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Education The Almighty Buck United States

Too Many College Graduates? 1138

The AP reports on a growing sense among policy wonks that too many Americans are going to four-year colleges, to the detriment of society as a whole: "The more money states spend on higher education, the less the economy grows." "The notion that a four-year degree is essential for real success is being challenged by a growing number of economists, policy analysts, and academics. They say more Americans should consider other options, such as technical training or two-year schools, which have been embraced in Europe for decades. As evidence, experts cite rising student debt, stagnant graduation rates, and a struggling job market flooded with overqualified degree-holders. ... The average student debt load in 2008 was $23,200 — a nearly $5,000 increase over five years. Two-thirds of students graduating from four-year schools owe money on student loans. ... [A university economist said,] 'If people want to go out and get a master's degree in history and then cut down trees for a living, that's fine. But I don't think the public should be subsidizing it.'"
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Too Many College Graduates?

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  • Ok, but (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:19PM (#32209224)

    Did the university economist go ahead and refund the publicly paid part of his tuition from years back, plus interest?

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:20PM (#32209242)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by MrEricSir ( 398214 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:20PM (#32209252) Homepage

    This guy is forgetting that we live in a (sort of) democracy. How would a democracy where the people aren't educated work?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:22PM (#32209268)

    The problem isn't that there are too many college graduates. The problem is that too much manufacturing that was formerly done in America is now done elsewhere, in third-world nations like China, Mexico and India.

    In the past, domestic manufacturing provided the solid foundation upon which the strong American economy was built. People made good wages working in these factories, engineers made good wages designing these factories and the equipment within them, builders made good wages constructing the factories, skilled-trades made good wages making the equipment within these factories, and all of these people provided jobs to many others in the community.

    Thanks mainly to Nixon in the 1970s and NAFTA in the 1990s, those jobs are gone. The foundation they provided is gone. They probably won't come back unless the federal government does the right thing and impose trade barriers against nations that have an oversupply of labor, and unsafe working conditions, and unsuitable wages.

  • by spribyl ( 175893 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:23PM (#32209290)

    Not everything needs a 4 year degree.

    If you are going into a science based field you will need a degree.
    Entrepreneur business school might help but it is not necessary.
    Blue Collar, tech school can give you a head start.
    CS/IT I have see excellent folks with nothing and really crappy folks with a PHD.

    Ultimately it is what you make of your life experience.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:24PM (#32209310)

    You think that more than 20% of the people who finish college courses come out educated? Must be nice to be an optimist.

  • by ryanleary ( 805532 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:25PM (#32209334)

    This guy is forgetting that we live in a (sort of) democracy. How would a democracy where the people aren't educated work?

    Most likely remarkably similar to how it works today with the largely (under)educated populace.

  • by cabjf ( 710106 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:27PM (#32209374)
    If twelve years doesn't cut it, I doubt four to eight more will.
  • public university (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Lord Ender ( 156273 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:27PM (#32209376) Homepage

    Public university is flooded with students who don't care at all about the subjects they are studying; they are in school either because it is expected of them by society or because they want to socialize with people their age for years.

    From an economic standpoint, it is absolutely wasteful for these kids to fudge their way through to a BA in Communication or whatever. I've known too many of them. It makes a mockery of academia.

  • Baselines (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Looce ( 1062620 ) * on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:27PM (#32209390) Journal

    Education and money are very much alike in one aspect: if everyone has at least the same amount, then that amount becomes the baseline, below which it is worthless.

    College degrees being required for plumbing jobs and the like are only the symptom of this problem.

    Whereas before education was made mandatory in most countries of the world, the baseline was no education at all, now the United States have college as a baseline. And it's rather difficult to get out of this, because you ask someone in college why they're in college and they'll say, "I must, because I can't afford to not keep up with my peers." So people go to college because people go to college, and it's a recursive clusterfuck.

  • by krakround ( 1065064 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:28PM (#32209408)
    All things considered, I'd rather have people overeducated than undereducated.
  • by MrEricSir ( 398214 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:30PM (#32209448) Homepage

    This isn't really related to the argument -- knowing how to program probably doesn't help you vote, most of the time.

    College isn't a trade school, you're supposed to get a well-rounded education.

  • by AthleteMusicianNerd ( 1633805 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:30PM (#32209470)
    Are these the same economists that didn't see the tech or housing bubble? The same ones who thought sub-primes were contained and wouldn't spread to the rest of the economy. Perhaps they are the ones that have America's debt rated AAA.

    What happened to the new deal from shit for brains?
  • Yeah, in Europe... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Gothmolly ( 148874 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:31PM (#32209476)

    How's that magical European lifestyle working out these days ?

  • by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:32PM (#32209492)

    Exactly.

    And with limits on education, you get limits on job opportunities. Fine, as long as it it the person who chooses such.

    If it is someone else who is already making decent money at a decent job arguing that too many people are advancing their educations ... fuck you. With a chainsaw.

  • by NervousWreck ( 1399445 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:32PM (#32209494)
    In answer to your title, because for over fifty years, the high school curricula in most states has been systematically gutted of anything that could possibly be useful to a graduate looking for a job of any sort. The trend of everyone going to college started during Vietnam when people needed student exemptions from the draft. There really isn't much use for a bachelors in many fields except to please hiring managers who think you must be pig ignorant and stupid if you don't have one.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:32PM (#32209506)

    is all in the last comment. 'Subsidize'. It's a bunch of wealthy schmucks that want to do away with public education and the middle class.

  • by mini me ( 132455 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:32PM (#32209508)

    The vast majority of college attending individuals are there because they have been told that the only way to successful employment is to become a college graduate. The fatal flaw in the logic is that when everyone has a degree, the degree no longer holds any prestige over any other job candidates. You are, again, competing against everyone else.

    People need to stop equating education with employment. If you are honestly interested in a subject and feel academia is the only route to fulfil your desires, by all means, please do peruse further education in that area of study. If getting a great job is your goal, however, college is not the place to achieve that. The time would be better spent learning what it takes to get the job you desire.

  • by kalirion ( 728907 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:33PM (#32209528)

    Harvard is about thirty thousand dollars for an undergraduate degree

    Huh? You mean per semester, right? I don't know if even community colleges are cheap enough for $30k to pay for a 4 year degree.

  • by ravenspear ( 756059 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:34PM (#32209536)
    Well, I can't speak for anyone else but myself, but it definitely worked for me.

    My parents are hardcore religious nutcases. They believe that God created the world 6,000 years ago, that Jesus will return within their lifetimes (which fosters a lack of work ethic, since they think God is coming to take away their problems soon), and that Sarah Palin should be president. That is how I was raised.

    After 6 years of college at a somewhat respected research focused school, I no longer believe any of that nonsense and I have successful employment in a good paying job.
  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:34PM (#32209544)

    College is supposed to teach you how to learn on your own, how to get information and how to digest it.

    Everything on top of that is flavor.

  • by gyrogeerloose ( 849181 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:35PM (#32209556) Journal

    Yep, he's missing the point. People don't get college degrees in order to go cut down trees, they get them in hopes of making a career in their chosen field. They end up cutting down trees (or, as in my case, driving a truck) only after they've failed to accomplish that goal. Perhaps they didn't make the wisest choice about what to study but sometimes it's kind of hard to know that in advance.

    In any case, an economist denigrating a history major is a bit of the pot calling the kettle black.

