Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

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Simon_Jester
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Simon_Jester »

Destructionator XIII wrote:
Simon_Jester wrote:Another advantage with a bricks and mortar facility is that there are physical places in the campus where you can simply ask fellow students for help- there are thousands of people nearby who may be able to help you with math or writing homework.
Indeed. There's also something I call osmosis - simply sitting there and seeing/hearing it discussed around you (in and out of class) I think really helps the brain, even if you don't put in an explicit effort. There's shit like lab experiments in science class too where the result is nothing, but the process is good, having actually done it yourself. Online stuff skips that process and you just fill in the blanks.

This is actually my biggest problem with the online classes, even bigger than the lack of interaction. Passively sitting in a real class gives you something. Passively sitting in an online class is poop.
Yes, and that's kind of my point: the divide in terms of what you get from a real university versus an online 'university' is so large that you can't say "online classes are scams, therefore real classes are scams." Even real classes where the homework is graded online are still 'real' in a sense that online classes aren't, because you have better lines of support and advice and help around the physical campus than you would online.
At this point, I suspect you've got bizarre notions in your head about how much things "really" cost that don't line up with the reality.
sorry i must have missed when you and aly posted balance sheets and cost analyseses
Since Alyrium started doing exactly this later on... heh.

But honestly, you're looking at this and saying "ah, they charge so much money, it must be a scam!" Do you do this for other things, too? Do you assume that automobile manufacture is a scam because new cars cost ten thousand dollars or more, when you figure it ought to cost less? Do you assume the same of computers? Surgery?

That's what's bugging me here. You're glancing at areas where you really don't know all that much about the constraints the organization operates under, and assuming that there are huge cost-cutting opportunities that they're just too stupid or evil to take, because they're too busy raking in their money. That doesn't line up with the experience of people whose experience of universities extends beyond "I attended one for a few years..." which ought to tip you off that maybe all those easy cost-cutting measures aren't as easy as you think.
It would also make engineering and science degrees from (formerly) four year institutions fucking useless, and most other degrees would also be fucking useless [...]
Why? It's not like the knowledge you have would magically disappear.

(Or is higher education actually about that piece of paper alone, and the actual education part of it barely has any relevance in the real world? If so, that's really fucked up.)
Because you wouldn't know shit. In technical professions, the first two years of a four year degree are not bullshit, you do not automatically pick them up in high school, no, not even if you are some "ohmigod he's so smart!" prodigy. If you try to compress a four year engineering degree into two years, either a lot of engineering students crash and burn because they're expected to learn more material at once- the curriculum is already brutal for some students in the mid-years. Or a lot of engineering students come out not knowing no more than they would otherwise have known some time in their junior year in college. Reducing the average knowledge level for a B.S. in engineering to what today's engineering juniors know is not a recipe for success in engineering.

"Streamlining" the college degree process to make it cheaper by reducing the number of years of total education only works if you don't need four years to teach the material to the student. That's really only true for the majors that were bullshit to begin with, for which the degrees were already bullshit and everyone knows it, which is why a B.A. in English isn't a recipe for surefire job security anymore. For science and engineering degrees, or for pre-law and pre-med, the first two years may not be bullshit- the student may actually need more than two years to assimilate all the information. In which cutting the program to two years will make the degree bullshit, and all you're doing is pushing the demand for education further down the road onto post-graduate education, just as the high schools have been pushing the demand for education off onto the colleges.
unless they were restricted to the tiny handful of people who self-direct their way to the equivalent of a sophomore education in college by the age of 18.
Not necessarily self-direct: they have high school for this. The basics should have been already covered.
So a high school education should give you the knowledge base of a college sophomore in all fields? Physics, economics, history, political science, biology, literature...

Do you honestly think this is a reasonable goal for the nation's education system? If we tried to implement this it would fail horrendously, because we'd have millions of students coming into the system, hitting 300-level college courses during their first year, and failing. To fix it, we'd either have to completely reform primary and secondary education (a generation-long process), or we'd have to dumb down the curriculum to a level students could reliably handle fresh out of high school.

We'd also lose the liberal arts education aspect of college entirely, which would have huge second-order consequences: we'd wind up with a much higher proportion of historical illiterates, people with poor writing skills, people ignorant of art and culture and any math not desperately needed in their day to day life.

As it stands, you're not proposing viable higher education reform. You're just making up a bad idea and blaming the high schools for the fact that it won't work.
I don't have a degree. When I went to university though, it was for physics and "computer science". (I saw "computer science" because I think the traditional definition is more theoretical than what I did, which included some off-major stuff like talking to clients and scheduling.)

Some of it was useful - mainly the stuff I did off-script. Most of it wasn't. I know I'm smarter than most people, being the 100th percentile of known intellect in the universe and all, and of course I've been self-teaching for a long time in addition to my intuitive knowledge. I suspect my high school teachers were extraordinary too.

But, can that really explain it all?

If high school isn't already giving typical students the kind of basic algebra, philosophy, etc. that college starts off with, the solution isn't to add yet more years of expense to the individual. It's to fix the high school system.
So your plan is to first break higher education, then use the breakage as justification to fix the high schools?

The fact that you are full of yourself and discount the importance of knowledge you do not possess doesn't explain why institutions ought to break to fit your notions of how they ought to work, based on your ego-based claims about how college was too stupid for your genius.
Wait, so a school that focuses on education is a "diploma mill"?
If it focuses on churning out the maximum quantity of diplomas cheaply, yes it is. There are a lot of subjects (many of them ones you don't necessarily understand) where depth is as important as breadth.

There's kind of an inconsistency in your position here. On the one hand, you want to concentrate on the 'really important' part of higher education, by throwing students into what are now 300-level courses straight out of high school, because after all it's not like you can't cover all the topics required for a physics or biology degree in two years if you are a (self-advertised) supergenius, right?

But on the other hand, you also want to concentrate on making the process of higher education nice and cheap, implicitly so that everyone has access. And yet you propose to do this by changing the system in ways that make it inaccessible to the average student.

You can't have it both ways.

Either you're concentrating on turning out fast, cheap, diplomas. In which case you get the education you pay for, and you're paying for less time in classrooms; you do the math.

Or you're revamping programs to try and teach what was once covered in four years in only two years. In which case you're trying to teach most of your students a lot more per semester, and a much higher chunk of them will simply burn out, fail, or be deterred from trying the program.

Even worse, that effect will be biggest in the programs that were most challenging to begin with. The guys teaching underwater basketweaving may well be able to condense their course of study into two years without overworking the students; the guys teaching electrical engineering can't. That means relatively bright students will be more leery of taking electrical engineering (which is now an absolute, total fucking ballbuster) and more willing to take underwater basket weaving.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Dave »

Two minor points to add on to what Alyrium Denryle and Simon_Jester have already explained to Destructionator XIII, mostly on the topic of "chopping university to 2 years of 300 and 400-level classes":

1) There's a lot of foundational knowledge that's required to get to those 300 and 400 level classes that is, naturally, covered in the tens, 100 and 200 level classes. This is not remedial work but it is VERY often major specific.
This includes things like "Ae Eng 161-Aero Vehicle Performance"
"Ch Eng 141-Chemical Eng Thermodynamics I"
"IDE 110-Mechanics of Materials"
"El Eng 151-Circuits I"
"Cmp Sc 253-Algorithms"
"Geo 125-Physical Mineralogy & Petrology"
(examples taken from my engineering university's catalog)

Now, I admit, you might be able to clear out the Circuits class or perhaps even the algorithms class in junior college. (I'll argue about that later) But no junior college is going to offer things like AeroVehicle Performance or Mineralology & Petrology.

These courses are often weeder classes, the kind of classes the instructors make very hard because they contain core concepts that must be mastered to proceed in their studies. (If you don't have a solid grasp of petrology, your mine is going to collapse because the rocks aren't strong enough to support it, and you didn't know any better not to dig in them. If you don't understand circuits forwards and backwards, you aren't going to be able to design them later and you will be totally lost when the circuit does complex (literally, mathematically complex) things in certain situations. And as AD has told us many times, if you don't grok evolution, you will have no hope making sense of later biology classes.)

Other minor benefits:
* It distinguishes between those who have any knack for it and those who don't. Those who don't are going to be hurting and may want to switch majors.
* If you don't learn time management for the weeder classes, you won't have the time for the 3- and 400 level classes that require significant time investments.

Above all, these classes are NOT offered at the high school level, most of them will not be offered at junior college, and they take a SEMESTER to understand. You cannot absorb them in 3 weeks of vacation, you will probably need an instructor after class to re-teach it to you, and there is no way in hell you can learn it on the fly while studying more advanced classes that build on top of that foundation.

This is what you are asking engineering most all students to do, and only the unspeakably gifted, driven, or suicidal people would make it through your "brilliant" system.


The other value I found in a 4 year education was the advantage of sitting in the student lounge with graduate students bullshitting in the background about problems they were having with their classes, and them being gracious enough to explain them to me when I asked. This opened up new mental horizons and insights into some of the stuff at the forefront of the field. One CompSci group I conversed with was working on a launch window calculator that made porkchop plots in a tenth of a second using a graphics card rather than the CPU. Stuff like that.

I was also rubbing shoulders with future engineers and scientists for a relatively long time, and it means I have casual knowledge in their fields and can shoot the breeze with them without looking like a total dumbass.

For someone with a thirst to learn like many of us here, 4 years of university is an amazing experience.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by aerius »

Destructionator XIII wrote:You say they aren't for profit and just want to keep the lights on, but something here ain't right. Why has the price of tuition consistently risen up to twice as fast as general inflation rates?
There's something wrong when it's going up faster than healthcare.
Tuition costs doubling every 9 years or so? Can you say "bubble", "implode" and "fucked"?

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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by aerius »

Thinking some more on the bubble, loans, and implode theme, college tuitions and housing seem to have a lot in common. Most people can't buy a house outright and the same is true of college educations; loans are often required in both cases, for homes we have mortgages and for tuition we got student loans.

So let's go back to the housing bubble, what allowed it to get so out of hand? Well damn near everyone wants to own property, it's just expected of them and there's a lot of pressure to do so. But for many decades we kept things under control by being fucking nazis with handing out mortgages, you're gonna put down a 20% downpayment and you can't have a total debt payment to income ratio of greater than 35%. If you can't get a mortgage you can't get a house, period, and during this time home prices closely tracked income & inflation. Then around the time I was born they loosened the standards and we started getting property bubbles, and when they cranked things up in the 90's with zero down mortgages, followed by interest only and neg-am loans & re-financing, home prices shot the moon. It got even better when they handed them out to anyone with a pulse. Then they ran out of suckers and we're now in a housing price collapse.

I see education in a similar way, there's tons of pressure to head to college, and not just to any college, but a "good college", which means $$$$. Students can't afford it, their families can't afford it either, 3/4 of the students are too dumb for college, but that's ok cause we got the financials, governments and colleges handing out these nice student loans. As long as they can keep handing out loans then everyone can "afford" to go to college even if tuitions are going up massively every year. Hell, I wouldn't be surprised if they jacked up tuitions just because they could knowing that the loans will be there to cover it. As long as you can keep suckering students into taking out larger & larger loans, you can continue jacking tuition fees. And remember how these things are damn near impossible to discharge in a bankruptcy filing? Yeah, no need to worry about the sucker defaulting on the loans, it'll keep on giving till the student's dead or it's paid off.

And it works, until you run out of suckers. Then you get a collapse and a lot of colleges are going to go tits up as tuitions are forced to come back down.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Magis »

I can't speak specifically about university operations in other countries, but in Canada, a university's income related to graduate school and research activities actually subsidizes undergraduate tuition, not the other way around. So if schools were to get rid of those "expensive" grant-getting, top-notch faculty researchers, undergraduate tuition would actually go up, not down. So, Destructionator, you're right that students don't get literature explaining that, "no, your money isn't being spent on your education, it's being spent on a random research project that we could cut and pass the savings on to you". But maybe they should get literature that explains, "A random research project is helping to fund your education".

