'The threat to our universities' - Stefan Collini (user search)
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  'The threat to our universities' - Stefan Collini (search mode)
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Author Topic: 'The threat to our universities' - Stefan Collini  (Read 6102 times)
Mechaman
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« on: June 22, 2012, 12:11:27 PM »
« edited: June 22, 2012, 01:04:15 PM by Irish Dixiecrat »

I realise that by merely raising a quizzical eyebrow about the self-evident priority of these goals I am going to be damned for being out of touch with "the real world".

Some see education as a means to an end; others see it as an end in itself.  

I've gotten past it.  I don't know how old I was when I realized that the vast majority of students see education as a meal ticket.  "What are you going to do with your degree?"  "Oh, I don't know.  Hang it on the wall, maybe.  More likely, it'll collect dust on a shelf."  "No, I mean, how will you market yourself?"  That sort of thing.  To this day I still see education as a goal in itself, but I've been keenly aware that many folks do not.

We roll with it.  We even exploit the fact, using it as a recruiting edge.  (That's probably why Lulu notices that it is being "pushed" in his university.)


Great great post Angus.

Right now I find myself in this same cycle of apathy that has been described.  I have graduated with a major for an industry I sure as hell don't want to be working in for the next forty years of my life (Accounting) solely because I even up to today I don't know what the hell I want to do.  In high school I flirted with the idea of becoming a History major, and I even brought it up several times when I was undeclared to my parents.  They always immediately shot it down everytime and encouraged me to get a "degree that makes a living".
Eventually, as time went by I became apathetic and cynical enough about college and adulthood I decided "f*** this" and declared a degree in Accounting.  I never got to liking it one bit as a lot of my fellows went gaga about being some corporate buttboy in the future.  I'm amazed that I managed to graduate with an over 3.0 GPA, considering how much I hated my educational life at that point.
The most motivating classes I've ever taken were the philosophy and social science classes.  However, every time I thought about changing my major there would be this voice that would say "wait!  Don't do that Lad!  Don't you want a comfortable living after you graduate!  Don't you want a field where you can get a job anywhere instead of working at Starf***ingBucks for the next three years before you get a crappy underpaid job as a public school teacher in some podunk town!"
My only comfort is that by getting my Accounting degree I am attractive to museums who are looking for people who can deal with finances to help me eventually pursue a Masters in some sort of History field.  And that some day I'll just try to write a random ass book I can sell on Amazon for $1.25 on Kindle (let the Five Minutes Hate from traditional "made from killed trees" book lovers out there) and make millions of dollars on.

It is unfair the demonization of liberal arts majors.  Like they are subhuman because they come to college to pursue a degree for more purpose than just to say "I LIVED WITHIN A COMFORTABLE $40,000 A YEAR BUDGET!"  Like they are uncool for thinking that philosophical pursuits are a great way to look at and better understand humanity, civilization, legal code, science, and everything else that exists.
Or maybe they look down on such fields because to actually analyze themselves analytically would require some painful truths.  It is painful, but it is worth it.

Which isn't to say that there aren't people who truly want to be Science, Math, or Business majors.  However, there are a lot of them, like me, who find themselves living in utter apathy and cynicism after they graduate.  The comments in this thread kind of hit the nail on the head in my opinion about why that is.
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