  • by Beyond_GoodandEvil ( 769135 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:35PM (#32209560) Homepage
    The trend of everyone going to college started during Vietnam when people needed student exemptions from the draft. There really isn't much use for a bachelors in many fields except to please hiring managers who think you must be pig ignorant and stupid if you don't have one.
    Actually, the trend of everyone going to college started after the Second World War with the Montgomery GI bill and trying to reabsorb all those soldiers returning to a roaring economy. Also everybody and their brother has been crowing about how you need college to fill those 21 century jobs as knowledge workers.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:36PM (#32209580)

    And yet nobody taught you the difference between knowledge and beliefs in those six years.

  • by hsmith ( 818216 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:36PM (#32209584)
    Please, how many kids go to school to get a "well rounded education" - it is a nice argument but lets be honest. People go to college because it is the next step and it is required to get a "Professional" job. I can barely recount the actual classes I took that were outside my major, so very well rounded.

    Going thousands of dollars into debt so you can have a "well rounded education" is a farce.
  • by maskwa ( 266045 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:37PM (#32209592)

    Any folks out there that crap on the skilled trades should consider: you can't outsource your plumber to India.

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:38PM (#32209616)

    And why don't they care about the subject? Because for 9 out of 10 jobs it does not matter. Read the classifieds lately? "College education required" is what they read. So you have a shitload of philosophy masters who can't write a cheque without breaking the pencil or are unable to do anything closely related to anything resembling work, but hey, they got a masters degree!

    THAT is making a mockery out of the academia.

  • by Culture20 ( 968837 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:38PM (#32209626)
    College is the new high school. So much so that colleges are bending over backwards to allow entry to the dumbest among us. My University's Math department had a Math 001 course for preparation to take Algebra courses (001 taught basic math like fractions). But apparently 001 was too hard for some high school graduates; a Math010 course was developed to teach things like addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. In &$#%#%*ing college!

    Combine that with some HR mandates that college degrees are required for anything above minimum wage, and you've got a perfect storm for devaluing a B.S. or B.A. An Associates degree is already worthless; it says "I went to college, but dropped out after it got too hard."
  • huh? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by NotQuiteReal ( 608241 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:39PM (#32209642) Journal
    Telling Americans to do something because Europe's been doing it is a lot like telling a 5-year-old not to go near the cookie jar.

    I think you meant something more like:

    Telling Americans to do something because Europe's been doing it is a lot like saying "But mom! All the cool kids ARE jumping off the bridge!"
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:39PM (#32209644)

    I agree with what you say, but there are some artificial factors that drive people into 4 year degrees even when there is no need.

    Your comment about CS/IT is spot-on, but the HR gatekeepers need a simple filtering criteria, so they require a degree..."Bachelors required", masters preferred". People spend 4 years in pursuit of a degree, racking up debt, primarily for the purpose of getting past the HR gatekeeper. Then we find out that the jobs are going to offshore outsourcers because it's cheaper. The same job that "requires" a 4 year degree in the US will be given to an anonymous outsourcer of dubious credentials with 3rd grade english skills because it's cheaper.

    I sometimes wonder why we don't hire high school kids into IT as soon as they are legally able to work. We could pay them minimum wage, and their skills would be no worse than what I see in the offshore world. Indeed, high school kids have better english skills, not to mention a reduced timezone shift.

    With the cost of college outpacing inflation for the umpteenth year in a row, it's only a matter of time before the cost has to be thoroughly reconsidered. I find it amazing that the requirements for US-based job applicants are pretty much thrown out the window when a cheapie outsourcer can be engaged to kinda/sorta do the job.

  • College isn't a trade school, you're supposed to get a well-rounded education.

    In that case, I'd have to question the social utility of colleges in a capitalist economy. The number of English and Philosophy majors capitalism can profitably use is vanishingly small, where the number of Engineers and actual professionals capitalism can use is comparatively huge.
     
    Still more needed, though, is UNSKILLED LABOR, apparently, given the eternal quest by our crony-corporate controlled federal government for illegal aliens and the amount of times I've heard "You're overqualified" from HR idiots.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:40PM (#32209666)

    I think you make some good points, but the problem existed before No Child Left Behind. It was there when I went to grade school, and Bush wasn't elected until after I graduated. I don't think it is a particular policy/administration/party problem. I think it is a cultural problem that is ours.

  • by MrEricSir ( 398214 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:40PM (#32209672) Homepage

    So you're blaming society for the fact that you didn't pay attention in school?

  • by AnonymousClown ( 1788472 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:41PM (#32209702)
    Let's face it, more than likely you wouldn't have gotten your first job, let alone the ones after that - if you had any, if you didn't have the degree.

    When I started, most of the time, all you needed was some sort of 4 year degree. Now, you need at least a BSCS for a code monkey job.

    Is a BSCS really necessary for most business applications? I don't think so, but tell that to the hiring managers. Personally, I think they're just requiring it to weed people out.

    I once worked for a guy who wouldn't hire this particularly brilliant programmer. I met some very sharp people in my life but this programmer topped all of them. He had only a high school diploma - everything else he learned on his own and he learned FAST. Said manager wouldn't even look at him because "for this kind of work, I think one should have a four year degree."

    Managers have a lot of hang ups about who they hire and they always rationalize for why they need certain qualifications.

  • by godrik ( 1287354 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:43PM (#32209736)

    I always felt that education was the goal of a society, not a mean to achieve a good economy. I always felt Universities should teach you what a field is, not train you to get a job. Optimizing the economy IS NOT what a society wants. If it was the primary goal, we would never have abolish slavery.

  • by mini me ( 132455 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:43PM (#32209748)

    I recently saw a job ad from Apple that did actually state that no degree is required. I will add that it actually looked like an interesting position, not some kind of menial labor job. I think many people would consider a good job at Apple to be reasonably successful. Heck, there are people who have degrees that would dream to have a job like that.

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:5, Insightful)

    by h4rm0ny ( 722443 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:44PM (#32209752) Journal

    I also strongly disagree with his point and I'll explain why: If a society finds itself with an overabundance of qualified, educated people, the correct response is not to try and cut down on the overabundance, but to start doing more interesting things. It seems to me that after starting off with a promising few centuries, the USA has suddenly decided that the guiding principle of its society should be maintenance of the status quo, rather than progress.

    Of course maintaining the status quo doesn't work when the rest of the world is forging ahead. In practice it translates into falling behind. If basic needs are being met (which they are), then surplus capacity should be directed. This guy's argument is that capacity should be reduced for the sake of preserving the existing wealth distribution as it is.
  • by jythie ( 914043 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:44PM (#32209760)
    Then why shouldn't everyone get at least 2 or 3 PhDs? Education is a continuum, and all this guy is saying is that we might have slid a little too far in one direction and would benefit from pulling back. This is not the same as going ALL the way the other direction.
  • by gknoy ( 899301 ) <gknoy@@@anasazisystems...com> on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:45PM (#32209780)

    Your paying largely for teacher interaction. ....
    Why does a degree in economics / business cost even close to the same as a person studying to be a molecular biologist / robotics engineer / etc that has to have some serious expenses.

    As a student, you see mainly teacher and TA interaction, and think, "Why am I paying this much for so little?"

    You often don't see (as a student) the herds of administrative people making sure your transcripts are in order, that tuition is payed properly, that tutoring positions are filled and made available to the students. You sometimes notice janitorial staff, library staff, campus police, and guidance counselors. You nearly never see (as school employees) the people who are planning and building new facilities (such as new classrooms, computer labs, parking structures (or lots), and dorms) or the large number of people that maintain the infrastructure. Universities have in-house staff for plumbing, electrical, IT, air conditioning, and other infrastructure.

    ALL of these people cost money to pay in a competitive manner, and I'd argue that there are often at least as many of them as there are teaching staff. That's a large part of where your tuition goes, not merely to the professors and TAs (who are often largely funded by grants and other research work). All students incur similar levels of infrastructure needs, with the exception of those who also need lab space. You all park in the same spaces, and sit in air conditioned lecture halls.