And it can't be overemphasized how much university-level research contributes to knowledge creation in our societies. Virtually all fundamental research is done by academics at either universities, or national laboratories (which are always closely associated with universities). Even when private entities perform research, it's almost always the case that it's in collaboration with a university department. Of course, the people leading the research departments of science and engineering firms are themselves usually post-graduate academics whose research experience and scientific expertise were cultivated at a graduate school, or even as a member of a faculty.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Teebs »

The UK's largest university is a distance learning institution and is also pretty respected. Obviously it's not competing with the top universities, but it seems to be rated in the top third of research universities in the UK (just :P ) and I've never heard anyone sneer at a degree from there, unlike a very large number of other universities.

Anyway, my point there is that distance learning/online universities are not necessarily crap. From some of the things I've read in this thread, it sounds like the Open University takes teaching much more seriously than distance learning places in the US though.
Simon_Jester wrote:"Streamlining" the college degree process to make it cheaper by reducing the number of years of total education only works if you don't need four years to teach the material to the student. That's really only true for the majors that were bullshit to begin with, for which the degrees were already bullshit and everyone knows it, which is why a B.A. in English isn't a recipe for surefire job security anymore. For science and engineering degrees, or for pre-law and pre-med, the first two years may not be bullshit- the student may actually need more than two years to assimilate all the information. In which cutting the program to two years will make the degree bullshit, and all you're doing is pushing the demand for education further down the road onto post-graduate education, just as the high schools have been pushing the demand for education off onto the colleges.
Interestingly in the UK there are a couple of private universities which offer two year undergraduate degrees (most UK degrees are three years) and advertise them as being cheaper despite the high tuition per year. Of course that's not what's been talked about, because, as I understand it, they cover the same amount of material but just cut out the long holidays and pissing around that characterise many undergraduates' lives. They don't seem massively popular at the moment - they survive but top students choose the good public universities.

I personally don't think it's a particularly good idea, but it seems to be doable.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Broomstick »

It's not the distance-learning or computer learning is inherently bad, it's just that it's harder to do it well than most people might think, and all too easy to develop a scam around the concept.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Fingolfin_Noldor »

Destructionator XIII wrote: Can you prove this?

With tuition being subsidized yet still rising, I'd like to know where the hell all that money is going. They don't have shareholders, so that can't be it.

My first thought was greedy professors - the rising textbook cost would seemingly support this - but faculty salaries are rising linearly, as tuition rises exponentially. Are they hiring more teachers; are classes getting smaller?

Or perhaps it's benefits. I haven't found a graph for things like pensions. Health insurance has, of course, been rising, but not as rapidly as college tuitions.

edit: perhaps it's greedy deans and other adminstrators... /edit

I can't find any evidence for extraordinary construction. Are they pissing the money away on new toys every year perhaps? But, the UT Austin didn't have that as a huge budget item, so I don't think it's it.


Anyway, whatever is going on, the money has to go somewhere. I'd really like to know where.
Maybe you could try graduate student tuition support, the occasional undergraduate scholarship etc.? I would imagine that is not exactly small figure. Throw in building maintenance, expenses on sports etc. I would really imagine that these are not cheap what with the rising inflation.
Last edited by Fingolfin_Noldor on 2011-08-08 01:27pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Magis »

Destructionator XIII wrote: Actually, it can be and is overemphasized. Alyrium's graph showed that, in the United States, universities contribute comparatively very little to the creation of knowledge aside from some floor space. By far, the majority of the money is tax dollars or from private enterprises (both for-profit and not-for-profit). Money is what talks, not location.
I didn't say that universities pay for research. I said that universities conduct research. The reason why governments and enterprises pay universities to conduct research is because universities can do it better than any other competing type of institution.
Destructionator XIII wrote:Saying universities contribute to research is like saying my landlady contributes to my software business.
No, in fact it's quite opposite of that. Your landlady isn't actually writing your software. Likewise, the government isn't actually conducting research. Universities conduct research even if the government or some private enterprise is paying for it. The correct analogy would be that your software business contributes to your landlady's real estate rental business, because you pay her for an office space just like governments pay universities to conduct research.

Your misguided theory that knowledge creation would continue on unimpeded if universities didn't employ researchers is wrong. A university (and to a lesser extent, national laboratory) is the only type of entity that can reasonably employ, full-time, researchers that are doing work for which there is no short-term or medium-term industrial application or prospect of profit. Universities are the only institutions that employ people to do research knowing that the research may very well lead to a dead end or that will have no redeeming monetary reward. Universities conduct fundamental research because at universities, it is believed that research and the expansion of knowledge are valuable for their own sake. It is for that reason that universities are able to cultivate such a large community of researchers and intellectuals, which is unmatched by any other type of organization.
Destructionator XIII wrote: Can you prove this?
I don't have any publicly available documentation for you that grad school / research money subsidizes undergraduate school. But, I have intimate familiarity with where grant money goes, especially for one university research group in particular. ;)
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Simon_Jester »

It seems to me that saying knowledge creation would go on if we stopped paying universities to do it is like saying that the production of movie scripts would go on if we abolished movie studios.

Some movie scripts would surely be written. There are people who write scripts, and even perform (short) motion pictures, without ever expecting to make a dime off of them. But the incentive to do it would be reduced. Many people who do it well today would be forced to seek other work to support themselves, diminishing their output. And it would be very difficult for trainees in the film industry to support themselves while learning the ropes.

You'd be disbanding the organizations with the most institutional experience at producing good movies, as well- if experienced directors are forced to retire or go do something else for a living, they will be replaced by less experienced directors who aren't as good at the job.

So you'd see a drastic decline in both the quantity and quality of movies produced. Instead of what we now consider professional-grade material, the average quality would drop closer to that of what now gets posted on Youtube and what goes viral online, because that would be the best a small operation can produce.

Movie studios take money and make movies; that doesn't mean movies would still get made in the absence of studios because "money talks." The money might get spent on something else, or get spent less efficiently on making inferior movies.

Something similar would happen to abstract research in the absence of universities. Universities take money and do pure research. That doesn't mean that someone else will take the same money and do the same research if the universities disappear, because "someone else" doesn't necessarily have the right organization, people, and facilities to do the job effectively. Except for a handful of corporate labs (Bell Labs being a famous historical example), the private sector doesn't do a good job of sustaining that kind of organization. The government does a better job, but even then, their best research labs usually collaborate closely with universities for a reason.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Simon_Jester »

The average professors don't pull down the same salaries the 'best' professors do. There's a spread- the ones who can bring more grant money in, and form stronger research groups around themselves, get paid more.

University professor salaries across the board are not inflated by the desire to keep a handful of star performers around, any more than anyone else's salaries are, because who pays the average person as much as the star performer?

But what you will find, if you start cutting professors' salaries across the board, is that the quality of the average drops off- just as it would with any other line of work. If college professors, who have to push themselves into the top few percentiles of education in the country just to be minimally qualified to do their jobs in the first place, are getting paid at the national median wage... what's in it for them?

And you say "fine, I'll just replace you with someone who will work for the salary I want to offer." Which is stupid- it's the same mindset that's been contributing to the de-skilling of workforces all over the developed world for years. It's simply not worth bothering to master difficult technical skills and invest five or ten years' experience into the field if the rewards for doing so are pocket change.

You can, by cutting wages society-wide, force people to work for less. But you can't force them to work as well.

EDIT: You know, this all ties back into the original problem. Young people today are finding it harder and harder to locate job opportunities, because education is less valuable and their relative lack of experience puts them at the bottom of the totem pole when it comes to seeking employment. And at the same time, real wages are stagnating or falling while costs of all sorts of things (not just college tuition increases).

We ought to ask ourselves: where is this trend heading? What are the social consequences of cheapening labor and downsizing the national economy like this?
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Broomstick »

Destructionator XIII wrote:With tuition being subsidized yet still rising, I'd like to know where the hell all that money is going. They don't have shareholders, so that can't be it.

My first thought was greedy professors - the rising textbook cost would seemingly support this - but faculty salaries are rising linearly, as tuition rises exponentially. Are they hiring more teachers; are classes getting smaller?

Or perhaps it's benefits. I haven't found a graph for things like pensions. Health insurance has, of course, been rising, but not as rapidly as college tuitions.
Even so, the rise in healthcare costs would well be a significant factor in the rise of tuition - it doesn't have to have just one cause after all.

Let's look at some factors that might explain some, if not all, of this rise in tuition:

1) increased cost of benefits, health insurance likely being the largest in this category but there could be other benefits also increasing in costs.

2) increased energy costs - particularly where buildings are old and poorly insulated.

3) cost of adding computer/network/internet infrastructure much of it installed in only the past decade or two. While some larger institutions had a network of sorts even back in my day, routinely giving everyone an e-mail address wi-fi, and access for everyone to widespread networks was not routine.

There may be others. These may not explain all of the reason tuition is skyrocketing, but it could certain explain some of it. I also agree that the student loan structure could also play into this, as mentioned by others previously. My opinion is that it's a multi-factorial problem.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Rogue 9 »

Broomstick wrote:I think some state universities were simply given those tracts of land, as opposed to purchasing them, but I'm not sure.
They're called land-grant colleges for a reason. The Morrill Acts of 1862 and 1890 gave over federally controlled lands to the states for the purpose of funding universities, though it's worth noting that selling the land rather than plopping university buildings on all of it was perfectly allowable.

That said, some still don't think they have enough. Never buy a house near Indiana University in Bloomington; they might decide they like it and eminent domain you right off the block.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by JointStrikeFighter »

One point I haven't seen addressed in this thread is the role of university research in ensuring the degree being taught remains relevant. In many fields, science, economics, management the key concepts change quickly. If the university isn't conducting research then the knowledge they are teaching is obsolete already.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by PainRack »

Simon_Jester wrote:EDIT: You know, this all ties back into the original problem. Young people today are finding it harder and harder to locate job opportunities, because education is less valuable and their relative lack of experience puts them at the bottom of the totem pole when it comes to seeking employment. And at the same time, real wages are stagnating or falling while costs of all sorts of things (not just college tuition increases).

We ought to ask ourselves: where is this trend heading? What are the social consequences of cheapening labor and downsizing the national economy like this?
To sidetrack the discussion and expand on this....... as undesirable this trend is, isn't this "normal" ? It appears to be me cheaper wages and etc are a normalisation of introducing the rest of Asia into the global economy.

Destructionator XIII wrote:(btw I'm not even saying universities should disappear or stop doing research! Recall my original statement was that universities should stop worrying about retaining top talent. Be willing to cut their pay and if they leave, just hire someone else to do the work. My position is an average professor can do a good enough job and sometimes good enough actually is good enough. The best is bullshit. The research thing was some secondary slippery slope from this.)
[/quote]
Because the best professors, with the best pay are often those at the leading edge of knowledge and pushing it back?
Seriously, have you any idea how outdated some of the textbooks can be? Or how fast knowledge can propogate?

My specialist nursing diploma in oncology had us entering the course with "high fat, meaty, processed meat has an increased risk in leading to breast/colon cancer." Afterall, that is the position WHO still endorse, right? Then the doctors leading the course said "well, it depends. study etc etc in Japan, Britain cast doubt on this". Oops.

There was also literal replacement of some of the course materials midway because the 2010 cancer statistics was released... Its also interesting to see how some of the nursing lecturers compare. The ones with the higher learning, such as masters and etc, you know, actual leaders in nursing were those who could give us deeper insight into the actual aspects of the industry. Its.... atonishing because on one hand, you're bemoaning the relevance of degrees, the costs and benefits while on the other hand, you're suggesting a course of action that will actually DECREASE the relevancy of the university experience.

I will also like to speak about how removing 100 can be detrimental. My specialist diploma did EXACTLY that. There was no 100 courses. Essentially, if you had 1-2 years experience, you were expected to know 101.
We COULDN"T. Our work experience was limited enough that we simply can't understand the technical jargon involved, if it wasn't for the fact that it was Simon Ong who taught our first course, I think our first med onco lecture would had been a disaster. One could EASILY see how bad this was when William Hwang taught the transplant lecture. The med/surg team were totally lost, the oncology portion were struggling at sea and it was only the Haematology people could understand it . well, actually, we lucked out because the only haem member who wasn't part of the transplant team was me.

