So for the young folk, what concerns you? Worries you? Makes you happy about the world?
Ooh I feel like a reporter.
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
Moderator: Edi
may I take this opportunity to point and laugh?Admiral Valdemar wrote:Tuition fees.
And you have a tiered education system, with the rich getting the best education.Shinova wrote:I don't know how much that's in US dollars, but it can't possibly compare to our colleges' 24,000 to 35,000 dollar tuitions. Thankfully, mines is much much lower.
State-funded higher education has never worked. We (us Americans I mean) got real lathered up about the fact that the USSR was pulling ahead in the technical sciences, graduating massive numbers of people with technical degrees, in fact Masters degrees or better, back in The Bad Old Days. Caused a bit of a scare on Congress, got a bunch of education acts passed.InnerBrat wrote: And you have a tiered education system, with the rich getting the best education.
We're trying to close our class gaps with regards to education, not reinforce them.
Oh, but it does. Maybe not in the US, but in Germany, university education is free! They are trying to change that though - but the fees won't go to the universities, but to the state, to fix some budget holes that have nothing to do with that.The Duchess of Zeon wrote: State-funded higher education has never worked.
Hmm strange and I thought we had doctors and stuff here in Sweden, guess I must be wrong then.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:State-funded higher education has never worked.
Well, public universities are one thing, but I should have specifically said free higher education for the whole populace. That was actually tried in California after a fashion but didn't work--all of the Community Colleges there were free once but they couldn't keep up any standards of quality and had to revert to fees for classes, though they are still rather small.Faram wrote: Hmm strange and I thought we had doctors and stuff here in Sweden, guess I must be wrong then.
Well all education here is free, the only costs is that of living while geting the education and for some books.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Well, public universities are one thing, but I should have specifically said free higher education for the whole populace. That was actually tried in California after a fashion but didn't work--all of the Community Colleges there were free once but they couldn't keep up any standards of quality and had to revert to fees for classes, though they are still rather small.
Although I am 22, so above your age group, one of my major concerns, which is Australia specific (and was when I was 21) is that something serious is not done about the Murray soon, we are gooing to lose large areas of our arable land to salt, we have to little arable land as it is, to waste it for short term economic gain.Gandalf wrote:As some of you know, I assist on a Sydney radio show. They've decreed that I can have airtime if I can speak on the concerns on young people, politically economically and such.
So for the young folk, what concerns you? Worries you? Makes you happy about the world?
Ooh I feel like a reporter.
Incidenatally, UGA has a whole row of buildings built in response to that.State-funded higher education has never worked. We (us Americans I mean) got real lathered up about the fact that the USSR was pulling ahead in the technical sciences, graduating massive numbers of people with technical degrees, in fact Masters degrees or better, back in The Bad Old Days. Caused a bit of a scare on Congress, got a bunch of education acts passed.
A quaint reminder, rather. *snerk* Speaking of which, have you ever heard of Why Johnny Can't Read: And what you can do about it? Great book to capture the feel of the period.Joe wrote: Incidenatally, UGA has a whole row of buildings built in response to that.
Hrm. Don't public European universities simply raise the bar to ensure that they don't get swamped with students?The Duchess of Zeon wrote: Well, public universities are one thing, but I should have specifically said free higher education for the whole populace. That was actually tried in California after a fashion but didn't work--all of the Community Colleges there were free once but they couldn't keep up any standards of quality and had to revert to fees for classes, though they are still rather small.