  • Absolutely! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:48PM (#32209830)

    I'm a big proponent of not forcing people through college. The problem is the lack of economic diversity now.

    Think about this from a historical perspective:

    • 100 years ago, only the wealthy and very intelligent went to college, and it was considered a life experience. The intelligent went on to become academics, and the wealthy would inherit their parents' business or land, so an immediate employment payoff wasn't really necessary. Everyone else went into a skilled or unskilled trade. Either they farmed, or started an apprenticeship as a carpenter, plumber, etc.
    • 50 years ago, college was still pretty much reserved for the smartest of the bunch. Thanks to union labor, and a very large manufacturing base, there was no problem if you weren't college material. If you worked your butt off, you would get paid a living wage in a factory and have a career progression that ensured your earnings kept up with your life-stage. If you were college material, a huge number of white-collar jobs opened up in large companies, and those tended to be very stable too. So, whether you were college material or you weren't, you were still covered. Academic life, or vocational school, you still came out OK.
    • 20-25 years ago, the bottom fell out of manufacturing, and with it went all the reasonably comfortable factory jobs. Suddenly, you couldn't get a decent job that paid a living wage. Because of this and an idea that "I dont' want my kid working in a factory forever," people started getting forced through college. At the same time, a lot of those white collar jobs went away too. There was a time where middle managers were required just to route reports around to people, and typing/secretarial work was way more important than it is now. With the advent of the PC and email, who needs hundreds of staff to process paper? So around the late 80s/early 90s, the downsizing began. Edna from the typing pool who worked at IBM for 20 years was suddenly out of a job. Because of both the blue and white collar job loss, people went back to school for retraining or higher degrees.
    • Today, there are even fewer low-skilled jobs out there, and almost none in the private sector offer union protection. So, when a mediocre high school student gets to 12th grade, he has 2 choices:
      • Work in a very unstable service job for not much more than minimum wage. Hope that you can string enough of these jobs together to fill a 45 year career.
      • Struggle through college, have a mountain of debt, and maybe you'll find work in some company.

      And oh yeah, every job above service-level requires a bachelors' degree now. So the office receptionist needs a degree in communications, and the HVAC guy needs a degree in engineering.

    This really is the dirty little secret of globalization. Some people just are NOT built for further study. There is a normal distribution of IQ. These people can often do a great job as a general contractor, skilled tradesman, etc. Instead, we force-feed everyone into the white collar world. It makes no sense. And for those who really do want the life experience, and are built for further study, they either have to deal with lower-skilled peers holding up college classes, or go to a private school and rack up mountains of debt for no guaranteed payoff.

    I really think our leaders need to take a step back and see that a country that can do nothing but manage projects and do other white collar tasks isn't healthy. I'm in the IT field, and I'm decent at what I do. But I also realized as I was getting my degree that I wasn't sailing through the material like my peers. Every grade I got, I worked hard for. Maybe 50 years ago, I would have been better off taking on an electrician's apprenticeship or something similar. Bottom line is that the lopsided economy we have is not good for society, and everyone's addicted to cheap labor, so there's not much to do about it.

  • by h4rr4r ( 612664 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:49PM (#32209840)

    One did something long ago, the other advocated killing people of different religions this decade.

    As someone not of her religion you might understand why she makes me more nervous than someone who did something bad long ago.

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:2, Insightful)

    by JonahsDad ( 1332091 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:49PM (#32209848)
    In both cases, what you're saying will tend to cause the opposite to happen.
    It isn't confused, but it is confusing. I should have picked an analogy without a negative.
  • by Shakrai ( 717556 ) * on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:49PM (#32209856) Journal

    And with limits on education, you get limits on job opportunities. Fine, as long as it it the person who chooses such.

    He didn't say there should be limits on education. He said that there should be limits on how much education the Government will subsidize.

    I have a friend who is a professional student. She has two masters degrees and is now entering law school. She's entered the "real world" a few times but can't decide what she wants to be when she grows up (she's 34....) and keeps going back for more degrees. When she finally does figure out what she wants to do she'll be buried so deeply in student loans that she'll probably never be in the black. Meanwhile her indecisiveness is being subsidized by our tax dollars.

    A few economists have also made the argument that too much cheap government money leaves next to no incentive to colleges to lower their rates. In fact tuition has been climbing pretty consistently for years now. This does nobody any good -- not the student who is absorbing more debt and will have less freedom of action when he/she finally finishes school, nor the taxpayer that is subsidizing the inflated tuition bill.

  • by lymond01 ( 314120 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:50PM (#32209862)

    College, I think, is partly about learning your major and partly about learning everything else. It's the environment, the exposure to other cultures and ideas that really make college better than a trade school. When you leave college you should be more open-minded, more theoretically-minded, than when you entered. You should be an idea generator, not only an idea applier. The world needs both and you can be both. You may not be a better coder because of college, but you're probably a better designer.

  • by T.E.D. ( 34228 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:51PM (#32209882)

    They believe that ..., and that Sarah Palin should be president. That is how I was raised.

    In their defence, Sarah Palin probably would have made a much better President back then. It takes time to grow that stupid.

  • by Shivetya ( 243324 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:52PM (#32209914) Homepage Journal

    Like you state, too many don't care about what they are studying, they are there because that is "what" they are supposed to do.

    However, far too many colleges are there to make money, and scads of it. Hence the push for new lending programs because this allows the to inflate their fees. Whether to build new facilities named after people they like or too keep themselves fat and happy in retirement. I would go so far to say that many colleges don't care what the students study either, just as long as they are there paying the fees. Hell, look at the racket that is course books.

    Too many degrees cost more than they can reasonably pay off in short order, by short I mean, less than five years. Sure medical professions if take to their furthest points pay off, but its not like TV, go to school four to six years and be the hero. Marketing drives more to college than need.

  • by AnonymousClown ( 1788472 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:52PM (#32209920)

    Harvard is about thirty thousand dollars for an undergraduate degree

    try about $200,000+ [harvard.edu]

    The total package (tuition, plus room, board and student services fee) will be $48,868, a 3.5 percent increase over last year.

    But, when you get out, you'll have a degree from Harvard. You'll have opportunities that folks from a state school will never get just because you have a Harvard degree.

    Back in my Fortune 500 days, all the 20 year olds in the "fast track" management programs were from Ivy League schools. Meaning, they were the ones being groomed for CEO. They spent 2 years working in all the departments around the company - a few months here...a few months there and then they're in management at the age of 24 - 25. Directors by the time they were 30. VPs by the time they were 40.

    In the meantime, us state school peons were lucky to get into management by the time were 45.

  • by imgod2u ( 812837 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:53PM (#32209950) Homepage

    so as soon as you stop 18 year olds from believing in themselves and the promise of their lives to do incredible things, that's when you convince more people not to go to college. so who here wants the task of destroying millions of young people's faith in themselves?

    Oh! Me! Me! Having been 18 not too long ago -- or perhaps too long -- I can tell you that 18 year olds are deluded, self-centered, narcissistic, unreasonably entitled and full of themselves; I certainly was.

    Complaining about immigrants "taking jobs from Americans"? It couldn't be because immigrants are willing to flip burgers, clean toilets and basically work hard at non-glamorous jobs for low pay. There will always be more ditch diggers than scientists and telling every single kid that they're special without qualifying it effectively makes everyone not special.

    How about instead of "you can grow up to be anything you want to be", we tell kids "as long as you work hard and do right by others, there's no shame in not being Joe McMansion"?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:55PM (#32209974)

    And somehow, your parents did a decent enough job that you were able to go to a respected college and get a good job.