This ignores the generalist nurses who weren't working exclusively with oncology patients like the private nurses. We also had surgical nurses who were taking the course because the hospital was expanding the surgical-oncology section.

Even if we were using the community college route, my experience with our equivalent of that doesn't suggest this is as easy as you might think it could be. We graduate with a diploma in nursing, so, to increase our competiveness in the job markets, many nurses go on to take private nursing degrees. Despite the work experience, despite the previous exposure say 3-5 years ago, they find it difficult to actually complete assignments on nursing theory and its application. And this is the first semester. My colleage who completed the degree before taking the specialist diploma also pointed out that in comparison, the degree was "easier"..... which suggest that the work up on 100 course DOES have some practical benefit as compared to simply throwing you in.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Dark Lord of the Bith »

Broomstick wrote:
Destructionator XIII wrote:With tuition being subsidized yet still rising, I'd like to know where the hell all that money is going. They don't have shareholders, so that can't be it.

My first thought was greedy professors - the rising textbook cost would seemingly support this - but faculty salaries are rising linearly, as tuition rises exponentially. Are they hiring more teachers; are classes getting smaller?

Or perhaps it's benefits. I haven't found a graph for things like pensions. Health insurance has, of course, been rising, but not as rapidly as college tuitions.
Even so, the rise in healthcare costs would well be a significant factor in the rise of tuition - it doesn't have to have just one cause after all.

Let's look at some factors that might explain some, if not all, of this rise in tuition:

1) increased cost of benefits, health insurance likely being the largest in this category but there could be other benefits also increasing in costs.

2) increased energy costs - particularly where buildings are old and poorly insulated.

3) cost of adding computer/network/internet infrastructure much of it installed in only the past decade or two. While some larger institutions had a network of sorts even back in my day, routinely giving everyone an e-mail address wi-fi, and access for everyone to widespread networks was not routine.

There may be others. These may not explain all of the reason tuition is skyrocketing, but it could certain explain some of it. I also agree that the student loan structure could also play into this, as mentioned by others previously. My opinion is that it's a multi-factorial problem.
Another major factor influencing rising tuition is bound to be decreasing revenue from other sources, especially in state schools, where state governments routinely slash academic budgets.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Magis »

Destructionator XIII wrote:
A university (and to a lesser extent, national laboratory) is the only type of entity that can reasonably employ, full-time, researchers that are doing work for which there is no short-term or medium-term industrial application or prospect of profit.
False. Alyrium's graph showed about 20% of "basic research" is done by private industry in the United States right now. Historically, the number was even higher. If universities dried up, the number would go up again.
Yeah, no kidding. Thanks a lot for that revelation that if universities were to stop doing research, that the fractional share conducted by remaining participants would go up. But the total amount done would fall like a rock. And by the way, those graphs refer to number of researchers, not the quantity or quality of research performed, or the usefulness of it. Universities doing research, and then publishing it in publicly available materials is a lot more useful to the world than when it's kept locked up in industrial folders of proprietary secrets.
Destructionator XIII wrote: And, of course, NASA isn't a university nor a national laboratory, and does all kinds of great science (and engineering).
NASA is essentially a national laboratory because it's fully government funded and mandated to conduct research.
Destructionator XIII wrote:
Universities are the only institutions that employ people to do research knowing that the research may very well lead to a dead end or that will have no redeeming monetary reward.
False. Microsoft does this kind of thing all the bloody time, for one example, even without government money.

ALL product development or any kind may very well lead to a dead end. The reason it's done is a) sometimes it isn't a dead end and b) even if something doesn't work out, the side benefits may be worth it. Side benefits include things from minor developments toward the main goal to simple perks to attract employees.
Exactly. Private work may lead to a dead end, but the company is doing the work in the first place hoping that it won't. Universities conduct research with no concern as to whether it is profitable, because to a University, generating knowledge is inherently valuable.
Destructionator XIII wrote:
On Alyrium's graph, it also shows other nonprofit as almost as high as industry,
That is really not detailed enough to derive any reasonable conclusion.
Destructionator XIII wrote: You say "only institution", but they carry out closer to 55% of the work and contribute only about 10% of the funds, not even close to 100% in either category.
No, they have about 55% of the number of researchers, but they are all world class experts in their respective fields. And that number probably doesn't include graduate student researchers, which outnumber professors by a factor of 5 or 10.
Destructionator XIII wrote:
Universities conduct fundamental research because at universities, it is believed that research and the expansion of knowledge are valuable for their own sake.
They do it for the money.
Care to back that up? Universities conduct research whether there's money in it for them or not, because conducting research is generally in the chartered mandate of the university. Not all university departments are revenue positive, but they still do research. In fact, revenue positive departments subsidize those that can't get sufficient research grants on their own.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Knife »

PainRack wrote: Because the best professors, with the best pay are often those at the leading edge of knowledge and pushing it back?
Seriously, have you any idea how outdated some of the textbooks can be? Or how fast knowledge can propogate?

My specialist nursing diploma in oncology had us entering the course with "high fat, meaty, processed meat has an increased risk in leading to breast/colon cancer." Afterall, that is the position WHO still endorse, right? Then the doctors leading the course said "well, it depends. study etc etc in Japan, Britain cast doubt on this". Oops.

There was also literal replacement of some of the course materials midway because the 2010 cancer statistics was released... Its also interesting to see how some of the nursing lecturers compare. The ones with the higher learning, such as masters and etc, you know, actual leaders in nursing were those who could give us deeper insight into the actual aspects of the industry. Its.... atonishing because on one hand, you're bemoaning the relevance of degrees, the costs and benefits while on the other hand, you're suggesting a course of action that will actually DECREASE the relevancy of the university experience.

I will also like to speak about how removing 100 can be detrimental. My specialist diploma did EXACTLY that. There was no 100 courses. Essentially, if you had 1-2 years experience, you were expected to know 101.
We COULDN"T. Our work experience was limited enough that we simply can't understand the technical jargon involved, if it wasn't for the fact that it was Simon Ong who taught our first course, I think our first med onco lecture would had been a disaster. One could EASILY see how bad this was when William Hwang taught the transplant lecture. The med/surg team were totally lost, the oncology portion were struggling at sea and it was only the Haematology people could understand it . well, actually, we lucked out because the only haem member who wasn't part of the transplant team was me.

This ignores the generalist nurses who weren't working exclusively with oncology patients like the private nurses. We also had surgical nurses who were taking the course because the hospital was expanding the surgical-oncology section.

Even if we were using the community college route, my experience with our equivalent of that doesn't suggest this is as easy as you might think it could be. We graduate with a diploma in nursing, so, to increase our competiveness in the job markets, many nurses go on to take private nursing degrees. Despite the work experience, despite the previous exposure say 3-5 years ago, they find it difficult to actually complete assignments on nursing theory and its application. And this is the first semester. My colleage who completed the degree before taking the specialist diploma also pointed out that in comparison, the degree was "easier"..... which suggest that the work up on 100 course DOES have some practical benefit as compared to simply throwing you in.
Indeed. I think Destructionator rant about the lower level classes only works for certain degrees; I'd say his whole rant about university is off base anyways but I digress. Even just the basic Nursing degree requires enough pre-requisites to get an Associates in and of itself. 101 and even 201 classes in anatomy, physiology, pathophysiology, biology, chemistry, and various other foundations that rapidly gets build upon in NUR classes that if you don't have or have a solid understanding of, you're lost out of the gates in NUR classes.

I guess I understand the notion of if they make you take a history class while in business school. Taking time out of graphs and how to tie a tie to learn history could leave a sour taste in your mouth, but other programs actually need foundations in various areas to be able to start with.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

That's the root of the problem. Students are making demands, and I don't think they are being informed or rational about it.
No, they are not. However, when you combine that with slashed state budgets, it makes economic sense for a university to go ahead and organize/promote them. You are the one obsessed with universities cutting costs, this is a logical way to do it. If you don’t like it, write your state legislators and pressure them to stop cutting the state contribution to university budgets in every cycle.

You say they aren't for profit and just want to keep the lights on, but something here ain't right. Why has the price of tuition consistently risen up to twice as fast as general inflation rates?
Because the states keep cutting our fucking budgets. Have you not been reading? When the state of Arizona cuts the budget of its state universities by 40 fucking percent back in IIRC ’09 what the fuck do you expect them to do?

Hell, fuel prices have gone up faster than inflation, which means that the price of literally keeping the lights on goes up etc. Even with the massive balance sheet I gave you, you have no god damn idea. Costs go up, state budget contributions go down, large reseach grants now have a funding rate of less than 10% per submission. Do the god damn math.

Yeah, I know that's expensive. That's why I'm proposing to render as much of that shit unnecessary as possible!
And for some universities it will work. There are plenty of urban universities which have done that historically. Other universities have not, and don’t have the capacity to switch over.

There are of course the benefits I already listed to keeping grounds with gardens, demonstration space etc. These are things universities have historically had for a reason. The difference between the community formed inside a traditional university, and the communities formed by what I will call a compact commuter university is very stark. Having a university present can literally transform an entire city. Tempe would be an inner city shit hole without the ASU at its heart. The grounds around U of A literally keep inner city Tuscon surrounding it safe for kilometers. Austin would not have its unique liberal bohemian flavor without UT. There are a lot of college towns where the University is literally the only thing keeping said town from collapsing. Granted, this is my impression, though it is backed up by crime statistics, election results, comparison to nearby comparable and university free municipalities, as well as the fact that I have a good sample size (for personal experiences anyway) of universities and their surrounding environs. Universities provide public spaces for positive community-building organizations, natural history and art museums, public fora for professional meetings, generate demand for local business, supplement the policing of surrounding areas, produce professionals who often stay and gentrify a city, as well as all of the intangibles.

Does being "well-rounded" help you find a job? Or are you at the mercy of the university system for the rest of your life?
A) I have CHOSEN to remain as part of the academic community. I made that commitment when I was a small child and dedicated my life to the study of nature (most kids don’t know what they want to be when they grow up. I knew I wanted to be a biologist when I was three)
B) There is more to life than simply finding a job. The mandate of universities to produce knowledge, distribute that knowledge to the population, and produce well-educated informed people has been in place since the fucking 16th century. That education in a specific field gives people certain marketable skills is both necessary and incidental.

Do you really want to live in a world where people have only the knowledge of the arts, philosophy, history, languages etc that they learn in fucking high school? Where no one knew how to speak anything but English, Spanish and maybe French? Where everyone is a hyper-specialist in one field with no knowledge or appreciation for the others, and who is not properly informed on any question outside of the narrow perview? I know I don’t. I think you would feel the same way if you pulled the piggy bank out of your ass and realized that there are more important things than low-cost tuition.

It would be fucking fantastic if we lived in a country where the State paid for education. It would, in fact, be awesome, and the false choice you present (either keep paying shitloads in tuition, or cut back on the quality of universities) is just that. A false fucking choice. There is a third option, and if you think that it is inferior to the option you present here, then you need to fucking hang yourself by your own entrails from a ceiling fan and do the world a favor.

Anyway, I'm not saying being well-rounded is bad, but is it worth the money you pay for it compared to the alternatives? Are there other ways to achieve the same goal? If shit goes wrong, does it leave you with other options or just a lot of debt?
Not everything of value can be translated into dollars and cents, moron. Specializing in a field is a RISK, just like every choice you make. However, having some knowledge of other areas of knowlewdge is useful to the entirety of society. Chiefly, in the form of an informed electorate. I don’t think I need to be explicit on why that is a good thing.

Massive waste of money. We should just get medicare for everybody instead of inventing yet another duplication of effort in this field. Healthcare in America is such fucking bullshit.
Yes, I agree. We should have a single payer system, but we don’t. You don’t solve that problem by removing the safety nets that exist. What you are basically saying is that we should not waste money donating to medical charities because we should have a single payer system and thus they should not be necessary. Do I need to spell out why that is bullshit for you?


