2
5/1/2008 10:29:28 PM
ya don't need a college degree to do what joe#'s just did!
5/1/2008 10:44:43 PM
5/1/2008 11:24:45 PM
Bottom line: While sitting in a class, ask who is there to make less money? I have done this on numerous occasions with the same result--nobody. Do people want to feel generally more educated as result of their, well, education? Yes, of course. Do people want to learn something that they can take into the real world and use to earn money? Yes, absolutely.The GERs are what should help create well-rounded students. The problem is that GERs have been applied improperly at many colleges, particularly in recent years. Wikipedia.com actually has a pretty good summary of this:
5/2/2008 6:15:06 AM
I am glad some colleges accept people that didn't shine in High School.I graduated from High School with a 2.3 GPA and my only extracrclr activity was marching band. I graduated NCSU with a 3.7 and after only 3 year in the market place am making the same money (and earning more vacation) than my mom who worked for 30 years without a college degree (though God bless her for putting up with all the shit she did to put me through college).If a kid thinks he/she can do better in college than they did in High School and a place like NCSU is good enough to accept them, then more power to them.If you're wanting to protect "stupid people" from wasting their money, then you can consider yourself a fucking snob-ass busy body. Live your own life and leave me to live mine.[Edited on May 2, 2008 at 6:37 AM. Reason : ``]
5/2/2008 6:36:20 AM
5/2/2008 8:12:50 AM
^^but then what will the limousine liberals do to stay busy?
5/2/2008 8:31:06 AM
^Some of you are so interested in political baiting its absurd. Take the above for example. Why would liberal vs. conservative have anything to do with this? Wouldn't liberals be more likely to want everyone to go to college instead of restricting and making requirements harder? I could respect some people more if they were more focused on being consistent with their views rather that chastising a group without much basis for the mere purpose of seeking political debate.
5/2/2008 9:04:53 AM
5/2/2008 9:19:38 AM
Again, the question is, what did college give you (other than the piece of paper) that you could not have gotten with 4-6 years of real world experience?And as far as hypothetical kids contributing to society without going to college, history is full of examples of people who didn't attend higher ed or dropped out who have made huge impacts of society in many more ways than 90% of the people who attend higher ed these days probably do.
5/2/2008 2:30:04 PM
^Absolutely. My hypothetical kid is someone who attended college though (the Flyin Ryan Institute of Preparing to Make a Living).
5/2/2008 2:42:09 PM
my buddy was stupid as shit at high schoolnot stupid, but stupid AT high schoolhe graduated, went to GTCC for automotive, and last year built the first toyota nascar. hes making tons. its not how smart you are, its doing what you know you are capable of.
5/2/2008 2:43:49 PM
Great example.There are tons of viable paths to success other than college.Yet we frequently turn kids away from these paths when we insist that they follow a college prep curriculum before engaging in anything actually relevant to their aspirations.And why the heck did someone bring up liberal/conservative? As stated, the opinion of this article is decidedly -not- liberal.[Edited on May 2, 2008 at 4:33 PM. Reason : .]
5/2/2008 4:33:01 PM
5/2/2008 6:18:54 PM
You have twice now dodged the question of what you got out of college that prepared you for your job / the real world aside from the degree that you can not get as well or better with 4-6 years work experience?
5/3/2008 9:14:53 AM
^ This was your original statement.
5/3/2008 11:09:01 AM
How anyone could fail out of college is really beyond me.I don't have experience in other studies (english, history, etc..) but ECE at NCSU was EASY. It required very little work and if you didn't even understand the principles you could have probably graduated based on pure memorization. I may not be dumb, but i'm no genius. So yeah, I don't see how it's possible to attend classes and fail so many you cant graduate.
5/3/2008 11:29:47 AM
I'll say that there is a huge gulf of knowledge between programmers who learned on the job and programmers who got a CS degree. In the real world, it's highly unlikely you'd be exposed to advanced data structures, algorithms, representations, approaches that would make it easier for you to solve a large number of hard problems. If you aren't exposed to the theory, you won't even consider a whole class of solutions when you go to tackle a problem. I've met multiple non-CS guys who have been writing software for many years, and they didn't even know what a binary tree was. As a result, the software written by the non computer scientists is generally inefficient, poorer, and less maintainable. Non CS-degree people might be able to make fucking webpage, but they likely aren't going to come up with innovative algorithms that will make you millions.(And I'm sure some dumbass is going to bring up some anecdote about the one guy who did well without a degree. Aside from being a logical fallacy, that's not the point. The point is a person with a degree is going to be better than one without in the same job in the vast majority of cases, even if the non-degree one starts out with more experience [not knowing a binary tree after 10 years??].)I imagine that any technical major would be the same way -- you get wide exposure to the theoretical underpinnings of a field, which gives you the exposure, inspiration, tools, and flexibility to solve novel, hard problems in that field.---It seems another question is whether it's valuable for technical majors to study non-major stuff (spanish civil war). Just to name a few things, natural language processing, neural nets, genetic algorithms, and many graphics techniques were all heavily inspired by stuff people learned outside of the field. If you read papers on advanced CS topics, you'll often find that one or more researchers are longtime experts in a non-cs field that somehow is influencing the CS research. If having the millions of CS majors take universal coursework leads to 10 breakthrough approaches a year, then the field as a whole has profited and advanced.(This same math applies to breakthroughs in any field/industry/whatever. A breakthrough by one person is worth more than the effort of millions. So, it's very important to put as many people as possible in a position to make a breakthrough in hopes that one of them actually does.)---Regarding the thread topic, i do think too many people try for 4 year degrees when a 2 year degree is appropriate. However, doing away with publicly financed 4 year, universal degrees and making everything a technical degree is fucking stupid.[Edited on May 3, 2008 at 11:53 AM. Reason : .]
5/3/2008 11:32:07 AM
5/3/2008 1:14:39 PM
very good articlehttp://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200806/collegepretty much the same thing as in this thread.
5/17/2008 11:34:55 PM
A degree is already ridiculously easy to get (minus financial aspects). Do we want to further convert Universities into diploma mills so that high school losers will feel better about themselves?
5/17/2008 11:56:55 PM
I wish I would have learned something cool like boat building.college is lame
5/18/2008 10:54:50 AM
ahahahahahahahahahaha'man other paths to success'Motherfucker if you can't hack it at an english degree in four fucking yearsThats four years of reading shit that was written centuries agoThen there's no fucking chance in our universe that you're going to hit it off as a success.And don't even bring that weak ass 'but Bill Gates NEEEGGAAAA" shit hereBecause dropping out of college due to a desire for doing something you loveand dropping out because you played too much fucking WoWAre two different things.If anything, college needs to be come harderAnd cull more intellectually lacking kids from the systemJust straight up merc them, Micheal Moore on logic style.Case in point:half the 'college educated' mongoloids that post here.
5/18/2008 2:30:47 PM
they should move all the engineering stuff to a tech school.
5/18/2008 4:04:28 PM
5/18/2008 6:56:27 PM
PR is under comm and they make plenty of money
5/18/2008 7:03:01 PM