My Dyson vacuum cleanerScience Technology Engineering ART and Math
My Dyson vacuum cleanerScience Technology Engineering ART and Math
I literally, see this on every trip I make doing critical infrastructure assessments for DTRA. COVID-19 has become the excuse du jour for just about everyone not wanting to do their jobs.What COVID-19 has shown me is people in all professions will willingly stop doing their job responsibilities if they can blame it on something.
Teachers execute policy, they don't write it.
To quote myself, more than STEM or STEAM specifically, what we need are creators and innovators. We want a curriculum that leads to that. Art definitely has a role.My Dyson vacuum cleaner
I think that this is a bit of a broad brush. As a 'consumer' of modern public education:
- The shift to digital learning tools is mostly bad. People retain information better when they write it down by hand. They have more endurance reading material when it's a physical book.
- I hate, hate, hate the shift toward 'FITREP style' report cards. They are meaningless, especially when teachers apply it with the same 'have to see right movement' as a fitrep. I don't want to see a 2 for 'progressing toward grade level' and get an explanation 'well, it's only October so I give all my students that score because they're not fully at X grade level. Your child is doing wonderful!' Give my kid a numerical or letter grade so I know how much information they actually retained and where their weak areas are.
- When I was a kid I had to show every assignment to my parents to get signed. Memories of my dad saying "I'm not signing it until it's right." "What's wrong with it?" "You tell me." Now teachers guard that shit like the holy grail, only to emerge on parent teacher conference day. No, you can't take any of it home to go over it with your child.
College is not meant to be a trade school.Valid points until your last paragraph, imo.
Are you aware how many people graduate with degrees in the liberal arts and can't find jobs utilizing what they learned, versus how many people graduate with STEM degrees and find themselves in the same predicament?
We, as demonstrated by the "free" market, do not need more art majors like we need computer scientists, engineers, etc. Also, one can be a fantastic artist on the level of Van Gogh or Mozart without ever attending a university, which is not true of architects, civil engineers, etc.
Yes, I understand this and even stated it in my post. Your anecdote notwithstanding, the move away from homework is a broad national trend.A student's experiences really depends on individual school districts in this country and some of the things that some folks complain or praise in one district can be completely different in another.
Many schools have some kind of core curriculum that forces STEM majors to take a plethora of art / humanities / literature courses. I found these to be mostly a waste of time, never mind the fact that I was in classes for 50% more time a week than non-science major counterparts thanks to the labs.That liberal arts don’t inherently directly lead to employment is not a statement on the value of a classical education. It’s a statement on the rigorousness and selectivity of secondary and college education.
I imagine an evening with Captain Brett in his home being as fun as being with Hannibal Lector while he is preparing fresh faba beans and asking if I would like a glass of chianti . . .I’m imagining spending an evening with Spekkio in his home would be like when Jodie Foster traveled through the movie Contact, experiencing an alien world for the first time. ?
I dunno, Rob. You and I have spent an evening together drinking beers in the club, and you appear otherwise unscathed. You seemed to enjoy the experience. Don’t worry, I won’t tell your other friends. ?I imagine an evening with Captain Brett in his home being as fun as being with Hannibal Lector while he is preparing fresh faba beans and asking if I would like a glass of chianti . . .
College is meant to prepare you for the work force, which is the same goal of trade schools (and basically all schools). You can learn to do anything on your own with enough effort, but colleges offer a shortcut and a way of proving you learned that thing to potential employers.College is not meant to be a trade school.
By the same token, you can learn to code on your own, too.
That liberal arts don’t inherently directly lead to employment is not a statement on the value of a classical education. It’s a statement on the rigorousness and selectivity of secondary and college education.
College is not to prepare people for the workforce.College is meant to prepare you for the work force, which is the same goal of trade schools (and basically all schools). You can learn to do anything on your own with enough effort, but colleges offer a shortcut and a way of proving you learned that thing to potential employers.
If you asked the person paying for any persons college degree why they are willing to pay such huge amounts of money, what do you think the answer would be? I think it would be because they hope it's an investment that pays for itself in time with a better job. So the value of the degree is, typically and for most people, is that it will hopefully directly lead to better employment, which is directly the opposite of what you claimed.
It follows that STEM degrees offer far more value than liberal arts degrees. I say this as someone with a master's in the liberal arts, mind you.
I have many friends that didn't go to college or started that stopped and went to a trade school, they are or have done quite well.College is not to prepare people for the workforce.
It’s to reach you how to think
“The person paying for any person” is generally the person doing it.
I’m not saying a degree in history from Podunk State is a ticket to riches. An engineering degree from that dump is likely more economically valuable
I’m saying that if we reduce college to being a trade school, it’s an overall loss.
We need technicians.
We also need thinkers. And that’s what quality liberal arts graduates provide.
And I say that as a person with an MS and an MA.