Even without medicare for all, there's still other choices for medicine. College students have the same options as everyone else. Of course, having the college enroll in a group plan, like the insurance you can get from an employer, might be worth it. But duplicating the providers too? Come on.
Wait wait wait. What? You are complaining about cost to students, and want to abolish taxpayer, tuition, and endowment subsidized healthcare? You do realize that when students have to pay for health insurance with their own money, they WILL have to spend more than if you subsidize it with endowments and state contributions right? This is basic addition and subtraction.

I rather wonder if this is why universities insist on being walled gardens too. You certainly wouldn't want those lower class proletarians mixing in with your snobby upper class networks!
Considering the number of socialists in academia (read: almost all) I think you are a bit off base here. Yes. Universities have pleasant walled gardens. However, they are generally NOT walled gardens. The walled gardens are there for a variety of reasons, attractiveness, providing nice serene study space etc. Universities do NOT keep out the poor, and a lot of funding goes specifically to provide need-based scholarships to the Proles.
Looking through it, the #1 expense is faculty salaries. #2 is research - a net loss in that budget, by the way. Servicing debt is also a big one, eating about 10% of their budget. Maybe if they were more modest early on, they could provide cheaper service today.
Heaven forbid we pay faculty decently. You know much an individual faculty member gets paid? Assistant Professor median is around 60k a year, Associate median is 70, Full Professor is around a hundred thousand per year. Considering the fact that they work 50-60 hour work weeks generally, and are in the top percentile in their fields, that is not exactly extravagant. There are just a lot of them in any given university, and because of budget cuts, fewer and fewer assistant professors are being hired/not getting tenure*, and the entire faculty is becoming old.

*Younger professors are not getting tenure because budget cuts have raised the bar on how much external grant funding they have to get in order to qualify (to the point that bringing in a couple million in grants is becoming insufficient in some second tier universities), and the funding rate for grants is less then 10%. This is what happens when you cut the state contribution to the budget. Faculty have been hit just as hard as the student body.

Time to slash pay then. They have nowhere to go, so they've go to deal with it.
It has already happened asshole.

Since faculty salaries are such a big expense, this will create a tangible savings that can be passed on to the students.
For the small price of long-term problems in the university system. How about you fuck yourself. Yes! Lets pay someone who works 60 hours a week and went to university for 8-12 years less than the manager at a fucking walmart. No. That will not affect the long term ability of universities to recruit academics. Nope. It could not possibly lead to a long term brain-drain in the US, with increasing numbers of US academics becoming expatriates. Nope. Never.

Maybe you should have gotten an art degree so you could actually contribute to society outside of your comfort zone!
How about you go fuck yourself with razor-wire.

I DO contribute to society. A third of amphibians are going extinct, amphibians which are key components in almost every terrestrial and freshwater foodweb on the god damn planet. The animals that serve as ecological canaries across every temperate and tropical ecosystem, and who’s skin secretions have already yielded significant medical advances.

I contribute to society, it just does not translate directly into profit.

It's not like private investors never do high risk, long term projects. But if they can get the same results with someone else doing the work, of course they'll take it.
Let me get this straight: You want to remove much of biochemistry from the public sphere, and put it in the private sphere. Do you know what that will actually do?

1) Information becomes proprietary. When a corporation controls the IP rights for new techniques in biochemistry it restricts who can do what research and for how much, increasing costs through the whole system (including opportunity costs of talented people being unable to do certain types of work), and said knowledge becomes private rather than public property, which is inherently bad.
2) Corporations can and do suppress the dissemination of knowledge which runs counter to their monetary interests. They also have a proven track record of pushing scientists they contract with (not even in their actual employ, but who they simply contract with) to perform shoddy research that gives them the data they want, not what is real.
3) Goal directed enterprises are inferior to the current system. As is merit pay. Research in cognitive science and behavioral economics has shown repeatedly that people perform best in creative endeavors like science if they are free to do whatever the fuck they want. You pay them enough that they don’t have to worry about anything, and then you just let them free. Corporations don’t do this, so their output per unit dollar, even when you consider everything else, is much lower.

Is this a situation you want?

You're an elitist misanthrope. Lots of people can do science, even those without big names. You don't need the best of the best to get real work done. That's just for dick measuring.
What happens to the production of knowledge if you only hire first and second upper standard deviation within a given field? By definition it slows down. There is nothing wrong with, and I endorse the hiring of beat-cop scientists. They are the ones who form the bulk of the community, and do much of the highly detailed work, filling in the gaps in our existing knowledge base. However, think about what would happen system-wide if universities did not hire and attract the big names—keep in mind, these are the people operating not in the details of our knowledge base, but on its edge—the one’s who push the boundaries of our knowledge outward? The margins of human knowledge expand much slower.

And yes. I am an elitist misanthrope. I hate people, and wish I had a TARDIS so I could go back to 1 million BDH (Before Damn Humans) to relax and rebuild my morale. However, that has no bearing on this. Do you do research? No. Do you have even the slightest clue why people who have big names have them? No. I will tell you. It is because they intelligent (maybe not even the most intelligent) and work disgustingly hard in order to do what they do. They represent a part of humanity we should nurture and cherish, not grind into the dust with hand-wringing austerity promulgated by small people, with small minds.

I suppose we should go back to the days of noble patronage?

Your own graph said about two in five (industry obviously, and "all others" I imagine are folks with decent research budgets, but not the other categories leaves things like think tanks and the pure research parts of companies)!
Non-profits mostly, which yes, do specific types of research within their purviews, and often have research scientists with dual affiliations—one with them, one with a university—the problem is, there are not enough of them, and their areas are a bit restricted.

Industry does do SOME basic research. However, it is limited to only things with direct and immediate applications, mostly chemistry and materials science. They also often contract out the work. There are entire swaths of science like astrophysics, particle physics, ecology, certain areas of geology (you wont find corporate seismologists for example), physiology and most of psychology that are relatively depauperate in industry.
Your third graph also shows more than half the research is funded by the government. It just happens to be done universities (surely because it's a convenient location; they have the equipment. In a way, they are renting out their science facilities to the government! Good for them)... but again, the government is what's making it happen.
Jesus fucking Christ, go look up what the primary functions of the NSF and NIH are: funding research. Universities do not internally fund research very much (not directly anyway, more in that momentarily), the government does. Both of those agencies were formed post WW2 in order to fund science at universities, and they are the reason we were and continue to be the dominant force in the international endeavor that is science.
But, you are now arguing that the university has very little to do with it - it's mostly government funded.

Even private industry funds more basic research than universities and colleges, according to your own source.
See above. The government FUNDS it, it does not PERFORM it outside of a few large national laboratories doing very goal-oriented research. For example, the NIH has its own massive facility in Maryland, but the bulk of its budget goes to funding university sciences dealing with health and medicine. Once again, you prove you have no idea how funding research actually works.
a) You're factually wrong, according to your own source. Did you actually read it?
Yes. Yes I did. You just don’t know how to interpret it, and you don’t know how to actually read what I am writing.

Step 1: Professors Apply for Grants, usually from various sources in the federal government, but sometimes from private entities like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and Non-Profit organziations who give grants such as the World Wildlife Fund, the March of Dimes etc

Step 2: The University takes 40-50% off the top of those grants (when the granting agency is large enough to have these rates negotiated), and uses it to keep the lights on, pay technicians who maintain common equipment, maintain research facilities and pay their staff (like the people who run Animal Care Facilities, the guy who runs the 454 gene sequencer or micro-array, maintenance contracts on that equipment etc) and perform building maintenance. Federal money makes up the vast majority of these funds.

Step 3: Some funds may be set aside for small grants to graduate students, travel to and from professional meetings, that sort of thing
Step 4: Monetarily productive departments may subsidize the operations of less well funded departments. So, for example, money left over from funding the physics department may cover the relatively small research expenses of the sociology or anthropology departments who only really need travel funds and graduate students to operate.

Step 5: The entire amount is still part of the university budget, including what the professors spend on equipment, materials, funding graduate students etc.

Step 6: Some small amount, though not research itself, may be covered in the general fund. For example, the electricity running the greenhouse may be taken from the general fund, or the cost of maintaining a research station in Antarctica may be funded by a specific endowment. However, tuition does not generally cover these costs, save for a tiny percentage which cannot otherwise be partitioned from the rest of the budget (a building’s air conditioning for example).

Step 7: Anything over any and all of the above amounts goes into the university general fund. This of course varies from year to year, and some years may exist where the grant money does not sufficiently flow, and research productivity drops.
c) The Federal government pays for most of it, and would surely continue to do so if universities weren't able to do it anymore. They'd probably just switch to private contractors (whether for profit or not for profit) or people who work for a government agency directly (like NASA).
Which is the point. The university does NOT by and large pay for it, so cutting that part of the university mission saves absolutely nothing, and costs you research productivity in the short term, and the existence of academia in the medium to long term. Where do you think graduate students, post-docs, and new professors COME from anyway? Oh. That is right. Universities. Where do you think the expertise of a professor in their field comes from? Oh, that is right. Doing research.

Fuck you.
Also, I'll note that I'm not actually against research. If they cut back so it actually broke even with Federal money, fine, it's not a cost anymore. Having that equipment bought and paid for by the government probably does help the students, so good for them.
This is exactly what happens. Total research=total grant funds, or almost equals when you consider multiple use budget items (like air conditioning).
And it works, until you run out of suckers. Then you get a collapse and a lot of colleges are going to go tits up as tuitions are forced to come back down.
And I will note here that Universities are in a massive bind. They simply have no choice. Funding cuts at the state level, funding rate of less than 10% on most federal grant submissions, flagging stock market (so endowments take a hit), we would expect that the only other source of funding for university operations—tuition—will climb, and it will climb faster than inflation.

You will note that this started to happen when Saint Reagan took the oval office and instituted massive tax cuts. I wonder what the data would look like if I annotated it with major political shifts, and thus shifts in the policies of states. Maybe broke the data down by state?
With tuition being subsidized yet still rising, I'd like to know where the hell all that money is going. They don't have shareholders, so that can't be it.
Student numbers are increasing, which increases the costs of operation for a university. At the same time, governments have been in recent years cutting the percent of GDP going to the NSF and other granting agencies, which decreases what universities can get in grant funding, at the same time states have cut university budgets. You make the mistake of assuming that there are only two terms in the equation. There are more than that.
Actually, it can be and is overemphasized. Alyrium's graph showed that, in the United States, universities contribute comparatively very little to the creation of knowledge aside from some floor space. By far, the majority of the money is tax dollars or from private enterprises (both for-profit and not-for-profit). Money is what talks, not location.
No. Money, People, Permanent Equipment, Academic Freedom and yes, Floor Space are what count. Not just money.

You cannot just pick up and move a research program somewhere else. You need a computer to do programming. A geneticist needs space, hideously expensive equipment, trained staff, and most importantly, the freedom to do what research he or she wants. Granting agencies provide the money, which pays for permanent equipment and staff. The university provides the space, and the academic freedom.

A corporate lab, or national lab, does not have the academic freedom a university does. As a result, both the depth and breadth of knowledge that can be obtained using either medium is limited.
If they are working with universities it's probably just because that's currently the easiest place to find people and equipment right now. If universities disappeared, the proportions would simply change, just like how I'd simply move if I were to be evicted from my house.
Where would they go? Lets do a thought experiment and assume that all universities in the US closed their doors to research.

Chemistry: Many will be able to find work in corporate America, if their area of expertise is in petrochemicals, natural products etc. However, a great many chemists work in areas that further knowledge of chemistry in general, but which cannot be applied in say, product development directly. What incentive does a company have to hire them and continue this research? What non-profit entity has this in their purview?

Biology: There are almost no biologists not working on medical research or crop genetics who would ever find work. Some plant and soil ecologists might be able to find work in private companies dealing with Restoration of wetlands as required by the Clean Water Act. However, that is a very small number. A few conservationists would find work with non-profits. Other than that, no biology will ever be done again. Why? Because corporations have no incentive to hire them, and in fact have a disincentive, because the information they generate runs COUNTER to their interests. Or do you think that the ecotoxicologist could get hired by Sygentia to tell them that their products turn frogs into transsexuals, when they can simply control the EPA panel and make it no longer matter?