    P.S.: Nobody's buying that the protestant work ethic is hurting the economy.

  • by guruevi ( 827432 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:56PM (#32209994)

    For the uneducated part, the general US public schooling system is to blame, not the higher education institutions. There are MANY things wrong on MANY levels with the current public school system starting off with NCLB, interdistrict exchange programs (meritocratic segregation), unionizing of school staff, ease of transfers to 'special' education classes, unaccountability of school leadership, commercialization of school supplies etc. etc. which all contributes to the all-out dumbing down of high school graduates.

    On the other hand there are too many children that are not properly taken care off - especially in city schools - that simply don't have the resources to get properly thought. The increasing funds that are channeled towards schooling programs should be diverted to properly (not just hand them a sum of money) support parents and children that simply don't have the necessary funds to get clothing, food and books for school. In other countries there are programs where families will get actual food and clothing items (not coupons that can be traded for cigarettes) when parents can't support their own children, books and school materials are all paid for by the government (with limited commercial printeries being used - usually only for speciality items).

    When people go to 4 year colleges, they shouldn't have to spend their WHOLE first year learning algebra, integrals, basic statistics and experiment design. If you can't do those things, you shouldn't get accepted in the 4 year program - either take a lower level program, self-educate or pay someone to tutor you.

  • by flattop100 ( 624647 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:56PM (#32209996)

    There are all kinds of technical and vocational schools - realize that fundementally, this is a discussion about education vs. training. I don't know about where you're located, but in the Minneapolis area, some training/vocational schools include:

    Dunwoody
    Minnesota State Colleges & Universities (MNSCU - NOT part of the University of Minnesota system)
    Le Cordon Bleu Culinary Institute
    MN School of Business
    Normandale Community College
    Anoka-Ramsey Community College
    Metropolitan State University
    North Hennepin Community College
    Hennepin Technical College
    Inver Hills Community College
    Dakota County Technical College ...and I know I'm leaving several out.

    If it's EDUCATION you want (to be well-rounded, in other words), there's:
    Macalaster
    St. Thomas
    University of Minnesota
    Augsberg
    Bethel
    Hamline ...and so on.

    These schools exist. They're not hard to find.

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:3, Insightful)

    by postbigbang ( 761081 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:56PM (#32210002)

    They wouldn't be quite the shortage if we thought a lot more about H1B numbers. Foreign nationals, while great in many ways, also dilute the pool of available jobs-- and university subsidy of foreign students has grown into a huge business as the costs of educating foreign nationals, despite high tuition-- doesn't cover costs.

    We've exported tons of labor and engineering abroad, and now complain that there aren't any jobs, and that taxpayers shouldn't subsidize education as a result. Instead, why not pressure banks to not only make money on student loans, but also on their entrepreneurial ventures as well?

    There's a madman libertarian behind all of this. Sure, we need technologists, but we also need engineers, systems people, as well as those that work on civil infrastructure so that our freaking bridges don't drop into the Mississippi.

    (insert car analogy here)

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:56PM (#32210014)

    Thank all the "wow, CHEAP, wanna have!" idiots, rather.

    Everyone wants cheap crap. But nobody cares about the price.

  • We don't need any lumberjacks, sanitation workers, or construction workers. In our new post-productive society, everybody gets to be whatever they want! There are no crappy jobs that need to be done. Everyone is qualified to be a surgeon. Everyone gets to be president. We don't need our garbage picked up.

    Look, we tell our children and ourselves that in America, anyone can be whatever they want to be. What did we expect would happen? Some jobs get no respect and shitty pay, despite the fact that they absolutely need to get done. Because, you know, once you've figured out that there isn't really a career in art history, you still need to pay off those college loans. Looks like the DOT is hiring road crews!

    Why can't we admit that not everyone gets to be a fashion model, a football star, or a CEO? Why do we emphasize the importance of some jobs, like advertising executive or investment banker, that add nothing of real value to humanity, while denigrating those who pick up our trash? I mean, is my day going to suck if I don't get to see any catchy ads? Probably not, but I've been around a garbage workers strike, and that shit ain't pretty.

    We overvalue positions of leadership and expertise, while lying that everyone could do those jobs. And tons of unqualified people rush to fill those jobs, because they were told they could, and that those jobs were more important than hauling garbage. But let's face it: most people don't have what it takes to become a surgeon or a CEO. Does that mean they are worthless? No. It takes all kinds of work to make a complex society run. We should not overvalue certain jobs and undervalue others, because that creates societal inefficiencies where we have too many people trying for the fun, high paying, well respected jobs. And meanwhile, the people actually doing the crucial dirty work get shit on by society.

    No marketing drone is worth hundreds or thousands of times what a sewer worker is worth. Yet our society says they are. If we have too many people going to university, maybe the answer isn't to say, "Hey, realistically most of you are fucking plebes who will never work in whatever you majored in. You should practice your table-waiting and ditch digging instead." Maybe we should instead strive for a more egalitarian society where everyone's contribution is respected. I respect a dishwasher who works hard and does a good job more than I respect a CEO who golfs all the time and takes credit for his underlings hard work. But society says this privileged douchebag is worth thousands of times more than the guy who washes dishes. So what do we expect people to do? Everyone wants to be that pampered and privileged CEO, nobody wants to build bridges and roads. And so we have Wall Street profiting while the economy crumbles, and meanwhile, most of our infrastructure is falling apart.

  • by hessian ( 467078 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:57PM (#32210030) Homepage Journal

    Things that are making college degrees less valuable, and therefore necessary for an even wider range of jobs:

    1. High school degrees are now worthless. "Bill showed up for four years."
    2. Affirmative action. "Even though Jake got a 950 on his SAT, he can go to Harvard."
    3. Grade inflation. "We wanted Suzy to feel on par with her classmates, so the lowest anyone can get is a B."
    4. Politicization. "If you want an A in English Literature with Dr. Rosenberg, you'd better write about feminist theories of hermeneutics."
    5. Dumbing down. "The staff decided it's too hard to code up a parser on a 64k Apple II, so we're going to start you off on Logo for Windows 7."

    Thanks to the feelgood policies of the 1970s, every precious snowflake feels entitled for just showing up. Schools have responded by making sure everyone has a place. The result: college degrees are no longer worth much, since they're easy to get.

    Rarity of college degree = value of college degree

    It's like having $100. If you give everyone in America an extra $100, the value of your $100 declines because there's more money floating around.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 14, 2010 @01:57PM (#32210034)

    > Please, how many kids go to school to get a "well rounded education" - it is a nice argument but lets be honest. People go to college because it is the next step and it is required to get a "Professional" job. I can barely recount the actual classes I took that were outside my major, so very well rounded.

    > Going thousands of dollars into debt so you can have a "well rounded education" is a farce.

    People go to college for different reasons. Most kids go to college either because it's simply expected of them or because someone tells them college graduates make more than high school graduates. That's also a different question than the question of what you learn or do while you're there.

    My degree was in CS & English. I wrote in microcode and assembly and C and C++ and java, everything from TCP kernel code to photon mappers to compilers.

    And I studied Shakespeare and Milton and the literature of the American Renaissance and the poetry of people from Petrarch to Poe.

    And I learned to tell the difference between a harpsichord and a piano even before I'd knowingly heard any baroque music, and what the romantics liked in poetry and music, and why atonal music sounds like somebody is strangling a cat with a piano.

