut. I think we want the degree to do the talking because we paid for it...but the truth is that nothing speaks louder than well, ourselves. There was a time way back when that degrees were rarer and you had to distinguish yourself not with a degree but a drive to succeed. I think being an enterprising, ambitious applicant that is not afraid to really take ownership of your hiring process is just as useful if not moreso than it ever was.
And we can all agree that more persistence is needed in improving the education available at the pre-college levels. I will say that I was more than prepared by my public education and the more I reflect on it, the more I realize the quality of teacher that was standard at my high school. This is in a small district that ranked among the lowest statewide in teacher's pay, by the way.
quote:Originally posted by Matt13:quote:Originally posted by bostonbulldogbaseball:
IMO, based on sending two kids to college, is there are kids who shouldn't be going to college but finding a trade school, joining the military, or finding a job.
That's a horse**** thing to say...apparently dumb people should join the military.quote:Originally posted by bostonbulldogbaseball:
I looked at the D1 school my son attends and 80% of the graduates are liberal art majors. The rest are engineering, math, sciences.
So? Liberal art majors have a purpose, too. Problem-solving, the ability to evaluate situations from a variety of perspectives, etc. There's a reason even medical schools now like students with liberal arts degrees.
quote:Originally posted by Matt13:
I would also point out that degree-holders are still well in the minority of adults. The very fact that someone had the persistence to finish a degree is telling in and of itself.
quote:Originally posted by zombywoof:
As for liberal arts, I think its a waste too. I told my kids that if they go to college, have a career in mind. Don't just go for the schooling. I'm spending a ton of loot to invest in them and all I ask from them is to spend my money wisely which means good grades and have a career plan. Since I'm getting no handouts or scholarships and my last name ain't Rockefeller, they get one shot at it and they must make the most of it.
quote:Originally posted by zombywoof:
As for becoming a tradesman or a soldier, there's nothing wrong with that and in fact, I've found these kids to grow up much faster than their college counterpartds who are only going so they don't have to face the real world that take these so called liberal arts courses.
quote:Originally posted by zombywoof:
For those who opted for military service, Just about every kid I know who went in were not much of college students and the military in a couple of short years transformed these unprepared boys into yong responsible men who learned a trade, got schooling in the military only to come out and go back to college with a purpose because they have a clearer idea what they want because of how they grew up in the military.
quote:Originally posted by Matt13:
So, you're saying you don't understand what a liberal arts degree is...because it's not something someone does "just because."
Way to stereotype (not to mention, may I reiterate, the lack of understanding of liberal arts.) Liberal arts aren't "courses." They are programs of study with an emphasis in a particular realm while at the same time ensuring exposure to other disciplines.
quote:
Funny, actually having been in the military, I would say the opposite--there is a harder transition trying to adjust to a non-structured lifestyle (or, as you call it, "the real world") at age 22 or 26 than at 18. Because of the institutional culture, it stifles socialization with those outside of that culture.
quote:Originally posted by leftyshortstop:
zombywoof - I'm sure you realize that Army and Navy ARE liberal arts schools. I think you might not know what a liberal arts school is.
quote:Originally posted by leftyshortstop:
zombywoof - I'm sure you realize that Army and Navy ARE liberal arts schools. I think you might not know what a liberal arts school is.
quote:Originally posted by Matt13:quote:Originally posted by zombywoof:
As for liberal arts, I think its a waste too. I told my kids that if they go to college, have a career in mind. Don't just go for the schooling. I'm spending a ton of loot to invest in them and all I ask from them is to spend my money wisely which means good grades and have a career plan. Since I'm getting no handouts or scholarships and my last name ain't Rockefeller, they get one shot at it and they must make the most of it.
So, you're saying you don't understand what a liberal arts degree is...because it's not something someone does "just because."quote:Originally posted by zombywoof:
As for becoming a tradesman or a soldier, there's nothing wrong with that and in fact, I've found these kids to grow up much faster than their college counterpartds who are only going so they don't have to face the real world that take these so called liberal arts courses.
Way to stereotype (not to mention, may I reiterate, the lack of understanding of liberal arts.) Liberal arts aren't "courses." They are programs of study with an emphasis in a particular realm while at the same time ensuring exposure to other disciplines.quote:Originally posted by zombywoof:
For those who opted for military service, Just about every kid I know who went in were not much of college students and the military in a couple of short years transformed these unprepared boys into yong responsible men who learned a trade, got schooling in the military only to come out and go back to college with a purpose because they have a clearer idea what they want because of how they grew up in the military.