In none of these cases will these researchers ever have the capacity for free inquiry. They will do the research that the CEO tells them to do, and their ability to publish will be dictated based upon whether their results contradict the results the CEO wants. Research Fraud will be rampant, just as it is in for-profit medical research NOW. Any knowledge that is generated will also become proprietary trade secrets of the company controlling the IP rights.

Is this a world you want to live in?

All of this of course ignores the problem of where these academics will come from in the future.

Go castrate yourself with electrified barbed wire.
Your misguided theory that knowledge creation would continue on unimpeded if universities didn't employ researchers is wrong. A university (and to a lesser extent, national laboratory) is the only type of entity that can reasonably employ, full-time, researchers that are doing work for which there is no short-term or medium-term industrial application or prospect of profit. Universities are the only institutions that employ people to do research knowing that the research may very well lead to a dead end or that will have no redeeming monetary reward. Universities conduct fundamental research because at universities, it is believed that research and the expansion of knowledge are valuable for their own sake. It is for that reason that universities are able to cultivate such a large community of researchers and intellectuals, which is unmatched by any other type of organization.
Magis hits the nail on the head.
I do my work better than any other competing consultant, but if I, and all other overpaid consultants in the world, were to give it up all at once,the work would still be done because the money is still there.

Either some new entrepreneur would take up consulting, or the clients would expand their in-house developers.
This is true because there is profit in consulting. There is NOT profit in studying sexual selection, or astrophysics, transposons, plant development, the metabolism of archeobacteria etc.
You just keep asserting it over and over again, but that doesn't mean it makes sense. The people would still be there (perhaps looking for work!). The money is still there (perhaps looking for people). It's a match.
See above.
False. Alyrium's graph showed about 20% of "basic research" is done by private industry in the United States right now. Historically, the number was even higher.
And research productivity was also lower.
ALL product development or any kind may very well lead to a dead end. The reason it's done is a) sometimes it isn't a dead end and b) even if something doesn't work out, the side benefits may be worth it. Side benefits include things from minor developments toward the main goal to simple perks to attract employees.
And science != product development.
They do it for the money.
Have you ever talked to an academic scientist? We don’t do it for the money. If that was our primary motivation, we would have all gone into medicine or petroleum geology. We do it because we LOVE what we do. Virtually all of the lower and middle administration of a university is comprised of academics serving temporary terms (the department head for example is just another faculty member who splits his time between administration, research, and teaching, as are most deans). Until recently this was also the case with university presidents and provosts (and governor appointed boards of regents), however, this has shifted in recent years toward MBAs (university presidents) who are professional administrators and who have applied their particular money-grubbing professional bias toward the running of universities. This however, has not and will not trickle down to the faculty culture. Just the opposite in fact. It is the faculty senate and the state faculty relations committees which fight the very measures these pieces of shit try to put in place.

The university is an institution and is defined by the people who compose it.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

That's the root of the problem. Students are making demands, and I don't think they are being informed or rational about it.
No, they are not. However, when you combine that with slashed state budgets, it makes economic sense for a university to go ahead and organize/promote them. You are the one obsessed with universities cutting costs, this is a logical way to do it. If you don’t like it, write your state legislators and pressure them to stop cutting the state contribution to university budgets in every cycle.

You say they aren't for profit and just want to keep the lights on, but something here ain't right. Why has the price of tuition consistently risen up to twice as fast as general inflation rates?
Because the states keep cutting our fucking budgets. Have you not been reading? When the state of Arizona cuts the budget of its state universities by 40 fucking percent back in IIRC ’09 what the fuck do you expect them to do?

Hell, fuel prices have gone up faster than inflation, which means that the price of literally keeping the lights on goes up etc. Even with the massive balance sheet I gave you, you have no god damn idea. Costs go up, state budget contributions go down, large reseach grants now have a funding rate of less than 10% per submission. Do the god damn math.

Yeah, I know that's expensive. That's why I'm proposing to render as much of that shit unnecessary as possible!
And for some universities it will work. There are plenty of urban universities which have done that historically. Other universities have not, and don’t have the capacity to switch over.

There are of course the benefits I already listed to keeping grounds with gardens, demonstration space etc. These are things universities have historically had for a reason. The difference between the community formed inside a traditional university, and the communities formed by what I will call a compact commuter university is very stark. Having a university present can literally transform an entire city. Tempe would be an inner city shit hole without the ASU at its heart. The grounds around U of A literally keep inner city Tuscon surrounding it safe for kilometers. Austin would not have its unique liberal bohemian flavor without UT. There are a lot of college towns where the University is literally the only thing keeping said town from collapsing. Granted, this is my impression, though it is backed up by crime statistics, election results, comparison to nearby comparable and university free municipalities, as well as the fact that I have a good sample size (for personal experiences anyway) of universities and their surrounding environs. Universities provide public spaces for positive community-building organizations, natural history and art museums, public fora for professional meetings, generate demand for local business, supplement the policing of surrounding areas, produce professionals who often stay and gentrify a city, as well as all of the intangibles.

Does being "well-rounded" help you find a job? Or are you at the mercy of the university system for the rest of your life?
A) I have CHOSEN to remain as part of the academic community. I made that commitment when I was a small child and dedicated my life to the study of nature (most kids don’t know what they want to be when they grow up. I knew I wanted to be a biologist when I was three)
B) There is more to life than simply finding a job. The mandate of universities to produce knowledge, distribute that knowledge to the population, and produce well-educated informed people has been in place since the fucking 16th century. That education in a specific field gives people certain marketable skills is both necessary and incidental.

Do you really want to live in a world where people have only the knowledge of the arts, philosophy, history, languages etc that they learn in fucking high school? Where no one knew how to speak anything but English, Spanish and maybe French? Where everyone is a hyper-specialist in one field with no knowledge or appreciation for the others, and who is not properly informed on any question outside of the narrow perview? I know I don’t. I think you would feel the same way if you pulled the piggy bank out of your ass and realized that there are more important things than low-cost tuition.

It would be fucking fantastic if we lived in a country where the State paid for education. It would, in fact, be awesome, and the false choice you present (either keep paying shitloads in tuition, or cut back on the quality of universities) is just that. A false fucking choice. There is a third option, and if you think that it is inferior to the option you present here, then you need to fucking hang yourself by your own entrails from a ceiling fan and do the world a favor.

Anyway, I'm not saying being well-rounded is bad, but is it worth the money you pay for it compared to the alternatives? Are there other ways to achieve the same goal? If shit goes wrong, does it leave you with other options or just a lot of debt?
Not everything of value can be translated into dollars and cents, moron. Specializing in a field is a RISK, just like every choice you make. However, having some knowledge of other areas of knowlewdge is useful to the entirety of society. Chiefly, in the form of an informed electorate. I don’t think I need to be explicit on why that is a good thing.

Massive waste of money. We should just get medicare for everybody instead of inventing yet another duplication of effort in this field. Healthcare in America is such fucking bullshit.
Yes, I agree. We should have a single payer system, but we don’t. You don’t solve that problem by removing the safety nets that exist. What you are basically saying is that we should not waste money donating to medical charities because we should have a single payer system and thus they should not be necessary. Do I need to spell out why that is bullshit for you?


Even without medicare for all, there's still other choices for medicine. College students have the same options as everyone else. Of course, having the college enroll in a group plan, like the insurance you can get from an employer, might be worth it. But duplicating the providers too? Come on.
Wait wait wait. What? You are complaining about cost to students, and want to abolish taxpayer, tuition, and endowment subsidized healthcare? You do realize that when students have to pay for health insurance with their own money, they WILL have to spend more than if you subsidize it with endowments and state contributions right? This is basic addition and subtraction.

I rather wonder if this is why universities insist on being walled gardens too. You certainly wouldn't want those lower class proletarians mixing in with your snobby upper class networks!
Considering the number of socialists in academia (read: almost all) I think you are a bit off base here. Yes. Universities have pleasant walled gardens. However, they are generally NOT walled gardens. The walled gardens are there for a variety of reasons, attractiveness, providing nice serene study space etc. Universities do NOT keep out the poor, and a lot of funding goes specifically to provide need-based scholarships to the Proles.
Looking through it, the #1 expense is faculty salaries. #2 is research - a net loss in that budget, by the way. Servicing debt is also a big one, eating about 10% of their budget. Maybe if they were more modest early on, they could provide cheaper service today.
Heaven forbid we pay faculty decently. You know much an individual faculty member gets paid? Assistant Professor median is around 60k a year, Associate median is 70, Full Professor is around a hundred thousand per year. Considering the fact that they work 50-60 hour work weeks generally, and are in the top percentile in their fields, that is not exactly extravagant. There are just a lot of them in any given university, and because of budget cuts, fewer and fewer assistant professors are being hired/not getting tenure*, and the entire faculty is becoming old.

*Younger professors are not getting tenure because budget cuts have raised the bar on how much external grant funding they have to get in order to qualify (to the point that bringing in a couple million in grants is becoming insufficient in some second tier universities), and the funding rate for grants is less then 10%. This is what happens when you cut the state contribution to the budget. Faculty have been hit just as hard as the student body.

Time to slash pay then. They have nowhere to go, so they've go to deal with it.
It has already happened asshole (or rather, the ratio of full time to part time faculty has dropped, unpaid furloughs have been instituted, faculty has been down-sized etc)

Since faculty salaries are such a big expense, this will create a tangible savings that can be passed on to the students.
For the small price of long-term problems in the university system. How about you fuck yourself. Yes! Lets pay someone who works 60 hours a week and went to university for 8-12 years less than the manager at a fucking supermarket. No. That will not affect the long term ability of universities to recruit academics. Nope. It could not possibly lead to a long term brain-drain in the US, with increasing numbers of US academics becoming expatriates. Nope. Never.

Maybe you should have gotten an art degree so you could actually contribute to society outside of your comfort zone!
How about you go fuck yourself with razor-wire.

I DO contribute to society. A third of amphibians are going extinct, amphibians which are key components in almost every terrestrial and freshwater foodweb on the god damn planet. The animals that serve as ecological canaries across every temperate and tropical ecosystem, and who’s skin secretions have already yielded significant medical advances.

I contribute to society, it just does not translate directly into profit.

It's not like private investors never do high risk, long term projects. But if they can get the same results with someone else doing the work, of course they'll take it.
Let me get this straight: You want to remove much of biochemistry from the public sphere, and put it in the private sphere. Do you know what that will actually do?

1) Information becomes proprietary. When a corporation controls the IP rights for new techniques in biochemistry it restricts who can do what research and for how much, increasing costs through the whole system (including opportunity costs of talented people being unable to do certain types of work), and said knowledge becomes private rather than public property, which is inherently bad.
2) Corporations can and do suppress the dissemination of knowledge which runs counter to their monetary interests. They also have a proven track record of pushing scientists they contract with (not even in their actual employ, but who they simply contract with) to perform shoddy research that gives them the data they want, not what is real.
3) Goal directed enterprises are inferior to the current system. As is merit pay. Research in cognitive science and behavioral economics has shown repeatedly that people perform best in creative endeavors like science if they are free to do whatever the fuck they want. You pay them enough that they don’t have to worry about anything, and then you just let them free. Corporations don’t do this, so their output per unit dollar, even when you consider everything else, is much lower.

Is this a situation you want?

You're an elitist misanthrope. Lots of people can do science, even those without big names. You don't need the best of the best to get real work done. That's just for dick measuring.
What happens to the production of knowledge if you only hire first and second upper standard deviation within a given field? By definition it slows down. There is nothing wrong with, and I endorse the hiring of beat-cop scientists. They are the ones who form the bulk of the community, and do much of the highly detailed work, filling in the gaps in our existing knowledge base. However, think about what would happen system-wide if universities did not hire and attract the big names—keep in mind, these are the people operating not in the details of our knowledge base, but on its edge—the one’s who push the boundaries of our knowledge outward? The margins of human knowledge expand much slower.

