1/30/2013 9:54:07 AM
1/30/2013 10:31:21 AM
ending the use of violence by entities to establish their dominance: not naive
1/30/2013 10:34:26 AM
1/30/2013 10:58:44 AM
No, I'm not asking about the justification, as stupid as that one is. I'm asking what you think the aim of higher education should be.
1/30/2013 11:21:07 AM
research, academics, enlightenment, discovery, the creation of new ideas and products, a place for people with ideas to explore them without the constraints of market motivations, etc... and in the issue of public state universities specifically, also to benefit the people of the state.http://www.ncga.state.nc.us/legislation/constitution/ncconstitution.html
1/30/2013 11:27:35 AM
1/30/2013 12:18:21 PM
1/30/2013 12:22:33 PM
1/30/2013 12:54:47 PM
1/30/2013 12:57:10 PM
Every thread in TSB is Walmart.
1/30/2013 1:08:18 PM
1/30/2013 2:19:16 PM
Many employers need arbitrary metrics for which of the thousands of resumes they get for every opening immediately into the trash just so they can get the stack to a manageable size
1/30/2013 2:21:56 PM
Sorry, meant to say:Many employers need arbitrary metrics to determine which of the thousands of resumes they get for every opening will immediately go into the trash just so they can get the stack to a manageable sizeThe phrasing was unclear but I can't edit now
1/30/2013 3:06:32 PM
"McCrory education board appointments"http://www.wral.com/mccrory-education-board-appointments/12044232/
1/30/2013 3:24:31 PM
1/30/2013 4:04:32 PM
Strategy: Rename Liberal Arts to Conservative Arts
1/30/2013 4:46:46 PM
^^^Because the people from the education system that have been in charge have been doing so much better, and would never see any financial gain from more money going to schools either. Hell, maybe these people could bring some new ideas with them.
1/30/2013 4:47:47 PM
1/30/2013 5:23:37 PM
1/30/2013 5:38:11 PM
1/30/2013 5:59:21 PM
1/30/2013 10:41:52 PM
Lets get rid of physical education classes also. Those jobs are also hard to come by, and really, who needs to live past retirement age anyway? Once you are done oiling the gears of capitalism with your blood, it's time to die.
1/30/2013 10:46:32 PM
^^So... the market.
1/30/2013 11:36:35 PM
1/31/2013 9:07:30 AM
get a real degree hippies. I agree with more STEM money, majors, and jobs.
1/31/2013 9:12:48 AM
1/31/2013 9:32:54 AM
1/31/2013 9:35:18 AM
How many secretaries have you hired? I don't really intend to argue in the land of make-believe about the make believe applicant pool for a make believe position for a make believe employer.
1/31/2013 9:57:12 AM
No, I haven't hired secretaries. Obviously it's impossible to know anything about anything unless you've actually done it.http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/04/degree-inflation-jobs-that-newly-require-b-a-s/
1/31/2013 10:15:31 AM
1/31/2013 10:29:21 AM
What is the cost?
1/31/2013 10:30:35 AM
I'm not going to make one up, but there is some level of scarcity to college educated labor, additionally you've noted that there is a higher demand. Scarcity and demand cause prices to go up.
1/31/2013 10:48:22 AM
How is there scarcity when ~35% of recent college grads are unemployed? There are plenty of people with degrees who are having to take what they can get.
1/31/2013 10:51:32 AM
1/31/2013 11:11:16 AM
Mentioning jobs is a distraction from the real issue, and you all took the bait
1/31/2013 11:11:56 AM
another grade A post!it's so great we have you to act as discussion police to tell us what we should and shouldn't talk about!you deserve an award!
1/31/2013 12:54:26 PM
1/31/2013 1:38:08 PM
You should use data to back up your claims rather than "I know a guy". Here is the unemployment rates based on education:
Less than a high school diplomaUnemployment rate11.7 High school graduates, no college(1)Unemployment rate8.0 Some college or associate degree Unemployment rate6.9 Bachelor's degree and higher(2)Unemployment rate3.9
1/31/2013 1:57:55 PM
You're talking about unemployment rates.In regards to college grads, you should be using underemployment rates.
1/31/2013 2:18:52 PM
For the "too many degrees in basketweaving" theory to be true, I'd expect that sector-by-sector unemployment changes since before the recession would show some clear patterns. Huh, that's weird, it's almost as though there's no statistically significant sign of a structural shift, and this is just another Republican scapegoat for a demand-side crisis, a particularly attractive one because it attacks "liberal" degrees like the arts and humanities. Companies aren't refusing to hire because everyone has English degrees, it's because demand is depressed and there's no point in expanding production if nobody's buying your shit.
1/31/2013 2:52:02 PM
1/31/2013 3:10:56 PM
1/31/2013 3:33:43 PM
1/31/2013 3:53:01 PM
1/31/2013 7:24:18 PM
I'm sorry but when did college education become free at state sponsored schools in NC? Last time I checked you still have to pay for your courses, so it's not like students who pursue a lib arts degree are getting some mythical free ride at the taxpayers expense.But that might be too rational of a thought.
1/31/2013 10:23:45 PM
A better question is when did universities become tax payer funded training programs for corporate political donors?
1/31/2013 10:25:57 PM
The mythical free ride at the taxpayer's expense was the student loan that landed them there in the first place.This free ride continues when they graduate and can't find a job (welfare).
1/31/2013 10:34:11 PM
1/31/2013 10:47:03 PM
People talk nationally about how we need to tackle the high student debt to attend university, and I think one way to do that is to prioritize financial aid to majors with sufficient job placement in that field. Leaving this to just UNC for example since McCrory talked about them and if a UNC person reads this post they won't say I'm being biased, wouldn't you rather help a premed student going into dental school with his bills than a kid that is getting a degree in French? Hey, if that person after he or she graduates get a job where French is the central focus like working in an embassy or moving to Quebec or being an interpreter, that's considered job placement and would be a positive. If he's scavenging around for a job and gets something in the service industry, the university education did not advance that person in life. There are so many majors that have no business being majors or they only create a very small niche group of jobs (e.g. Marine Biology).Wouldn't kill liberal arts programs entirely though. If you want to study some major that has no placement, go right ahead, but it'd be understood you wouldn't get financial aid for that major. You would be admitting you're not going to university to improve yourself but instead just you're doing it as a hobby. If universities have an issue with that, then they need to be asked why they have such low placement percentages post-graduation.Really have no issue with what McCrory said reading the quote.And if you have an issue regarding job placement being a metric, you need to read up on the law school business the past 10 years and how there is this massive surplus of law school grads with no jobs to give them. Places are giving out degrees that have no business giving them out, and all you're left with are people with $100k in debt and no way to pay for it. If placement were tied to aid or at the very least publicized, a lot of these bullshit law schools would disappear and that'd be a good thing.[Edited on January 31, 2013 at 11:10 PM. Reason : /]
1/31/2013 10:52:03 PM