    I did VLSI design and read Horowitz & Hill and played with electron microscopes and liquid helium. I studied the history of warfare from the first knife-fight in recorded history through the twentieth century. I learned about the history and evolution and origins of terrorism and the effectiveness of propaganda. I learned about developmental psychology and the way children grow, and I learned with wonderful, brilliant people from across dozens of disciplines.

    I don't think I lost money by learning this, because I'll make more in the end, and money isn't the only way to measure utility. I care more about the world because I understand art, because I'm as much an artist as an engineer. That's something college gave to me. It's a place to learn. That's what's beautiful about it. Maybe not everyone should go. But everyone should have the chance to. And we should always be part of a community of learning. Even as we should be part of a community of doing.

  • by mog007 ( 677810 ) <Mog007@gm a i l . c om> on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:01PM (#32210094)

    Which is why CS majors also need credits in the humanities and why art majors need credits in math.

    That second bit isn't really true. One of my exit courses for my CS degree was a communication class. It was taught by an English graduate student who didn't know that a nanosecond was a measure of time. I don't have a problem with technical degrees having liberal arts coursework as a requirement, but I'd like to see the liberal arts students take as many math/science classes as I had to take liberal arts classes.

    A friend of mine dual majored in Philosophy and Political Science, and he never took any math classes at the university, and only one science course. And the science course was optional.

  • by Mr. Slippery ( 47854 ) <.tms. .at. .infamous.net.> on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:02PM (#32210110) Homepage

    In that case, I'd have to question the social utility of colleges in a capitalist economy.

    It's pretty low. That demonstrates one of the problems with capitalism -- and indeed, every other form of hierarchical organization. So long as you have a class of rulers (owner, investors, whatever) and a class of workers, it will be in the interests of the rulers to have the workers educated only to the point of being trained to do their jobs, and no farther.

  • by Capt_Morgan ( 579387 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:03PM (#32210120)
    The govt gave me about 20,000 in loans plus I had in state tuition at a "Public Ivy" University. With my BS in computer engineering I now pay well in excess of 20,000 in taxes every year
  • by nbauman ( 624611 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:05PM (#32210168) Homepage Journal

    I think it's a great idea to take a year off after high school and work as a welder if you feel like it.

    But I also think college is a great mind-expanding experience, and that everyone should have the opportunity to go to a 4-year college if (and when) they feel like it too. How good a welder can you be if you don't understand basic physics and chemistry? What happens when the welding jobs disappear (as they did in Germany)? What happens when she gets tired of welding?

    And everybody should go to a 4-year college without going into debt. Talk about the road to serfdom. $20,000 in debt that you can never discharge in bankruptcy, and that will accumulate exhorbitant interest for years, sounds like serfdom to me.

    Up to the 1970s, America used to be a land of opportunity. Free access to college education was a big part of that. Now America is turning into a two-class society. http://www.economist.com/world/united-states/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15908469 [economist.com] People in the middle will move up or down, and most of them will move down.

    Traditionally, a college degree has been the way out of poverty, and the great equalizer. If these economists have data that it doesn't work that way any more, I'll look at it carefully. That's what I learned how to do in my 4-year college. But I wouldn't accept a major reversal of a long-established social goal based on a couple of associational studies.

    We just spent $3 trillion on the war in Iraq (according to Nobel-prize winning economist Joe Stiglitz). That's about $10,000 for every American. So we can certainly afford to spend $20,000 or so for a college education for anybody who is capable of it. And the rich are doing extremely well. We can tax the rich to pay for the poor. There's more of us than there are of them. All we have to do is vote.

    If you're middle-class in America today, you're taking a crap shoot, according to The Economist. You might move up. And you might move down. In the European social democracies, you don't have that risk of moving down.

    In the 1960s, John F. Kennedy committed us to the goals of sending a man to the moon and eliminating poverty. We sent a man to the moon but we didn't eliminate poverty. There's no excuse for that. The Scandinavian countries have basically eliminated poverty. We have whole cities where people can't get out of poverty. If you don't want to just transfer a lot of money from the rich to the poor, the other way to eliminate poverty is to give everyone a good education, and a free college education is a centerpiece of that.

    These economists are trying to talk us into giving up on the goal of eliminating poverty and educating our population the way the wealthy European nations do. I don't buy it.

  • by commodore64_love ( 1445365 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:06PM (#32210192) Journal

    Not really. An economics degree is useful in virtually all businesses, if only to balance the sheets. Of what value is a history degree to Goldman Sachs or Microsoft or GM?

  • by silentcoder ( 1241496 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:06PM (#32210200)

    Well... there is your problem right there.
    A civil engineer who never took a history class, a social studies class, a psych class, and most importantly at least one year of philosophy classes is nothing but a trained monkey.

    A sort of educated barbarian.

    I did two separate and utterly unrelated degrees - and in both cases I chose my electives as FAR as possible outside my fields of study. When I studied English Lit - I got special dispensation to allow me to get credited for doing CS as an extra even (I actually claimed I wanted to become a technical documentation writer to get the dispensation... as if :P )

    Here's the funny thing. I became a programmer for the first half of my career, a sysadmin after that (in my country sysadmins get paid better). And through all this, I hardly EVER use anything I learned in C.S. classes, it was all obsolete (except for basic principles) before I finished. What I learned about philosophy and the laws of logic I used every DAY a million times over. What I learned in history class has shaped my thoughts about the world around me (and the apparently incurable stupidity of my species) and what I learned in Literature class has given me a love for Shakespeare and Pratchett and Doctorow and all them... and they taught me how to have a HEART and an imagination and how to use them both to be better at any job I could do.
    Today I feel like a real renaisance man. I'm 30 years old and on my 3rd major career change - and I plan to do one every 5 years for the rest of my life. I am not just here to make money (though I make a good sum) ... I'm here to live and experience in the short bit of time I have... I'll be DAMNED if I am going to spend it doing the same thing for 30 years.

    Now THAT is what a well rounded education does for you... I pity people who did what you did.

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:5, Insightful)

    by CapnStank ( 1283176 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:08PM (#32210234) Homepage
    I'm in the same boat as you fellow Captain. I find however that the issue is employers seeming to THINK that Highschool isn't enough when it really is. Browsing the job market I see 75% of jobs requesting bachelors (of anything) or greater can be accomplished by two weeks of in-house training and a grade 10 education. The problem isn't that we have too many degrees saturating the market, its that every employer feels their entitled to request only those qualifications for their position when not required.
  • by commodore64_love ( 1445365 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:09PM (#32210268) Journal

    Sounds reasonable. Let's just raise the minimum wage to $20 an hour, even for McDonalds hamburger flippers, to ensure a "fair wage" for everyone.

    I don't mind paying $10 or more for a happy meal. What's that? It won't work? Oh. Never mind then.

  • Re:huh? (Score:1, Insightful)

    by TheGeneration ( 228855 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:11PM (#32210306) Journal

    Actually, telling Americans to do something because Europe's been doing it is much more like saying "Good morning special needs student Butch, see the straight A students on the otherside of the room over there? Don't you want to be like them with a prosperous future? No? You don't? What's that? ...You think being stupid and short sighted is cool. Alright then Butch."

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:4, Insightful)

    by quantumplacet ( 1195335 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:16PM (#32210402)

    Telling an American to do something because Europe's been doing it is like telling a Toyota to stop because you hit the brake?

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:2, Insightful)

    by CherniyVolk ( 513591 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:27PM (#32210592)

    If you think this doesn't happen in America, you're naive.

    From the start, the system guides the child down certain paths. (Disputes against IQ tests, particularly one group having better education is self-reflecting of the IQ studies as those IQ tests are given before education starts... mainly, upon entry or before enrolling into the 1st grade). I remember the testing myself, I started the first grade at around age three to four years old (I turned four during the year) and I never went to kindergarten.