Funny, actually having been in the military, I would say the opposite--there is a harder transition trying to adjust to a non-structured lifestyle (or, as you call it, "the real world") at age 22 or 26 than at 18. Because of the institutional culture, it stifles socialization with those outside of that culture.
Who says a kid has to attend a private university. There are a lot of great state institutions in the US.quote:Originally posted by Diamondthebest:
JPontiac is obviously a insider, he clearly understand the tough selection process of college App. Any 2012 parents will tell you a story about what they were going through. Although it's much easier than being drafted by MLB, but with over 2200 GPA and 3.97 GPA, you still got bounch of rejection letters, that's kind of scary, with this kind of score, No Ivys will admit you and those Top 20 private schools will ask you to pay for it in full. That's how hard it is. The good things we can afford it, we don't have to beg for money. As I said before I don't blame others for my son's own failure, If son was rejected by those top schools because his score was not good enough, it's his fault. If I can't give him the financial support needed to be in those Private Universities, that's my shame, I won't blame the system for that. The aid is for who really needs it, don't bother to even apply for it if you got enough. I don't complain Puff Daddy's son got the scholarship to go a college, maybe Puff will donate 100 times more to the school to support others in the future. Fortunately everything works fine for us, he got admitted and I will pay for it, nobody will take the blame, the system works.... hahaha...JMHO
You're assuming every kid is going to spend an additional two to four years in grad school. That's more expense.quote:Originally posted by JPontiac:quote:Originally posted by Matt13:
I would also point out that degree-holders are still well in the minority of adults. The very fact that someone had the persistence to finish a degree is telling in and of itself.
That's a good point.
I recall someone complaining in my AP Calculus class in high school, something along the lines of "when am I going to need this in real life?"
My teacher, who had once been the head of a university mathematics department, had much to say. Among those things, he told us that there is a reason that your law school, business school, medical school, graduate schools generally want to see that you've passed calculus and it has nothing to do with your ability to do calculus; there is something to be said for thinking critically, perseverance, and doing things you don't want to do and still doing them well. I hesitated giving such a brief retelling of my teacher's response, but I think you get the point.
Joining the Army or Navy is not attending West Point or Annapolis. But regardless of what kinds of degrees military grads obtain they come out of college with a guaranteed job.quote:Originally posted by leftyshortstop:
zombywoof - I'm sure you realize that Army and Navy ARE liberal arts schools. I think you might not know what a liberal arts school is.
quote:"Firms are looking for talent. They're not looking for content knowledge, per se," says Scott Rostan, founder of Training the Street Inc., which provides financial training courses for new hires at a number of investment banks. "They're not hiring someone just because they took an M&A class."
quote:Originally posted by Diamondthebest:Who says a kid has to attend a private university. There are a lot of great state institutions in the US.quote:Originally posted by RJM:
I'm not interested in my kids meeting the next Obama or Bush in college. I'm interested in them coming out of college and having good careers. My daughter is interning at one of the most prestigious law firms in the world out of a state university. She received a scholarship award from them before any Ivy Leaguer. She'll get to choose her law school. If she returns there after law school she'll make the same as any Ivy Leaguer at the same level.quote:Blame the USNEWS' College Ranking for it. Top 20 schools are mostly Ivys & Privates. Yes, public & state universities are much cheaper, but you won't have a chance to met the future Obama or Bush.......By the way, the first year salary after graduation is much higher.....JMHO
quote:Originally posted by bostonbulldogbaseball:
Not even a close analogy. If you join the military and get accepted to one of the academy's you are guaranteed a job as long as you have passing grades and no major infractions.
quote:Originally posted by bostonbulldogbaseball:
Now days a liberal arts degree equates to unemployment.
quote:Originally posted by RJM:
You're assuming every kid is going to spend an additional two to four years in grad school. That's more expense.
quote:Originally posted by zombywoof:
Maybe going back to the days of more entry level jobs out of high school would be a good thing. It will get those not college material in the workforce instead of a college classrooom and they're only there because mom and dad want them there and have been told the only way to make it is to get a college education. Another benefit will be less kids n debt and at the same time become productive and valuable workers who's skill set will increase as well as their earning power as the years go by.
quote:Originally posted by wraggArm:
Awesome idea. Lets actually dumb-down our economy so that we can reduce the number of educated waiters with student loans. Hell, letting the mean-o capitalist free market structure drive our job requirements is just not fair to people with feelings who would like to have an income.
Hey you know, while we're at it, lets just establish a rule where EVERYBODY gets a job, regardless of GNP, and just take all the money and divide it equally among everyone.
And then, since we don't like immigrants competing with us for jobs, lets make a big huge fence, and not let anybody get in or out...
quote:Originally posted by zombywoof:
Have no idea what point you're trying to make ...