Free Tuition for Math, Science, and Engineering? 766
Gibbs-Duhem writes "Montana Democratic Senator Max Baucus wants free college tuition for US math, science, and engineering majors conditional upon working or teaching in the field for at least four years. From the article: 'The goal, he said in an interview last week, is to better prepare children for school and get more of them into college to make the United States more globally competitive, particularly with countries like China and India. "I think the challenge is fierce, and I think we have a real obligation to go the extra mile and redo things a bit differently, so we leave this place in better shape than we found it," Baucus said.' Do you think this would help with the US's lackluster performance in these fields?"
I think it's good (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, it should be good for the country as a whole, having more scientists and engineers. Those extra beakers and hammers are really valuable!
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Re:I think it's good (Score:4, Insightful)
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>>Advances in science and engineering both create jobs. A couple of coots putting together a transistor in Bell Labs apparently spawned off the international industry that pays CmdrTaco's salary.
A bunch of science majors flipping burgers doesn't lead to any advances in science and engineering.
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I think it's good (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Insightful)
If it increases the pool of qualified science teachers, it is -- and right now, there is a real shortage of math/sci teachers who know science and math, even leaving aside the issue of their teaching skills.
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To me, this is a somewhat self-serving drive by business executives who are tired of paying engineers salaries which are almost as much as half their own.
Re:I think it's good (Score:4, Insightful)
Ever look into games theory?
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I take issue with this claim based on numerous and diverse observations, three of which I'll post today (then proceed to the coffee pot)
- the presentations I've seen in my research group meetings (grad students, and I'll point out that grad students have more education than those with a BS, damaging the notion that more education in science = more ability to teach it)
- the
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Re: I think it's unconstitutional (Score:3, Insightful)
"What gives you the idea the job market has 'no need' for those people?"
What gives me that idea are the hundreds of thousands of bright, well-educated science and tech workers who are under-employed and unemployed.
It would be far better to implement tax breaks to employers who invest in bringing in US citizens for interviews, in relocating US citizens, and in education and training US citizens... and to adjust
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Re:I think it's good (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Insightful)
You ever thought that the job the Physics PhD wants is a teaching job?
--Mike
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not really sure if your post is implying that a PhD might teach poorly, but I had a PhD in physics as my high school physics teacher. I had never had another person with a PhD as a teacher before, and he was by *far* the best teacher I ever had. Pretty much exclusively due to his existence, I am now a fairly well published researcher getting my PhD in Materials Engineering from MIT. Granted, he's special in a lot of ways because he was willing to work as a teacher in an inner city high school despite being somewhat overqualified by our typical standards. However, I suspect that anyone who is able to get a PhD understands and is excited enough about their field so much that if they try at all they'll be able to generate many future PhDs who would never have thought about doing something more difficult than IT. Being Weird to an employer definitely does not imply that you are a bad physicist!
I plan to teach someday too, but currently I'm enjoying the heck out of myself doing actual research, so it'll probably be a few decades. =)
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Insightful)
part of me wonders how effective a PhD would be at teaching high school students. Honestly, if you have a degree in Physics and can't find a job, I'm not sure I want you in front of students as you must be a horribly weird person.
What a small-minded comment. Not everyone is just after the money, you know. Most people who go to the trouble of getting a PhD have a passion for the subject, and often that is accompanied by a passion for sharing the subject through teaching. Have you ever considered that the person wanted to teach high school students, rather than viewing it as some sort of fallback job?
Re:Where's the motivation? (Score:4, Insightful)
Passion, sir. Passion.
Any companies driven by passion? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Most of the small ones. Go join or start one.
If you insist on remaining at a large company, please follow this handy instructional brochure [drasolt.com]. I think a lot of large companies are negatively productive, so following that plan will help us all.
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Insightful)
As such, I'm a little skeptical of the scheme, but without knowing more of the implementation details I'm afraid I can't critique it in depth...
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But then again, I also believe the plan to make people pay per kilometer of car use is a scam at best (some IT company pushing a ridiculously exp
Re:I think it's good (Score:4, Insightful)
I know it sounds harsh, but the kids already in school are pretty much a lost cause. This country needs to focus on getting parents to perform the roles they are supposed to - socialize and prepare their children to be productive members of society.
Sitting them in front of the TV to watch the same DVDs over and over again, or to play Grand Theft Auto and shoot the homies doesn't count. That produces the misfits that are coming out of the schools in droves.
If this country wants educated people, we need to approach this problem differently than just offering free degrees in math and science. They are crap degrees now anyway. Kids get passed up the ladder from grade to grade because the teachers don't want to get dinged for flunking a bunch of illiterates and the classes have been marginalized to the lowest common denominator.