And yes. I am an elitist misanthrope. I hate people, and wish I had a TARDIS so I could go back to 1 million BDH (Before Damn Humans) to relax and rebuild my morale. However, that has no bearing on this. Do you do research? No. Do you have even the slightest clue why people who have big names have them? No. I will tell you. It is because they intelligent (maybe not even the most intelligent) and work disgustingly hard in order to do what they do. They represent a part of humanity we should nurture and cherish, not grind into the dust with hand-wringing austerity promulgated by small people, with small minds.

I suppose we should go back to the days of noble patronage?

Your own graph said about two in five (industry obviously, and "all others" I imagine are folks with decent research budgets, but not the other categories leaves things like think tanks and the pure research parts of companies)!
Non-profits mostly, which yes, do specific types of research within their purviews, and often have research scientists with dual affiliations—one with them, one with a university—the problem is, there are not enough of them, and their areas are a bit restricted.

Industry does do SOME basic research. However, it is limited to only things with direct and immediate applications, mostly chemistry and materials science. They also often contract out the work. There are entire swaths of science like astrophysics, particle physics, ecology, certain areas of geology (you wont find corporate seismologists for example), physiology and most of psychology that are relatively depauperate in industry.
Your third graph also shows more than half the research is funded by the government. It just happens to be done universities (surely because it's a convenient location; they have the equipment. In a way, they are renting out their science facilities to the government! Good for them)... but again, the government is what's making it happen.
Jesus fucking Christ, go look up what the primary functions of the NSF and NIH are: funding research. Universities do not internally fund research very much (not directly anyway, more in that momentarily), the government does. Both of those agencies were formed post WW2 in order to fund science at universities, and they are the reason we were and continue to be the dominant force in the international endeavor that is science.
But, you are now arguing that the university has very little to do with it - it's mostly government funded.

Even private industry funds more basic research than universities and colleges, according to your own source.
See above. The government FUNDS it, it does not PERFORM it outside of a few large national laboratories doing very goal-oriented research. For example, the NIH has its own massive facility in Maryland, but the bulk of its budget goes to funding university sciences dealing with health and medicine. Once again, you prove you have no idea how funding research actually works.
a) You're factually wrong, according to your own source. Did you actually read it?
Yes. Yes I did. You just don’t know how to interpret it, and you don’t know how to actually read what I am writing.

Step 1: Professors Apply for Grants, usually from various sources in the federal government, but sometimes from private entities like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and Non-Profit organziations who give grants such as the World Wildlife Fund, the March of Dimes etc

Step 2: The University takes 40-50% off the top of those grants (when the granting agency is large enough to have these rates negotiated), and uses it to keep the lights on, pay technicians who maintain common equipment, maintain research facilities and pay their staff (like the people who run Animal Care Facilities, the guy who runs the 454 gene sequencer or micro-array, maintenance contracts on that equipment etc) and perform building maintenance. Federal money makes up the vast majority of these funds.

Step 3: Some funds may be set aside for small grants to graduate students, travel to and from professional meetings, that sort of thing
Step 4: Monetarily productive departments may subsidize the operations of less well funded departments. So, for example, money left over from funding the physics department may cover the relatively small research expenses of the sociology or anthropology departments who only really need travel funds and graduate students to operate.

Step 5: The entire amount is still part of the university budget, including what the professors spend on equipment, materials, funding graduate students etc.

Step 6: Some small amount, though not research itself, may be covered in the general fund. For example, the electricity running the greenhouse may be taken from the general fund, or the cost of maintaining a research station in Antarctica may be funded by a specific endowment. However, tuition does not generally cover these costs, save for a tiny percentage which cannot otherwise be partitioned from the rest of the budget (a building’s air conditioning for example).

Step 7: Anything over any and all of the above amounts goes into the university general fund. This of course varies from year to year, and some years may exist where the grant money does not sufficiently flow, and research productivity drops.
c) The Federal government pays for most of it, and would surely continue to do so if universities weren't able to do it anymore. They'd probably just switch to private contractors (whether for profit or not for profit) or people who work for a government agency directly (like NASA).
Which is the point. The university does NOT by and large pay for it, so cutting that part of the university mission saves absolutely nothing, and costs you research productivity in the short term, and the existence of academia in the medium to long term. Where do you think graduate students, post-docs, and new professors COME from anyway? Oh. That is right. Universities. Where do you think the expertise of a professor in their field comes from? Oh, that is right. Doing research.

Fuck you.
Also, I'll note that I'm not actually against research. If they cut back so it actually broke even with Federal money, fine, it's not a cost anymore. Having that equipment bought and paid for by the government probably does help the students, so good for them.
This is exactly what happens. Total research=total grant funds, or almost equals when you consider multiple use budget items (like air conditioning).
And it works, until you run out of suckers. Then you get a collapse and a lot of colleges are going to go tits up as tuitions are forced to come back down.
And I will note here that Universities are in a massive bind. They simply have no choice. Funding cuts at the state level, funding rate of less than 10% on most federal grant submissions, flagging stock market (so endowments take a hit), we would expect that the only other source of funding for university operations—tuition—will climb, and it will climb faster than inflation.

You will note that this started to happen when Saint Reagan took the oval office and instituted massive tax cuts. I wonder what the data would look like if I annotated it with major political shifts, and thus shifts in the policies of states. Maybe broke the data down by state?
With tuition being subsidized yet still rising, I'd like to know where the hell all that money is going. They don't have shareholders, so that can't be it.
Student numbers are increasing, which increases the costs of operation for a university. At the same time, governments have been in recent years cutting the percent of GDP going to the NSF and other granting agencies, which decreases what universities can get in grant funding, at the same time states have cut university budgets. You make the mistake of assuming that there are only two terms in the equation. There are more than that.
Actually, it can be and is overemphasized. Alyrium's graph showed that, in the United States, universities contribute comparatively very little to the creation of knowledge aside from some floor space. By far, the majority of the money is tax dollars or from private enterprises (both for-profit and not-for-profit). Money is what talks, not location.
No. Money, People, Permanent Equipment, Academic Freedom and yes, Floor Space are what count. Not just money.

You cannot just pick up and move a research program somewhere else. You need a computer to do programming. A geneticist needs space, hideously expensive equipment, trained staff, and most importantly, the freedom to do what research he or she wants. Granting agencies provide the money, which pays for permanent equipment and staff. The university provides the space, and the academic freedom.

A corporate lab, or national lab, does not have the academic freedom a university does. As a result, both the depth and breadth of knowledge that can be obtained using either medium is limited.
If they are working with universities it's probably just because that's currently the easiest place to find people and equipment right now. If universities disappeared, the proportions would simply change, just like how I'd simply move if I were to be evicted from my house.
Where would they go? Lets do a thought experiment and assume that all universities in the US closed their doors to research.

Chemistry: Many will be able to find work in corporate America, if their area of expertise is in petrochemicals, natural products etc. However, a great many chemists work in areas that further knowledge of chemistry in general, but which cannot be applied in say, product development directly. What incentive does a company have to hire them and continue this research? What non-profit entity has this in their purview?

Biology: There are almost no biologists not working on medical research or crop genetics who would ever find work. Some plant and soil ecologists might be able to find work in private companies dealing with Restoration of wetlands as required by the Clean Water Act. However, that is a very small number. A few conservationists would find work with non-profits. Other than that, no biology will ever be done again. Why? Because corporations have no incentive to hire them, and in fact have a disincentive, because the information they generate runs COUNTER to their interests. Or do you think that the ecotoxicologist could get hired by Sygentia to tell them that their products turn frogs into transsexuals, when they can simply control the EPA panel and make it no longer matter?

In none of these cases will these researchers ever have the capacity for free inquiry. They will do the research that the CEO tells them to do, and their ability to publish will be dictated based upon whether their results contradict the results the CEO wants. Research Fraud will be rampant, just as it is in for-profit medical research NOW. Any knowledge that is generated will also become proprietary trade secrets of the company controlling the IP rights.

Is this a world you want to live in?

All of this of course ignores the problem of where these academics will come from in the future.

Go castrate yourself with electrified barbed wire.
Your misguided theory that knowledge creation would continue on unimpeded if universities didn't employ researchers is wrong. A university (and to a lesser extent, national laboratory) is the only type of entity that can reasonably employ, full-time, researchers that are doing work for which there is no short-term or medium-term industrial application or prospect of profit. Universities are the only institutions that employ people to do research knowing that the research may very well lead to a dead end or that will have no redeeming monetary reward. Universities conduct fundamental research because at universities, it is believed that research and the expansion of knowledge are valuable for their own sake. It is for that reason that universities are able to cultivate such a large community of researchers and intellectuals, which is unmatched by any other type of organization.
Magis hits the nail on the head.
I do my work better than any other competing consultant, but if I, and all other overpaid consultants in the world, were to give it up all at once,the work would still be done because the money is still there.

Either some new entrepreneur would take up consulting, or the clients would expand their in-house developers.
This is true because there is profit in consulting. There is NOT profit in studying sexual selection, or astrophysics, transposons, plant development, the metabolism of archeobacteria etc.
You just keep asserting it over and over again, but that doesn't mean it makes sense. The people would still be there (perhaps looking for work!). The money is still there (perhaps looking for people). It's a match.
See above.
False. Alyrium's graph showed about 20% of "basic research" is done by private industry in the United States right now. Historically, the number was even higher.
And research productivity was also lower.
ALL product development or any kind may very well lead to a dead end. The reason it's done is a) sometimes it isn't a dead end and b) even if something doesn't work out, the side benefits may be worth it. Side benefits include things from minor developments toward the main goal to simple perks to attract employees.
And science != product development.
They do it for the money.
Have you ever talked to an academic scientist? We don’t do it for the money. If that was our primary motivation, we would have all gone into medicine or petroleum geology. We do it because we LOVE what we do. Virtually all of the lower and middle administration of a university is comprised of academics serving temporary terms (the department head for example is just another faculty member who splits his time between administration, research, and teaching, as are most deans). Until recently this was also the case with university presidents and provosts (and governor appointed boards of regents), however, this has shifted in recent years toward MBAs (university presidents) who are professional administrators and who have applied their particular money-grubbing professional bias toward the running of universities. This however, has not and will not trickle down to the faculty culture. Just the opposite in fact. It is the faculty senate and the state faculty relations committees which fight the very measures these pieces of shit try to put in place.

The university is an institution and is defined by the people who compose it.
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Alyrium Denryle
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

Wait a minute. Before you said private universities are expensive because they don't have state funding, but the trend is the same there.

Soo.... yeah. Can you explain that?
Public university budgets will be designated P, private university budgets designated C

S=state contribution, E=Endowments, G=Grants from agencies, A=Alumni donations and other sundry, T=Tuition

P=E+T+G+S+A

C=E+T+G+A

The same drivers of tuition external to state budgetary issues such as flagging endowments, increased demand, and the fact that private universities DO want profits drive their tuition up. However, they also start more expensive compared to a comparable public institution.

Or does simple addition and subtraction cause you headaches?
So, have you ever actually lived in the real world?
Yes idiot. I live in the real world on a daily basis
I feel like you're just Miley Stewart. I'm both Miley and Hannah Montana - I can speak to the best of both worlds.
No, you really cannot.
An educational institution should worry more about educating than transforming entire cities.
Yes! Let us focus on one constructive purpose for a thing, and not only ignore, but smash to pieces all other constructive purposes for a thing! Let us remove good things from the world!
It really speaks to your inferior intellect that you can't handle knowledge without someone holding your hand through it.
Most people are not as self-motivated as you, and there are things you dont learn through self-study. What you learn through self-study is biased by your own particular interests. For example, I enjoy medieval history. However, i did not learn how the finance system worked and why anyone ever made loans to the nobility at all until I talked to a medieval historian. Unless you have a professional directing your study, correcting errors in your thinking, and who has the experience to know what is and is not important and what supplemental material is useful, you will fall victim to several different sorts of cognitive biases that hamper your learning.