    As you progress in the American education system, you get encouraged to take certain classes. A child of an IQ score of 90 or below will never pass a Calculus class; probably will never pass the prerequisite classes to get to Calculus honestly; they'll probably never get out of remedial general math... adding and subtracting. *Cue the folk who for the sake of argument claim they had IQ scores of 80 yet ended up acing AP Calculus in high-school, I guess we should give the morons hope so say what you will. I know you're a liar.*

    Thousands of years of education systems, this system is down to a science and highly accurate. "Look at me boy... I see it in your eyes, you go to that room there. You'll hear words like 'goods', 'merchants', 'business', 'theory and postulates' and 'degrees/diplomas'. " "Look at me boy... look at me! Nothing. You go into that room, you'll hear words like 'craftsman', 'journeyman', 'master', 'apprentice', 'vocation'." I had to fight the school to let me take a woodshop class, they were correct in assuming I was just looking for an easy 'A' but also a friend was taking the class and I just wanted to hang out with him. By that time, the deed had already been done. In my classes, eyes lit up to the sounds of Bachelors and Masters degrees... and what is needed to get them. In wood shop class eyes lit up with the prospect of success as a Master of a vocational trade. Those kids struggled just as my peers struggled in our classes... they wouldn't have a chance in hell with trigonometry.

    Part of all of this, is to set each child into a relative reality proportional to their own capabilities. On the down side, this reinforces the illusion of equality, on the up side they are generally happy as their scale of success is supposedly within their grasp. A kid with an IQ of 90 will simply never become a neuro-surgeon no matter how much of his little mind he puts forth towards the effort; so don't even take him down a path where he might catch wind of such absurd goals given his limitations.

    In Russia, they do the same thing--limited people get sent to PTU instead of Universities. In America, it's cleverly masked into the system from the start so it's not as obvious. Plus, in America there are opportunities all the way through that are put in place to catch all those that might slip through the cracks. (A genius might get sent down the wrong path from the start, but given cross roads throughout the system, odds are he's going to take one of them, odds are he'll get noticed... even if it's, college transfer studies at a community college after dropping out.) This might make us feel good about the American system, but there's a dark side too. It only goes to magnify the sheer fact of mental limitations for someone who misses every cross road; reasons for missing them by this time are largely irrelevant.

    They do this in every education system... this "streaming" you speak of.

  • Counterpoint (Score:4, Insightful)

    by orthancstone ( 665890 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:27PM (#32210604)

    4. Politicization. "If you want an A in English Literature with Dr. Rosenberg, you'd better write about feminist theories of hermeneutics."

    Actually, there's a valuable lesson to be learned from that situation. Specifically, at some point in your life you're going to have a boss who gives you a task you don't like and tells you to do it in a way you don't want to. Suck it up and do it well anyway.

  • by NeutronCowboy ( 896098 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:29PM (#32210616)

    Considering the prevalence of Marxism in colleges

    [Citation needed]

    How is this different than what your Right wing parents believe?

    Wait, believing that the earth is 6000 years old and the Rapture is right around the corner is the same as believing that social safety nets promote a stable society? Is this what you have to resort to in order to make your point?

    That right here is the problem with America. More than anything. The complete lack of critical thinking skills, desire for rational debate and the equivalence of truthyness and truth.

  • by smitty777 ( 1612557 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:29PM (#32210634) Journal

    I definitely see your point, and I agree with you on not undervaluing the "less important" jobs. But I think you're missing some key factors - motivation and desire. What gets some people up in the morning is the thought that you can improve your lot in life, maybe by going to school to get a better job. Not all people, mind you. Some are pretty happy being construction workers, truck drivers, whatever. I was a dishwasher for a number of years, until I decided that I really needed to do something with my life. A few degrees later and presto, a very satisfying IT job.

    I don't think I would have been a very motivated/satisfied worker if I hadn't been able give it a go for myself. That being said - I'd much rather see the sanitation worker get the six digit paycheck than the douchbag that comes up with that garbage they pass for entertainment/advertising on the tube nowadays.

  • by Sir Holo ( 531007 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:32PM (#32210658)

    Of what value is a history degree to Goldman Sachs or Microsoft or GM?

    Actually, Goldman could have used some historians. You know, that whole "market bubble" thing likes to repeat itself every few decades?

    Every company should have some historians around, so when someone starts saying, "THIS time it's different..." they can talk some sense into their heads.

    History rhymes.

  • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:37PM (#32210740)

    He didn't say there should be limits on education. He said that there should be limits on how much education the Government will subsidize.

    Ok, x% of us should stop at highschool. You first!

    This story is long on how college is not paying off.. but conveniently neglects the fact that those without college are even worse off.

    Ours is increasingly a winner-takes-all society. By definition, that means most people will be losers. But getting on top is still the best chance you've got.

  • by gyrogeerloose ( 849181 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:38PM (#32210746) Journal

    And who do you suppose supplies that online, verified history information source? An economist?

  • by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:39PM (#32210766)

    I had to delay entering college for two years and work while I was in school to afford the tuition -- but I managed to do it without burying myself under a mountain of student loan debt.

    -and-

    Of course, this guy hasn't suggested taking that help away, all he's suggested is applying some common sense to way we dole out that help.

    So why did you spend 2 years avoiding the money being doled out?

    And student loans are designed to be repaid. That's not being "doled out".

    I think too many people are confused between "money for education that does NOT have to be repaid" and "money for education that DOES have to be repaid).

  • Re:huh? (Score:5, Insightful)

    Telling Americans to do something because Europe's been doing it is a lot like saying "But mom! All the cool kids ARE jumping off the bridge!"

    This is going to come off as a troll, and I don't mean to say that European societies are perfect in any way; but frankly on the whole, Europeans run their countries, societies and economies a lot better than Americans do. I realise patriotism, Ryandianism and past performance may lead many Americans to believe otherwise, but you need only look at objective metrics in any of a number of fields to see just how far modern America has fallen behind its contemporaries. All these newspapers columns about "a crumbling superpower" didn't just spring out of thin air you know.

    Now, so intertwined have western societies become, it's hard to cleanly separate the problems and declines of America from those same contemporary effects in Europe. But one thing is certain; as a self governing society America is more dysfunctional than any of its peers. This didn't happen overnight, but is rather the result of decades of mismanagement, short-sighted policies and misguided ideologies which by and large (UK accepted) did not take hold in Europe.

    Again, this post is going to come off as a troll, but really its a response to what is effectively a troll. Yes there are many problems across the European continent, but the notion that American society and government is superior to European version is incredibly outdated. America is a country in need of deep and comprehensive reform of almost all of its institutions, and the first step in that reform will be to realise just how badly it is needed.

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:3, Insightful)

    by billsnow ( 1334685 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:51PM (#32211006)
    I must be in the minority in America, because I never took an IQ test, and I only know of a few who had. My experience in American education: all students are encouraged to go to university. A majority either don't go or realize it's not for them within the first couple years. Of who's left, the majority realize it was a waste of their time. I could be off base though.
  • Re:Ok, but (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @02:57PM (#32211150) Homepage

    No it does not. Most of the college educated are t hat way because of the over-inflation of the value of a college education. sorry but as an Accounts payable clerk it's retarded to require a bachelors degree. Problem is most executives believe they are a better company to have "all highly educated staff" where in reality they exclude highly skilled workers with 20 years experience but no degree because it's pure stupidity to get a degree for many jobs that only experience makes you good at.

    So now, you get people that spend tens of thousands of dollars for a degree and they wont accept $14.50 an hour. Business men whine because they cant get people for peanuts but require a degree.

