[quote]Dr.Matt581 wrote:
[quote]Makavali wrote:
Offer no-strings financial help on useful degrees (Engineering, Sciences, Medicine, Architecture, actual Music, etc). If some snot nosed little hipster wants to piss away his life doing an Arts degree, then he can do it on his own dime.
And while we’re at it, entry requirements should require kids to actually pay attention in school. University level study isn’t for everyone, so we should stop pretending it is. For example - Architecture should require electives from High School that are relevant (Physics, some form of Art). Engineering should require the relevant science (Physics, Biology, Chemistry). And so forth.
There we go - less idiots in University dropping out and clogging the system in the months before they drop out, and less loans being handed out to people that have a small probability of finding a job that will let them pay it back.
The consequence of the “everybody can do a degree” attitude is that most employers expect degree level qualifications for jobs that once only required a Diploma or even Trade Certificate. The amount of employers who seem to think you need a PhD for flipping burgers just because of how easy University is would surprise even the most cynical of you.
This is getting to be a huge problem at my university. There is a growing sense of entitlement among my new students that has become more and more noticeable in recent years. They seem to think that just because they got accepted to the school and show up, they deserve a degree. That may work for some degrees, but not in my field, or most fields that offer decent wages. Getting a physics degree requires a lot of work, whether you have an IQ of 190 or 100. Anybody who claims to have gotten a physics or engineering or similar degree without spending a ridiculous amount of time studying is full of shit. The problem is that each year I get way too many freshman students that fail/drop my introductory classes simply because they do not put in the time required to pass.
Here is the funny/sad part: More than a few of these students try to blame ME, or whomever their professor is, for THEM failing. I have heard the remark “I am paying you to teach me. You should be putting in more effort to make sure I pass.” I always laugh when I hear something like this. Students pay for the opportunity to come to class and learn and show their proficiency through tests and such. If you do this, THEN you are granted a degree. I don’t care if a student pays 20 grand a year, if they do not study they fail. It is that simple.
I really wish I knew where this sense of entitlement came from so it can be stopped. [/quote]
Oh I know where it comes from, I substitute taught grades K-12 for a year after my undergrad and kids today basically can’t fail out. Every parent thinks their kid is a genius and if they fail a test or assignment, the teacher gets an earful for not doing their job. So you know what the teacher does, follows the path of least resistance and instead of failing students and having to deal with them for another year, they just pass them along. I had high schools that couldn’t write a cohesive essay or even do basic multiplications. It was ridiculous. But sure enough they graduated.
To further the problems, it seems like no one recommends vocational schools anymore, everyone thinks college is the only option. So you get these kids that come out of high school, not having basic skills they should have learned. Furthermore they’ve never been challenged to actually do good work, so they have no idea when they get to college and have this sense of entitlement because they got through the “rigors” of high school relatively easily. When an instructor tells them their work is crap, they don’t know how to take it and the only option in their eyes is that the instructor failed them…
Hell, even when I did high school which wasn’t long ago (2004), guidance counselors were shocked that I wanted to take physics instead of earth science as a senior. They practically pleaded with me to take earth science because it was a guaranteed “A” for a senior. It just goes back to that path of least resistance.