Also: I find it funny that you feel intellectually superior to the person who is working on a PhD. The irony is so thick, that MRI's would be destroyed by its proximity.
Moreover, that's not a great option - the costs are still there, just instead of some poor kid being roped into it, rich, successful, hard working (...wait I'd better not go too far... ) businessmen who are the backbone of the country's economy, you know, net contributors like me have to pay for it instead.
Two words: marginal utility. Better you pay for it than the poor people, because the marginal utility of a dollar for you is less than the marginal utility of a dollar for someone making 20k a year.
I have not yet gotten around to cloning myself (thankfully, one of my superior virtues is a weak traditional sex drive), so suicide would be a huge hit on human civilization. I am, by far, the most intelligent and reasoned entity ever to walk this Earth.
You should have yourself checked out for narcissistic personality disorder
Again, I must ask: do you have even the slightest inkling of experience in the real world?
Yes. And I know the value of cheap primary care, because I have needed it.
A lot of college students already have private insurance - many private plans from parents extend to their student children (another unfair bias toward the university system - it should provide equal opportunity to the other choices too).
You do realize that many many families do not have insurance right?
And, a lot of people have no insurance at all, even some rich CEOs. We get by.
Yes. And unless (like you) they can pay for it out of pocket, they dont get primary care. Ever. Not everyone is as rich as you. Not everyone can afford to go to a private clinic at 100 USD if they need anti-biotics or get a load of parasites in their mouth. On campus health clinics provide that same service at a fraction of the cost to students, in addition to providing free mental health care--often not covered very well by private insurance.

Do you live in the real world?
That's a lot of money.
Why yes. It is upper middle class. Heaven forbid someone who goes through 12 years of post-secondary education to earn the minimum qualification for an entry level job and who benefits the whole of society gets to live in a nice neighborhood and not live paycheck to paycheck.

BTW, in the real world, people work 80 or 90 hours a week just to take home 40k so they can feed their families while paying off outrageous student loan debt.
And that is the fault of Greedy Professors, and not a corporate culture that outsources jobs and has kept nominal wages stagnant since the 80s, while reducing as much as possible their reliance on educated skilled workers who they have to pay more. Nope. Not at all.
The greedy fucks who contribute to making the poor poorer don't.
Yes, because the professors who have seen their wages stagnate since the 70s along with everyone else are the cause of the problem. It could not possibly be a systemic issue in society that needs to be addressed in the way universities are funded, and in how students get recruited and admitted. No. It could not possibly be that high schools suck so hard that the universities have to pick up the slack on remedial english composition. No. Nothing like that. Hell, it is not even the state legislatures who consistently defund higher education and have done so for the last thirty fucking years, while market forces increase the actual costs of running a university. Nope. It is the greedy professors who make upper middle class salaries!

Virtually nothing, since it's already done that way.
Yes. let us completely ignore issues relating to academic freedom and the proprietarization of knowledge.
Actually, yes: marketing, probably with most the gruntwork being done by people well below them on the academic ladder.
Nope. Dead Wrong. Knowing a great many such people, the big names actually do the work. There is also a difference between what you might consider a big name, and what we do. A guy by the name of Cedric Feschotte for example is a diminutive little french guy who works alongside his students in the lab every day, multiple publications in science and nature etc. Same with Rick Relyea, Bert Holldobbler etc. We do not operate like the proles. Putting forth big and new ideas is the currency we operate on. Not internal marketing.
That's fucking disgusting.
Not when you consider what the money does. Or did you not read the list of where the money goes? That money goes to pay for all the HUGE pieces of equipment that no one lab could ever afford on their own. This is how universities get those big MRI machines, gene sequencers, autoclaves, commone use environmental control chambers etc.

Science is a collaborative enterprise, and our funding stream treats it that way.
But, now I'm starting to see them as nothing more than greedy parasites, not just on the students, but also on the government and private foundations honestly doing their best to forward the knowledge of mankind.
That is because you did not read the list, numbnuts.

My lab, and in fact, labs from other nearby universities cannot afford high throughput next-gen sequencing technology. However, because my university used overhead funds from a federal grant to put a 454 sequencer into our Genomics Core Facility, and then uses the overhead from other grants to pay the maintenance contracts, everyone in our department has one at their disposal, and in fact, so do people from other nearby universities. On the same token, we do not have a bank of fMRI machines. However, the neuroscience department at UTD does, and they permit our psychologists and neuroscientists to use them.

It is a net benefit.
I was about to say if research breaks even like you say, cuts to it shouldn't have an effect... but if the university is skimming a metric shitload off the top for themselves, it indeed might have a difference.
It is not a skim. It is a cost-sharing endeavor. Say I submit a grant to the NSF for a 40 thousand dollars (actually 120 thousand because they fund at that rate for three years). The grant actually pays 59.2 thousand dollars per year, with 48% (19.2k) taken off the top. I buy what I need each year with that 40k (new dissection scope, disposable things like falcon tubes, gallon after gallon of formalin and MS-222, frog-loggers, sound-processing software, a km of PVC pipe, seins, tarps, that sort of thing. Maybe hire a technician or fund another graduate student). The university uses that 19k to pay the people who run the animal care facility I (and everyone else) keep my lab frogs in. They use it to pay Ray (or... Dr. Jones, yes we have fun with that), the director of our common-use genomics facility and his Minions (yes, he calls his technicians his minions, and lives in the basement. His laugh is also a cackle) and maintain said equipment. It also gets used to help subsidize the cost of the chemicals needed in said genomics facility so that labs who are going through a funding dry spell can still be productive. Anything left over after that goes into the general fund, and helps defray costs elsewhere, keeping tuition lower than it would otherwise be.

All said and done, this system allows the university to do things it would not otherwise be able to afford.
Academic freedom is bullshit. There was an article I think in this thread that said it doesn't actually exist in universities. Grants fund certain things and tenure is, ironically, given to those who toe the line.
Link it. I dont want to go find it, and frankly, I question your ability to interpret it.

Grants fund certain things, yes. Meaning you have to send your proposal to the right NSF panel (dont send your submission for frog ecology to the genomics panel), and target where you send your submissions.

Also, I have never seen someone denied tenure because their research ran counter to someone's interests. Granted, the decision may be based on how much money someone can bring in, but that is a more recent development, and it depends on the type of institution. So, you need to define what you mean when you say "toe the line"

As for academic freedom inside a private company. Since when? Since when does a researcher working for Monsanto get to determine the direction of his research?
Why does Microsoft have such a massive research division?
You are confounding basic and applied research again.
Whomever gets the government money, just like universities.
It does not work like that. A non-profit entity like the James Randy Educational Foundation will only take on people who work in support of its overall mission. Unless private Science Charities crop up, vast swaths of basic research simply do not fall into the sphere of non-profit organizations.

There are also the massive transaction costs of switching over some 400 thousand US academic researchers into the private sector, which is far more than packing up the people. Also the infrastructure, permanent equipment etc.
Actually, yes there is, because the government is willing to fund it! That's how the universities afford it now.
That is the sound of the point sailing over your head.

The University does not operate at a profit. It does not do research motivated for profit. That in order to function, it must obtain money is not the same thing.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Anguirus »

Have you ever talked to an academic scientist? We don’t do it for the money.
Just thought I'd chime in on this point. I'm on a broadly similar career path as Alyrium at the moment. Based on our personal communication, etc., I've long since concluded that while I'm a pretty dedicated sort, he's much more of a "live your work, I've always wanted to do this" sort than I am.

But obviously, if money were my one and only goal, I wouldn't have even considered going into non-medical biological research.

So what's my motivation? I love my work, but I wouldn't, and couldn't, do it if I had no expectation of any light at the end of the tunnel. Most of my grad student friends I gather are in the same boat. We want to contribute to understanding in both a basic ("how does evolution create observed diversity?) and an applied ("how can we stop every amphibian from dropping dead of chytrid or Ranavirus?") manner. However, we also want to have kids, houses, etc.

The tenure system exists to motivate people to become top professors. Essentially, it is a promise made by the university to the people that it hopes will advance its academic reputation that their salaries and employment are not held entirely at the mercy of politics, minor misfortune, etc. To people who are interested in fields that are not exactly a hotbed of immediate profitable opportunity, it's a guarantee that if you're smart enough, dedicated enough, and good enough, you can lead a comfortable life and stay productive.
Tenure is not a promise of riches but of stability.

It's not perfect, but what is? We can talk about reform, but not "reform" that throws out baby and bathwater unless--and this is the key point--you devalue the very concept of basic research. Unfortunately our corporate and governmental systems are to a large degree not equipped to reward long-term, forward thinking and/or risk-taking research. In my opinion, decoupling research from profit motive and (institutional) partisan politics--which is exactly what the tenure system does--is essential to ensure scientific progress outside of a few "hot" fields.

The practical result of some kind of massive "reform" that certain elements salivate for would be brain drain, as Alyrium points out. You'd see it instantly, as us young scientists would largely have nowhere to go but out. Also, you would arrest the current popularity of the US as a destination for international students who themselves are fleeing from relative poverty and political repression in academia.

I consider myself a patriot, and I want to stay in the US, but that doesn't mean I'm not going to get the message if, by some far-fetched series of events, the tenure system and academic freedom are rapidly dismantled in this country.

If anyone is interested in matters of the tenure system and academic freedom (and what they have to do with each other, which is a hell of a lot) feel free to PM me. I've been the beneficiary of discussions with a professor on the subject, and have a copy of the agreement which established and defined the concepts.
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This is the guy they want to use to win over "young people?" Are they completely daft? I'd rather vote for a pile of shit than a Jesus freak social regressive.
Here's hoping that his political career goes down in flames and, hopefully, a hilarious gay sex scandal.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

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Most people don't have money as their one and only goal, even inside institutions that operate that way. Actually, if an institution is really money grabbing, getting people who love their work aside from money is the best thing they can do - such people work for less and stick around through more bullshit.
Good point, so I'll amend for clarity. By "money as one and only goal," I mean something more like "the optimal intersection of my talent, motivation, and desire for financial reward." If you reduce the value of that reward too much, fewer people in general and, in particular, top people who could be in demand elsewhere, will be attracted to non-medical biological research. If the value of that term was too low, I wouldn't be in it either, because I won't do research for twigs and berries. (Oddly enough, it's tough to convince a bunch of smart folks who study evolution for a living to reduce their individual fitness too far. ;) )

As Alyrium points out, our "exploiters" are usually folks who have lived the exact same lives as we have, and enthusiastically defend our livelihoods and research from the budget brigade of the Rick Perry school of thought. Consciously or unconsciously, we make the decision that dealing with this system and its flaws are better than working for some corporate paymaster who will own every idea we spawn.
"I spit on metaphysics, sir."

"I pity the woman you marry." -Liberty

This is the guy they want to use to win over "young people?" Are they completely daft? I'd rather vote for a pile of shit than a Jesus freak social regressive.
Here's hoping that his political career goes down in flames and, hopefully, a hilarious gay sex scandal.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

From the Wiki article

Some argue that modern tenure systems actually diminish academic freedom, forcing those seeking tenured positions to profess conformance to the same views (political and academic) as those awarding a tenured professorship. According to physicist Lee Smolin, "...it is practically career suicide for a young theoretical physicist not to join the field [of string theory]."[2]
Yes, like everything else, Academia has fashionable subjects that make it easier to get funding, or large problems or holes in the knowledge base that the community by and large decides need to take priority (Funding in the NSF is controlled by working scientists serving one to three year terms as volunteers, on sabbatical from their home institution. I dont remember if they get a stipend or not). Theoretical physics is a very very small field, its goal is to find a "theory of everything" and there are only so many avenues one can really go down there...

Saying that it is academic suicide to work on something other than the most-likely-to-be-true theory in theoretical physics and using that as an argument against tenure is bad for a number of reasons, especially when you compare it to the alternatives

A: Why this is a bad argument
1) It is divested from its surrounding context in the article posted. Why this is bad should be apparent.
2) It is not a binary. There are plenty of other theoretical physicists working on something other than string theory. However, because string theory is a hot topic it IS easier to get funding to work out its kinks, and try to find technologically feasible ways to test it.
3) String theory is advanced to the point now that the theoretical physicists working on it might actually need something other than a whiteboard and a computer equipped with Matlab to work on it. Other potential theories of everything are not at this point, and thus the physicists working on it have a hard time bringing in funding.