The problem right now is with parents. They are too interested in their own little universes to properly care for their kids. They need to know and act like kids are the responsibility they really are. They need to show interest in their kids. Not just plop them in front of anything that will keep them occupied while they watch American Idol or some Monday night footbal game.
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Cuba.
Granted their situation is a bit unique because of the USSR's involvement there.
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Re:I think it's good (Score:4, Insightful)
_That_ scares politicians.
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Informative)
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show me one country full of highly educated people that are in poverty
Easily.
1. Sri Lanka. 91% literacy rate. Abysmally high poverty and an economy that's in the shitter thanks to the little Sinhala-Tamil "race war" of theirs
2. Palestine. Most Palestinians are actually very well educated, but, well, you read the papers, right?
Not my intent to disparage any country or culture, mind you. My point is that education is certainly necessary to remove poverty, but it is far from sufficient.
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Cuba?
To be fair, I don't know of any free country full of highly educated people that are in poverty.
Re:I think it's good (Score:5, Interesting)
Students saddled with debt The recent student loan scandals have shown us that most student "aid" in America is in the form of loans, and the whole industry is one big racket engineered to rob the unprepared (students) and the taxpayer (govt subsidy on interest). Recent college graduates, not to mention dropouts, are saddled with insane amounts of debt.
Government money better spent this way
Finally, my personal hypothesis is that was placement in college affordable for a demanding major, the more incentive for children from poorer sections of society to avidly pursue it. "Free" is a very powerful word. As long as it's reasonably strenuous to get in (i.e. quality and selectivity are not being sacrificed for price or subsidy), I think the demand could be great enough to drive reform in individual high schools. Inspiring such bottom-up reform in the bloated bureaucracy that is our public school system is far more worth it than any "top-down", watered down establishment approach.Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I think that before you make that claim, you have to first demonstrate that people who would otherwise pursue higher education are not pursuing it because they cannot obtain financial aid or student loans. I don't believe that is true, considering the ease with which an idiot such as myself managed to obtain piles of student l
Can it be retroactive? (Score:4, Insightful)
But seriously, forgiving the debt of recent graduates who are now working in engineering fields will pump a shit-load of money into the economy.
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Retroactive incentives couldn't work without some form of time travel...
Re:Can it be retroactive? (Score:4, Insightful)
So don't raise taxes. Cut other programs (like the war in Iraq) that are sucking money to no good end.
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There are plenty of places with fine economies (Switzerland for one) that maintain a policy of neutrality.
-b.
Great Idea (Score:3, Interesting)
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I agree with the free tuition for teaching, but for not working. Of course, I take no responsibility for the poor qualiity of uninterested teachers that we will be turning out.
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You aren't required to teach. You can teach or work in the field, for a minimum of 4 years.
There are people who slog through 4 years of an Engineering degree and then *don't* work as an Engineer !?
/Why ?
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Clever (Score:3, Funny)
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In the United States this is not true at the university level (K-12 you need a "teaching certificate"). I go to a public institution and many of the instructors are from industry, and have nothing past a masters and no degree in education (or even a teaching certificate). On the other hand, the physics departmen
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link [ed.gov] see page 3.
This won't happen. (Score:5, Insightful)
Because anything that makes the least bit of sense never does, in America.
Cynicism aside, this is a much needed proposal for the future of America. We are being left behind in so many markets due to increased global competition, but we are also lagging far behind in quality accessible education (meanwhile, tuition rates continue to rise).
I wish Senator Baucus the best of luck with this. He deserves our support.
Of course it will help (Score:5, Informative)
More selective != better (Score:2)
Free (Score:2, Insightful)
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Helping eachother is the human superpower. Having big teeth and claws is the tiger superpower. You don't see many tigers around these days, do you?
But have they considered (Score:5, Funny)
Re:But have they considered (Score:5, Interesting)
I truly applaud this senator for the initiative and believe that that ALL states should follow suit and offer a similar program, to help keep the sciences strong in the US.
Increasing the amount of graduates.. (Score:3, Insightful)
So what you'll end up with is a bunch of people with math, science and engineering degrees asking "Do you want fries with that?", which actually isn't bad. At least they're educated.
Is the plan short-sighted? (Score:2)
And, how will this be implemented? Socializing the education system tends to decrease the overall quality of teaching because lower salaries and less grant money cause more people to work in industry rather
ok (Score:2)
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Is this retroactive? (Score:2)
No free lunches (Score:3, Insightful)
And the 'Free money!' (of course TANSTAAFL) mentality would totally distort the education establishment even more than the transition of Athletics from a sideline into a major cash cow did.
