Terralthra wrote:Channel72 wrote:The "general education" curriculum of US colleges is a total joke, as far as I'm concerned. Racism is definitely a factor in every facet of American society, but at least in the business world when a candidate applies for a technical position, nobody gives a fuck about their "extracurricular" activities - if the applicant can demonstrate skill and accomplishment within his/her field that's all that matters, accounting for whatever percentage of racist interviewers/HR personnel are involved.*
But anyway, at least in my field, the "general education" students get is a complete joke. I work at a large technology company, and seriously - finding qualified candidates for anything right out of college is a miracle. I've interviewed CS degree students coming out of Princeton, Stanford, etc. and I'll be lucky if 1 out of 10 is qualified. The problem is that a huge chunk of course work is not related to the students' major, meaning most students are essentially forced to waste their fucking time and stress out over learning material which will not help their career at all, and actually hurts them because it takes away precious experience and studying of the material that actually does matter, and will land them a job. Anyway, the result of this is that I'd rather hire some punk kid who writes software for fun or contributes heavily to major open source projects (like the Linux kernel) for fun, rather than a 4.0 GPA Princeton grad who got an A in organic chemistry, plays the piano, and can't write code for shit.
I'm glad the corporatist point of view is being so well-represented in this discussion. We should abandon the liberal arts university, cornerstone of knowledge and learning since essentially the Enlightenment forward, because it purportedly
makes hiring more difficult. Hint: there's a reason they're called
universities, not technical schools.
In which case we should at least give the students at the university a realistic appreciation of what jobs they can and cannot expect to secure. If a student "can't code," they should
know they do not have enough experience and knowledge in computer programming to land a job in that field. They need that, if only so they can get feedback... because if their dream IS to become a great computer programmer, or to achieve great things in a field that requires programming skill, then they might fail to achieve that dream due to lack of preparation. Better for them to be given the chance to remedy that while still in university, than to find out their degree isn't worth what they thought it would be.
Ralin wrote:Thanas wrote:Then it seems to me one needs to get the curve changed so that fewer students get a 4.0.
Indeed, but that's well past the pay grade of the people writing college admissions policies. Until the shitty system can be overhauled or replaced the stopgap is needed.
Ultimately, a big slice of the problem is that we keep trying to get the high school graduation rate up to 100%. Much effort is applied to accomplish this.
The problem is that the only way to accomplish this
on a finite budget is to make "graduated from high school" a meaningless distinction that anyone can pick up no matter how little they do and no matter how horrible their work ethic or commitment to the process are.
As a side-effect, high school becomes something almost anyone with a brain can "ace," because if you're giving some of the real clowns a pass-with-a-D option, then almost any functional human being can expect at least a B and even vaguely intelligent is good enough for an A.
Thanas wrote:Ralin wrote:The fact that he can learn to play guitar or some other hobby well IS being used as a roundabout way to judge his work ethic and general ability to get things done. Or at least of his ability to persuasively pass off said hobby as evidence of the same. And if nothing else that serves to weed out however many dozen or hundred or thousand applicants with otherwise similar records who couldn't.
There are many, many things wrong with the American education system. This is relatively low on the list of them.
That is beyond backwards. Over here, if you got too many hobbies, people will say that:
a) Your program is not designed very well, because you have that much free time or
b) You must not be very dedicated to your field of study
University should be designed to occupy at least 80% of your time as a serious student. Whether that be through homework, lectures or self-study, who cares. But you can't tell me that one can seriously study and have several hobbies.
If the test results indicate that they CAN learn the material they're supposed to learn, and do unusually well at it, while keeping up these other hobbies... who am I to argue?
Of course, many of the children who try to do this are working themselves to the brink of psychological collapse and burnout, but it's certainly possible.
Also, bear in mind that this is about university
admissions, not university itself. These are admissions officials looking at applicants' transcripts from high school. You can argue that the high school program should be as rigorous as university... but if you do that in the US then a huge fraction of all students simply will not graduate from high school. Because we don't have anything like the German system of selectively cherrypicking the "university-bound" fraction of our population and putting all of them into special preparatory high schools.