    Real degrees in science, studies, and math? I'm all for them. It is the bullshit degrees in business do nothing but dilute the worth of education with a bunch of worthless degree holders that want a premium for their work but are only capable of doing unskilled tasks.

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:3, Insightful)

    by interkin3tic ( 1469267 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @03:01PM (#32211196)

    I wasn't saying "So that's good" I was saying "So that's why this won't work." You're not going to convince any individual american that they should not go to college because it would slightly help out some of the rest of us. That's just how it is.

    Anyway, I reject the premise that education can be a complete waste. Horribly inefficient at doing anything beneficial to the point where it would be better not to fund it, yes, but a complete waste no. And I'd think we can all agree that there are far bigger wastes of taxpayer money.

  • by Stan Vassilev ( 939229 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @03:07PM (#32211298)

    Why do we emphasize the importance of some jobs, like advertising executive or investment banker, that add nothing of real value to humanity, while denigrating those who pick up our trash?

    Wait, did you catch that, everyone? "Those who pick our trash"? You don't see yourself as one of "those", do you? As long as it's "those" and not "you", it's ok to speak down on everyone, because they dare try to be anything more than pick someone's trash.

    I say lead by example. I want you to pick my trash. We have a deal?

    Or maybe you don't want to do this, as you think you're good at coding or designing or engineering. Shouldn't have graduated then. It's all your fault.

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:3, Insightful)

    by CraftyJack ( 1031736 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @03:35PM (#32211800)

    75% of jobs requesting bachelors (of anything) or greater can be accomplished by two weeks of in-house training and a grade 10 education.

    You need to see a bachelors to be sure that they can function at a 10th grade level.

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:3, Insightful)

    by 0100010001010011 ( 652467 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @03:36PM (#32211804)

    Except in America every child is special and deserves to go to college, and no matter what system you list above, nearly everyone somehow ends up in college.

    You'd have more lawsuits than you knew what to do with if you told some parent that his or her child wasn't smart enough to become an engineer. Or should become an automechanic*. Kids don't even play sports to 'win' any more. They don't keep score. Everyone gets a participation ribbon. Can't hurt anyones feelings.

    Even if you showed absolutely no aptitude for anything requiring college, your counselor and parents still suggested it and you came out with some useless degree and a huge amount of debt.

    The other problem with the way America does it is, just as you ran into a problem with it, 'smart' people can't take "dumb" trades. I was top of my class. I took all the AP courses I could Junior year and was off to a local community college for 1/2 of my senior, and despite all this I was never allowed to take "welding" class because it was a trade.

    I like cars, I'd like to restore some old cars and the only limiting thing is I don't know how to weld. I work full time so taking courses locally would both cost money and take time I don't have.

    * There is nothing wrong with being an automechanic. Some people kick ass at it and SHOULD go to a trade school straight out of high school, but for some reason this is looked down upon.

  • by wjousts ( 1529427 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @03:38PM (#32211844)

    I think the point is that some people are not suited to a college education. The current system still encourages those people to go to college and pursue a degree even though the only thing they'll get from it is a mountain of debt after they eventually drop out. The real solution is to increase college admission standards so that the money can be focused on those who are most able to take advantage of a college education while those who are not suited to an academic career can be guided into vocational training that better suits their abilities.

    In an ideal world, all barriers to higher education will be based solely on your ability and not on how much money you (or your family) has.

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mangu ( 126918 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @03:43PM (#32211948)

    IQ tests may not be perfect, but who is to blame for that?

    If a system is imperfect the correct attitude would be to try to improve it. Unfortunately no one dares to try to improve IQ tests for the fear that there could be intrinsic limitations on some people's intelligence.

    Let's face it, people do have limitations. I'm too short to play volleyball or basketball, too skinny to play football, too clumsy to play baseball. Why should we deny that some people are too stupid to go to college, even if they get sports scholarships?

  • Many, many people have the talent for running a business successfully, but no capital and therefore, no chance to prove it. The illusion that running a business takes some kind of special genius is a self serving illusion perpetuated by the people who run businesses. You know why so many businesses fail? Because shitheads with no skills, no brains, but plenty of good old fashioned daddy-money are the ones who get to start businesses. It's got nothing to do with how hard it is.

    In the Mondragon Cooperative [wikipedia.org] in Spain, they have a 90% startup success rate, because everyone is encouraged to start a cooperative, and they are given all the help they need, from cooperative lending, to cooperative staffing, to cooperative business planning. It's not hard. Anyone can do it. Only in capitalist societies where the barrier to entry is set so high only the rich can start a business do we see the reverse, with the majority of startups failing. It's not that rich people are idiots, or even less intelligent than average. It's just that they believe their own lies, and you can't be that delusional and function well.

  • You assume that labor actually operates under the laws of supply and demand. First off, you learned some economics, so you know the paper about lemons? As in, bad cars? It talks about the effects of information imbalance on the market. Well, the labor market is a prime example of this effect. Workers know more about their true value than bosses do, therefore, bosses must assume that all workers are overstating their value and therefore, all bosses systematically undervalue labor.

    Capitalism values capital more than labor. It's systemic. And the owning class see each other as valuable, while the working class are replaceable. Thus systematically devaluing labor again. Your theory also assumes people are rational actors, this has been disproven by many, many recent experiments. The owning class do not make decisions based on their rational self interest. Many of them, for instance, would bankrupt themselves rather than give in to worker demands because giving in puts them lower down on the old totem pole, and being high in the social hierarchy is the real reason they became rich in the first place. They would rather go bankrupt and be able to say "Fuck you!" to the workers than pay a fair wage and be seen as an equal. That is culturally systemic to the owning class, and they make the rules because they have the capital.

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:4, Insightful)

    by QRDeNameland ( 873957 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @04:00PM (#32212238)

    Except in America every child is special and deserves to go to college, and no matter what system you list above, nearly everyone somehow ends up in college.

    And to quote from The Incredibles:

    "If everyone is special, then no one is."

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Bigjeff5 ( 1143585 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @04:27PM (#32212624)

    Yeah that "Advanced Calculus" you "mastered" was more like college level pre-calc. I went to a private school that regularly outperformed the public schools in pretty much every area, and I took the advanced classes as well, and college calculus kicked my ass.

    You are an ignorant fool if you think getting an A in AP Calculus is the same as "mastering Advanced Calculus". Your AP physics class may be a rough equivalent of an introductory college physics class, but you sure as hell didn't "master physics". Nobody in the history of the world has ever "mastered physics", to say so is to be completely ignorant of physics.

    The fact that you consider programming to be more difficult than calculus is proof that you don't know calculus. Programming is easy, it's just basic logic. This then that else this or if that enough times to produce a program. That's all computers are. There are all of six basic commands, repeated enough to create something functional. Becoming proficient is difficult, and requires a certain type of creativity and anal attention to detail, but the basics are incredibly simple. Calculus, on the other hand, is hard. It's not just logical repetition. There is an extremely strong foundation required to understand the concepts of calculus, let alone put them into practice.

    Apparently your high school experience was filled with delusions of grandeur, must have been all those medals you got just for participating.

  • by martin-boundary ( 547041 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @04:43PM (#32212808)
    It's the difference between reading slashdot without being logged in, and logging in and commenting on the story.

    In a lecture, you can interrupt the lecturer and ask for clarification, or point out mistakes etc. Online, you have no idea who even wrote the phrase you intend to quote in your homework.