How do you define "working in the field" (Score:2)
-b.
Consequences of Unemployment (Score:5, Insightful)
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What about offering "national service" type jobs (not necessarily teaching) to all those who graduate with a good GPA. We have plenty of infrastructure, for example, that needs to be redesigned and repaired. Then again, the unions will probably squeal
I don't think so (Score:5, Insightful)
So either the scholarships need to be available to anyone who meets the simple criteria of graduating and working in the field, or they probably won't have the intended effect of increasing the quantity and maintaining or improving the quality of engineering graduates. They'll just end up being a hand-out to the people who don't need handouts.
Honestly, I think the USA's best bet is brain-drain. We need to tear-down a lot of the post 9/11 every-foreign-student-is-a-potential-terrorist rules, and kill H1B, replacing it with a fast-track to citizen-ship visa (I say go so far as to make citizen-ship a requirement after 3 years on this theoretical visa) so that we attract and then keep all the smart people from the rest of the world.
Free tuition for Political Science (Score:2)
It "might" help... (Score:2)
This is already going on.... (Score:2)
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like grad school (Score:2)
Who pays in this case? The federal government, through grants. Someone always pays.
Does this lead to more people getting graduate degrees in science? Definitely, although financial reasons are also a big part of many people leaving grad school without the degree they went in for.
Does this lead to more jobs in science? Yeah, kind-of. More federal funding for science grad students encourage
And how is he going to ENFORCE it? (Score:2)
And how will he enforce the rule? By making the non-complying graduates pay back — no other way, really, as there is no slavery here.
Which means, people, who find better jobs than teaching, will just pay off (as they do now) with the losers sticking to become teachers. Could find better use for that money...
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Right. "National service". Make a GOSPLAN [wikipedia.org] while we are at it...
How one stupid Democratic idea can bring others in tow...
Double it for law = engineering (Score:2)
Nothing will change (Score:3, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's not true - because it presupposed a mythical golden era where American kids didn't prefer other [er
Re:No, it won't help (Score:4, Funny)
Dad?
$1000 for Graduating HS on Time (Score:5, Interesting)
It costs the government something like $30K a year to keep a person in jail. Not to mention how much it costs to run the rest of the judicial system, to build the jails, the damage caused by their crimes, or the taxes they could have paid if they were free to work. By the time we're done with the difference between a free person and a jailed person, it's probably over $50K a year. The average Federal jailtime is over 5 years [usdoj.gov] per sentence, or well over $250K per prisoner (many get multiple sentences per lifetime).
People graduating HS on time are less likely to commit crimes and go to jail. So every person who the bonus spares from jail is worth over 250 people who get it, but still go to jail. In other words, if the increased on-time graduations reduce the crime rate even as little as 0.25%, they're worth it. It's probably closer to needing only 0.1% or less to "break even". And that's not counting other benefits, like increased productivity, reduced teen pregnancy, and all the other benefits of on-time graduation.
We can afford a lot more investment in Americans' education. Some targeting high performers who need more money for even higher performance. Some targeting low performers at risk of creating more damage than it costs to prevent. Education is always the investment with the best return. Investing more will pay off quickly, creating more money to invest, and improving the country across the board as a "byproduct".
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Consequences for the research/credential question (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, there are some students who straddle the fence — in a way, I was one myself — but for the most part the undergraduate student population is rather sharply divided between the research-directed and the credential-directed. The fact that programs have to accomodate both lead to conflicts — the research-directed students complain bitterly about dumbing-down of material and excessive commercial influence on the curriculum, while the credential-directed complain about having to learn a ton of useless theory which will be irrelevant to their future.
I mention this because I speculate that Max Baucus' proposal would certainly change the current equilibrium between these two camps, particularly if free tuition is only for science/engineering students. True, there would be a lot more research-directed types who can't get into university now for lack of funds, but I imagine most of the people who'd come who aren't there now would be credential-directed.
There's also another reason they'd be credential-directed, which is the tone set by the policy itself. There's something a little disturbingly utilitarian about the proposal of granting free tuition only to those people. This sort of philosophy makes me wonder whether the line would be drawn around science/engineering as a whole, or around only those science/engineering programs that have a utilitarian (read: "commercial") appeal. I would think it would be hard for the government to argue that engineering and category theory are "useful" but that philosophy and rhetoric are not.
If, however, research-directed programs are ruled out, the result would likely be a forcible segragation of research-directed and credential-directed students, even more than there is now. Maybe this is where we're headed anyway, but it would be regrettable as the forced mingling of the two has been hugely productive for both in the past.