It has nothing to do with ruffling feathers or doing anything in violation of Established Doctrine(tm)

B: Why tenure is superior to the alternatives in this respect
1) Without a system of tenure, the results of your experiments, particularly in politicized fields like climate science and ecotoxicology can get you fired. Now that upper level university administrators are professional administrators, trying to find one who has a backbone and an appreciation for academic freedom is like trying to find a leprechaun. This is important when you consider the following case study:

http://www.tampabay.com/news/business/b ... es/1168680

In this case, Koch Industries essentially bought several faculty positions with a sufficiently large donation. Without a system of tenure, they could also make a large donation and get economics professors fired for their political views. This has not happened since the Gilded Age, and it has not happened since then because in the past, the faculty were in control of the overall direction of universities, and because of the system of tenure. Now that MBAs control upper university administration, tenure is the only thing keeping people like Tyrone Hayes from being fired by Sygenta, and Rick Relyea being fired by Monsanto.

Actually, lets use Tyrone Hayes as an example. His lab was contracted by Sygenta to determine the ecological impact of the herbicide Atrazine on amphibians. So, he performed the experiments and they came up... horrifying. At concentrations or 3 ppb, the herbicide feminized male frogs, because it interfered with the physiological pathway which turns testosterone into estrogen. Testes that ovulate... let that sink in for a bit.

Sygenta defunded him. However, he was able to get funding from the NSF and other granting agencies to continue his work. He found that Atrazine causes infertility and various degrees of sex reversal at concentrations thirty times lower than is permitted in our drinking water, and we have nearly identical endocrine pathways. Since then, his work has been replicated, though results have varied by species, probably because of differences in endocrine pathways and absorption rates.

Most importantly--and this is another reasons why corporate entities should NOT be doing this sort of research--when you run a Fishers Exact Test, looking at who runs the studies and who funds them, the labs funded or run by Sygenta (more on that momentarily) reliably get different results from independently funded labs, and this is due to intentionally poorly designed studies. The lab that does these studies is headed by a Sygenta executive or his students.

Incidentally, the same person also heads up the ecotox regulation panel inside the EPA, and also the Endocrine Disruptor panel inside that larger group. The granting-agency part of the EPA is controlled by scientists, and has conflict of interest rules. The regulatory part is run by poltical (and therefore corporate) appointees, and has no conflict of interest rules. This is why a chemical which has been linked to multi-generational immunosuppression and cancer in lab rats (exposure still has these effects on grand-children), tranification of frogs, and infertility in people, is still approve by the EPA, which has determined no further investigation is required. At the same time, the EU has banned the chemical. This is also the second most widely used herbicide on the planet.

What do you think would happen if the primary place of employment for ecotoxicologists was industry?
Another argument against tenure is professors underperforming in research or teaching cannot be terminated, so typical performance-oriented management techniques from the business world such as reviews, audits, and incentive-based salaries are the only tools available, as the threat of firing does not exist without due cause.[3] Nevertheless, many tenured faculty members are expected to and most do obtain research funding.
Tenure is not an excuse to sit back on your laurels, and the vast majority of faculty do not do that. Sure, if you look at their funding stream and research output, they may slow down a bit. However there are reasons for this. The first is that once someone has tenure, they are often press-ganged into university service positions like Graduate Adviser, admissions committees, that sort of thing. The second is that they often focus on longer term projects, often more intensive in man-power than funding requirements. I will focus on biology here because I am of course the most familiar with it.

Systematics: A systematist might start a long project trying to figure out if the wide-ranging and highly morphologically and ecologically variable Rana pipiens (northern leopard frog) is really a single species, or is a hybridogenic complex and otherwise try to re-evaluate the phylogeny of the genetic/evolutionary clusterfuck that is the north american ranidae. Doing something like this requires more wide-ranging sampling than trying to infer the phylogeny from published sequences.

Ecology: An ecologist might begin a long-term project evaluating the life history schedules of turtles, and determine how much road-mortality their populations can sustain without collapsing. This is not expensive, it just takes thirty years.

Evolutionary Biology: A tenured professor might begin a long term project looking at the effect urbanization has on amphibian call frequency and reproductive success as land use changes. Again, not expensive, just labor and time intensive.

Tenure is not perfect. Yes, some people get lazy. However, because the sort of person who becomes a scientist is not generally lazy, there is a self-selection bias such that it does not often happen. It is just that the productivity is not easily measured on short-term time scales. A guy I know did that turtle project I mentioned above. He started in 70s, and finished in '08. He got out 15 papers when he did, and massively contributed to our knowledge of how long-lived organisms bet-hedge in the face of reproductive uncertainty. However, he did not publish on that project for thirty years. If he was on a system of 7 year contracts or whatever the alternative to tenure is, that work would never have been done.
Individual companies might vary, but people work for less money when they have more freedom while still getting stuff done. That's why there's a few companies that say you do what we want some of the time and do what you want other times. Google famously has their free fridays. 3M is another one.
There is a big difference between doing that when someone can just save the file and start back up again next week, and projects which take staff, large amounts of institutional resources, and more time than one day a week on average to do.

Let us continue our running ecotoxicology example. Lets assume that a scientist working for Monsanto has three months a year to work on whatever he wants, seek extramural grant funding etc. Now, lets assume also that the company expects results that can potentially be developed into some sort of profit like they do at google and I assume 3M.

This immediately constrains what say, an ecotoxicologist could do. Additionally, even if that constraint is not in place, the company can still shut down their project or even fire them if the results end up being against their interests because they control the infrastructure that the work requires. This is what happens in medical research all the time. Study after study has shown that research fraud is rampant in corporate research, that they bar publication of results in violation of their interests. Conflicts of interest like this do not exist in the university environment when funding is independent, and when the entire academic culture of the university can leverage its union-like bargaining power to prevent a corporate entity funding research from controlling publishing rights. Doing the research at universities provides massive protections to academic freedom, so long as tenure exists to protect researchers from the political pressure of companies that can buy elections--let alone a university provost. It and the independence that university centered academia provides is absolutely critical to science.
You're a low level worker without even rank of doctorhood. How many experience points does a fresh graduate have?
I personally know dozens of academic scientists from multiple countries on four continents, and through them am aware of the politics at dozens more universities. Do the math. I have seen people not get tenure because of legitimately poor performance, and have seen them not get tenure because of new MBA-holding provosts flexing their power or raising the funding bar insanely to increase rankings (this happens at R2 institutions trying to become R1, and gets fought tooth and nail by faculty). I have never seen or heard of someone not getting tenure because their work is a political hotbed.
On proprietary knowledge, you yourself talked about how this is happening in the college world. Universities hold patents, you said, that bring them money, you said. There's been an increasing trend of universities patenting things since about 1980.
Sure, if a drug gets developed in a national product lab, the only way that this gets distributed is if the IP rights get sold to a drug company.
Do you have any examples of a natural discovery being held as a trade secret in history?
Look up the history of Student's T Test. The reason it is not named after the guy who came up with it is because he was prohibited from publishing, and had to use a pseudonym to keep his job. Had he not done so in violation of contract, statistics would be set back a while.

The issue is not so much that things like the breeding phenology of frogs will become proprietary, but that information about research techniques will become that way. As it stands now, the knowledge itself is not proprietary. If I want to create a transgenic organism, I can learn how to do the technique and while I may have to go through industry to get the necessary equipment, I can do it myself, and different companies do their own engineering and compete, creating better and more efficient equipment. If the knowledge necessary to create a transgenic was proprietary, we would not be in the place we are today. For example: the Oncomouse. The Oncomouse is a specific application of transgenic technology, created by Harvard and sold to DuPont. However, while the specific application of the technique (the gene sequences used in the modification etc) is patented, the protocol used to create it is not, and has been published because it was originally done at a University. Had DuPont actually created the protocol, that too would be patented and unusable by someone without a license--if they license it at all.

This is made all the more tragic when the laws were changed to permit taxpayer funded endeavors to be patented. The only thing keeping this from being really bad in universities is that the knowledge itself gets published first, before the specific application (say, a specific protocol or transgenic organism) gets patented. This at least permits others to copy the technique so that downstream basic research is not significantly harmed. This would not be a problem if universities were still being run at the top by academics. Instead, they are now being run like quasimodoesque non-profit businesses by MBAs... Get rid of tenure, the precarious situation we are in now gets worse. If you transfer all research to private entities, the precarious situation we are in now with the commercialization of research will become a tragedy of the anti-commons.

http://works.bepress.com/cgi/viewconten ... %20cost%22

A few small legal changes could stop this, but right now the fact that professors hold their own IP rights to their basic research and data and are rewarded by publishing said research is the only thing keeping it at bay.
Of course, patents are meant to open the information to the public (hence it's name), so maybe that's not what you're talking about. Regardless though, universities do it just as much as companies. If it's ok for one to do it, why not the other? It's the same legally in either case.
What patents do is reduce free-riders on innovation by restricting access to it. However, this is only a good thing when it deals with the end-points of product development like the Oncomouse. However, it creates massive opportunity costs (in the the form of un-performed research) when the basic research tools (like the PCR technique itself, rather than the devices to do it) are patented. If I know that I can amplify and purify DNA by tossing nucleotides, a sample, pH buffers, and primers bracketing the sequence I want to amplify, I can engineer the equipment. If I can only ever learn that by working for DuPont or paying a massive fee after seeing a little brochure on their website, that causes a problem.

I've also said this should be addressed several times. You even replied to it at least once, by dismissing it as "not gonna happen" or something like that.
And it wont. Not in the forseeable future if we dont change the trajectory we are on.
Are you even reading what I'm writing, or are you just off on some private NERD RAGE? Be honest now.
No. I am reading it. Your solutions however do nothing but deal with the downstream solutions, and throw out the baby with the bathwater in the process, rather than dealing with the root causes.

In order to solve the root societal problem (shitty secondary education, devaluation of high school, forcing more and more students to go to college, increasing demand, which interacts with other problems like reduced state budgets, flagging endowments and a variety of other factors to increase tuition rates) by gutting the universities, and thus destroying the many many public goods they produce.

That is like treating AIDS by pumping someone full steroids to control secondary inflammation but which also further suppresses their immune response.
But, the point is we get by with what we have. Why? Because when you can't afford it, it doesn't matter if it's an up-front cost or a hidden cost. Either way, you can't afford it and you live within your means with what you have.

College paid healthcare is simply a hidden cost, not a reduced cost. If you can't afford it up front, you can't afford it buried under other tuition and fees. Either way, you're in debt.
Except that the actual cost is not incurred on a 1 to 1 basis for an individual directly or indirectly. Someone who cannot afford it pays only a part of what they otherwise would pay--hidden or direct--because someone who CAN afford it and then some, subsidized the cost. Just like with progressive taxation. Part of endowment dividends go into paying for it. Part of the state contribution goes into it. These represent a real decrease in the cost. Tuition also goes into it and students on need based scholarships dont actually pay that cost etc. You are also ignoring the cash-flow issue as well. Paying 500 dollars at once is not the same hard ship as 50 dollars each month for ten months.
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Re: Young, College-Educated, and Desperate - F*** The Poor!

Post by aerius »

Destructionator XIII wrote:
As for academic freedom inside a private company. Since when? Since when does a researcher working for Monsanto get to determine the direction of his research?
Individual companies might vary, but people work for less money when they have more freedom while still getting stuff done. That's why there's a few companies that say you do what we want some of the time and do what you want other times. Google famously has their free fridays. 3M is another one.
I've been skimming through the last page of giant posts and would like to comment on this. One of my friends works for a major oil company whose corporate logo resembles a certain mollusk. She did the usual drudge work stuff for the first few years but eventually got promoted to a senior position where she can run whatever research projects she wants as long as she stays within the budget and the resources needed aren't tied up in more urgent projects.

It's probably not very common but it does exist.
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