  • by Marxist Hacker 42 ( 638312 ) * <seebert42@gmail.com> on Friday May 14, 2010 @04:45PM (#32212846) Homepage Journal

    The reason it won't work is because you're addressing only HALF the equation. As long as you still have a guy earning $4000/hr at the top end, raising the minimum wage will only raise prices until they once again exceed the ability of the poor to pay at the bottom end.

    The actual amounts don't matter one whit; it's the distance between the bottom and the top that counts.

  • Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @05:14PM (#32213258)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Zordak ( 123132 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @05:26PM (#32213392) Homepage Journal
    You obviously never took a 1,000-student GE history course in college. Those are pretty much memorizing facts and spitting them out on a Scantron. I frequently skipped class but still had a ~98% average grade. The only thing I got from the lectures that I couldn't get from the text is the knowledge of which points were important enough to the Prof. to go on the PowerPoint slides. To be fair, I doubt the guy wanted to be at those lectures any more than we did. It was a joyless, "check the box" requirement on both sides.
  • by RAMMS+EIN ( 578166 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @05:43PM (#32213590) Homepage Journal

    ``Many, many people have the talent for running a business successfully''

    Perhaps, but ...

    ``but no capital and therefore, no chance to prove it.''

    I don't think that is necessarily a problem. How much capital do you really need to start a business? It doesn't have to be a lot. It also doesn't have to be yours.

    I would say the main reason that people don't start businesses is that they simply don't want to.

  • Rich people have rich friends and family to lend them money. Poor people don't. When you say, "It doesn't have to be yours" you reveal your own cultural assumptions, which are very different from those of say, a working poor family. You just assume that capital is easy to come by, because for you, it probably is. For most people, not so much.

  • by ridewinter ( 754545 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @05:54PM (#32213716)
    I don't have any daddy-money. But I found someone who did, and who also happened to learn quite a bit of business acumen from said daddy. He funded our operation, handles the business side, and I handle engineering. It worked out very well in the end. Of course the real world isn't always fair, but there's always ways to adapt and come out on top. Step 1 is to stop complaining about it.
  • Sir,

        You make an interesting point. My counterpoint is this: the effect you speak of leads to a winner-take-all society. For example, the sports players that are in the top 1% of their field collect 99% of the money to be made. Minor league baseball players make diddly squat compared to the major league players.

        This is due to the effect of mass media and a global society. Everyone watches the major leagues, because the media carries them, while the minor leagues are ignored. And the money follows the media attention.

        So there are a VERY FEW "winners" and a lot of losers who barely scratch by.

        This holds true for ALL entertainment. Many talented musicians make nothing. The top 1% of their field makes a killing.

        With large companies, this is happening too. Executives are cleaning up in companies, everyone else is getting diddly.

        This is leading, almost inevitably, to an insane stratification. Someone who outperforms YOU by 5% or even 1% gets paid 1000x what you do. The elite collect ALL the wealth. Everyone else just scratches by. Whole professions are dominated by a few superstars who collect all the money to be made, while the rest (who are almost as good, or BETTER but unknown or unlucky) languish in obscurity.

        Yes, this is a result of supply and demand, and a result of mass media and popular culture, and is an "economic" truth. THAT DOES NOT MAKE IT RIGHT OR DESIRABLE. It offends me that some idiot THUG who CAN THROW A BALL 1% better than OTHER BALL THROWERS makes hundreds of millions while the doctor who saves my life by spotting and removing a melanoma makes $200k/year working 80 hour weeks and has to spend 40 of those hours filling out BS health insurance forms. (And incidentally, by catching this melanoma early, this doctor also saves my health insurer $1M in cancer treatment bills!)

        This is pure social inequity and I have NO problem fixing this brokenness in the market via VERY progressive taxation at the high end. The capitalist free market is NOT holy, it is NOT moral, and it should serve HUMANS not the other way around!

    --PeterM

  • Re:Ok, but (Score:3, Insightful)

    by couchslug ( 175151 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @07:09PM (#32214604)

    "I'm risking getting blasted here, BUT, I think we have an overabundance of mediocre people with a degree."

    Getting a degree means showing up and passing exams. It's a nice filter for employers to use, but when everyone has one it means less.
    Who here doesn't know that?

    "We've been content to let other people do the "hard work" and encouraged many of our smartest and most talented people to pursue "quick-and-easy" money in areas like the financial industry to the ultimate detriment of other industries."

    They went where the money was. If one wants employees, pay what the market will bear. Refusal to compete is not a strategy, and there is zero reason for smart people not to seek money. Why work hard in a society where employers and government are both your enemies and dedicated to separating you from your money?

    Life is a shit sandwich. The more bread you have, the less shit you'll taste.

  • by Howitzer86 ( 964585 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @07:26PM (#32214796)
    I'd like to think there were enough people who lacked ambition (enough Hank Hills), that these jobs can and will be filled, and that my trash will continue to be picked up.

    "Maybe we should instead strive for a more egalitarian society where everyone's contribution is respected."
    My opinion is that people can think what they want, and it is not up to the government to tell us to be comrades. I don't think about the dishwasher. If someone were to ask me about the job a dishwasher does, I'd ask them if that was a trick question.

    "We overvalue positions of leadership and expertise, while lying that everyone could do those jobs. And tons of unqualified people rush to fill those jobs, because they were told they could, and that those jobs were more important than hauling garbage"
    It's not up to you to say who can, and cannot, do something. How would you feel if your advisor told you, "No, you can't do this very well - I can tell by just looking at you. You shouldn't go to college either. You should work in the coal mines instead."
    That's not the government's job - that's the job of the hiring manager. They are responsible for filtering unqualified people out. If a person wants to waste their lives trying to do stuff they aren't good at, fine, let them be.

    I think it is important that we should pursue what want. We live not to serve the state, but our own interests. It's not up to the government to decide what we should do with our lives.

    Although this isn't a career: I want to strap a pulsejet to a bicycle. Not everyone wants to do that. Not everyone should do that. But this is a free country. (And that's just for a hobby. For a living I want to animate- I am teaching myself because the schools that teach animation are prohibitively expensive. My success in this field are completely dependent on my ambition and willingness to work harder than everybody else. -- In the meantime I attend a local college for a degree in Graphic Design.)

    They say freedom isn't free. You pay in other ways. If that means my degree isn't worth much, so be it. At least I'll have one. I'll let my brains (provided its not splattered on asphalt) push me the rest of the way through in life - as it should be.

    There are 300 million people in the country. They don't need protection from disappointment. If they can't do something, they will find out - and they will look for other work. That's perfectly fine.
  • No sir (Score:3, Insightful)

    by DesScorp ( 410532 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @10:24PM (#32216362) Journal

    Except in America every child is special and deserves to go to college

    No, they aren't, and they don't. The vast majority of people are average and ordinary. And that's just fine. That's reality. Most work is done by ordinary people, not Einsteins and Mozarts. One of the things I despise about modern education is the way we lie to children and parents... every child has untapped genius!, when the truth is, no, most of us don't.

    Now, anyone can improve themselves. Anyone can work harder and learn more and better themselves. But that's not the same as being special, and it's not a justification for sending everyone to college.

  • by darkwing_bmf ( 178021 ) on Friday May 14, 2010 @10:33PM (#32216420)

    Lets say you come home from work at a real job and it's your time to do whatever you want. Would you rather work even more for $1/hour or would you rather watch TV (or surf the web or spend time with your family - basically anything you would want to do that doesn't pay cash)? Clearly free time has more value than $1/hour, at least if you aren't destitute to the point of needing that dollar.

    In fact the value of free time is a function of how well your material needs and wants are met along with how much free time you already have. If you're unemployed, you're more willing to give up 8 hours of your day for cash than if you were already working 8 hours a day and were asked to give up 8 more.

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