Re:Consequences for the research/credential questi (Score:3, Interesting)
The main draw of the credential directed outlook is financial, and I don't think it's schooling expenses, but rather long-term earning potential, and thus a sense of security, which is the main incentives. More r
We don't need more engineers (Score:4, Interesting)
The US doesn't need more engineers. If it did, salaries would be higher. In 1970, engineering and law salaries were about equal, or so says the IEEE. That's certainly changed.
The US doesn't need more engineers because high-tech manufacturing has gone offshore. Where the manufacturing goes, the production engineering must go, and the design engineering follows. Then the brands go. Then top management. Then the financing.
Read the Lenovo story. [lenovo.com] They're not a spinoff of IBM. They're a successful Chinese PC company that bought IBM's PC business to expand. IBM is just the company to which Lenovo outsources US warranty service.
yes and no (Score:3, Informative)
But, instead of another "let's give certain groups something special" program, how about raising the general level of education in such fields as math?
Many scams and doubtful business methods (including, btw. many insurances) only work because the general public is frighteningly uneducated in math, for example, and can't do even simple statistics.
One of the reasons this is so is that there is no education science of mathematics. There are special branches of education science for almost every other field, be it art, languages or health. But no one seems to care about how to teach math. So it's taught by people who know general pedagogics and try to apply that to math as best as they can - but we all know that math skills and people skills do not very often go together, so you are really lucky if your math teacher is good at both math and teaching.
And that's not his fault, but a failure of the system, which instead of thinking about why so many people fail in math in school, and improve the teaching techniques, dumbs down the curriculum or makes math optional instead of mandatory.
Re:Yes, it would work. (Score:5, Insightful)
Aside from that, don't forget that giving free college education to foreigners is great, considering that you get to choose how long you keep them, and where you let them work.
You save twelve years of fundamental education, and with just four, you get an engineer who will work where you want him to work, and for as long as you wish.
The same thing is done by European countries, they import graduates for example from Latin America, give them a free or a cheap Phd, and they get a cheap doctor in whetever they need, for 3 o 4 years of education. Of course, that money comes back in patent royalties, and expensive technology exports even to the same countries that provided the people.
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They should teach you English, too.
I apologize that my attempt at a sarcastic first post did not meet your perfecting standards for internet forums. Clearly, I should prepare as though writing for a peer-reviewed medical journal.
Aside from that, don't forget that giving free college education to foreigners is great, considering that you get to choose how long you keep them, and where you let them work.
Actually, I disagree. If we keep them, they take a job from an American. If we send them home, they compete with us from abroad, and make money for India/China instead of for the US. In either case, Americans lose.
You save twelve years of fundamental education, and with just four, you get an engineer who will work where you want him to work, and for as long as you wish.
Since the fundamental education is a sunk cost, why should we shoot ourselves in the foot by
Re:Yes, it would work. (Score:5, Informative)
Since I like helping bigots, here's my link for you: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,276508,00.htm
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Yeah, um... these Americans who are qualified for the job but losing them to Indian or Chinese candidates... Could you send them my way? It is damned near impossible for the company I work for (a semiconductor manufacturer) to get Americans just to apply. I don't like hiring foreign talent over na
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My question is, what do you mean by "American"? Do I count, as a naturalized citizen of this wonderful country?
Yes.
have you ever thought about why these people came over here to learn in the first place?
Wouldn't you, for a free ride?
Seriously, when did "Americans" become so hostile towards immigrants?
When our politicians gave them free education, and tax incentives to employers to hire them over equally qualified Americans who had to pay for their education with a lifetime of debt.
~Rebecca
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Unclear... critics of nativists like to claim that it is opposition to non-white immigrants... but I think that it is an oversimplification. I think that the anger is directed at "Mexicans" and "Indians" but I don't think its racism... I think that it's more
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~Rebecca
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What exactly are you referring to?
We spent most of the 80s and 90s giving tremendous amounts of money to Indian and Chinese exchange students (at the high school level) and student visa students (at the college level). None of the students on those visas were paying for their education, nor were their home governments sending them here. We imported them, and paid for the entire cost, including subjects other than just Math, Science, and Engineering. Largely part of political plays to show what nice tolerant people we were, and "increase
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Well, we've (ab)used parts of it, anyway. [wikipedia.org] I think that "using" the rest more would sort of limit the charm, unfortunately.
-b.
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is Informative and had not been posted above.
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This is the typical attitude in this friggin' country. First comes me, me, me, and me again. Everybody for himself. It's all about who pays what and how much does what cost.
Widen your horizon. Open your eyes. Free or at least affordable quality education is a good long-term investment for everybody. It is an important part of the common good. But as long as you just worry about your own pocket book it will never happen.