Topic: College as a right?

Well there is a movement, in the United States and abroad, to make college a right.

My question is simple... where do we draw the line?

If everyone gets a 2 year degree, then a 4 year degree, a 6 year degree, and a Doctorate are all reduced in value...

All those jobs needing a 2 year degree will soon say 4 year degree after all..

So we put it to 4 year degrees...

then 6

then 8


Then what, a 20 year degree?


Where do we draw the line on this? Will this not be unfair to past and future generations then? Is this age limited, or can I apply for my 20 year degree now?

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
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2 (edited by Justinian I 16-Mar-2010 02:38:30)

Re: College as a right?

I see your point to an extent. It is absurd that some minority groups receive special government assistance to attend a University, and then they eventually drop out. Overall there is about a 50% graduation rate nation-wide, and it is logically lower for these disadvantaged groups receiving government assistance. The fact is most people are too dumb to graduate from college, and what the government does is a risky investment (what can I say about government?).

However, I strongly believe in meritocracy and equal opportunity. I think that if someone demonstrates merit, they should receive government assistance for their education. Maybe they should prove themselves at a two-year college first, but I fully support government assistance in education on condition that it is executed in a way to minimize risk and maximize returns.

That said, the education system is currently a mess. Prices are inflated because of government involvement, private interests and various other reasons, and it is hard to give an answer on what level government should be involved in providing assistance to students without a radical overhaul first.

3 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 16-Mar-2010 04:06:28)

Re: College as a right?

I've got nothing to add... yet...  tongue

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Re: College as a right?

I think we should focus more on making sure kids know the basics than worrying about them getting a 4yr degree. I blame bad parenting for the failure of the American education system. When your freshman class in HS is 700 students and the senior class is half that it's pretty obvious that something is wrong.

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5 (edited by Justinian I 16-Mar-2010 05:48:19)

Re: College as a right?

Lizon,

That many people seriously dropped out? I think 90% of people generally graduate High School. That said, the quality of education has dropped, has become more expensive, and parenting does not seem to value education.

Re: College as a right?

Question: How can you make College a right?  Now maybe things have change since I started but College and University programs generally have prerequisites to enroll, if you don't meet those requirements you don't get in.  So how do you make something a right for everyone when it demands a particular level of proficiency.

"If everyone gets a 2 year degree, then a 4 year degree, a 6 year degree, and a Doctorate are all reduced in value..."

If everyone got such degrees then yeah they might go down in value, but even if they give everyone the right to attend college they still can't give them the right to pass (similar to highschool).  So even if they do pass this idea (sincerely hope they don't) it's only a problem if everyone has the skill and intelligence to acquire a degree (which they don't) or if a push is made to lower the expectations for the programs, and if you've reached that point you really might want to consider starting a revolutiion.

There are 10 kinds of people in this world, those who understand binary and those who don't.

Re: College as a right?

Well DPS.. the man in charge of the new Obama policy got his bill added to the Health Care bill


The New bill will make the Government the ONLY source of Student Loans. They will then issue loans to anyone (I am guessing in what they consider college student age) according to the guy.

It is soon going to be a 'right' and if your scores are not high enough.. I presume they think you can 'learn into correction' your status at the University or College...

The only reason there is no shouting at this, is because the Health Care is scarier by far financially... This however alone could and would doom us...

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: College as a right?

"That many people seriously dropped out? I think 90% of people generally graduate High School. That said, the quality of education has dropped, has become more expensive, and parenting does not seem to value education."

Yes that many dropped out, and that was nearly 10 years ago. I hear things are worse now. It's sad, and a big part of it is that many times both parents work and don't spend time with their children. It's a snowball effect. Parents work more to make ends meet and help pay for their children's education, children see their parents less often and suffer at school, which means their kids need more help, and thus enroll them into more programs or pay more taxes to pay for such programs, which means their parents have to work more......

Fear not the Darkness, for without it there is no Light. Embrace the Light, for it brings forth Darkness. Embrace both, to embrace the gift of Life. ~Kai Master Creed
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9 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 16-Mar-2010 19:44:28)

Re: College as a right?

Actually... I'm going to flip sides on this debate.



> Einstein wrote:

> If everyone gets a 2 year degree, then a 4 year degree, a 6 year degree, and a Doctorate are all reduced in value...



The same argument could have been said about people being literate in the 18th century... you don't need to read in order to pick cotton, right?

As technology and specialization increase globally, the need for less-educated individuals decreases.  People hoping to be factory workers in the US are finding their jobs moved to other countries, and I suspect in coming decades, some of those people in other countries will find themselves replaced with more automated systems.  In addition, basic services such as some tax and accounting services are being completely automated.

Yes, Flint, the degrees will all decline in value... at least in terms of the return on investment the individual will gain.  However:
1: Globalization and the advance of technology both guarantee that 80% of people without high school degrees will have a huge problem getting work outside only a handful of relatively small industries.
2: As technology takes over these smaller positions, the demand for higher education positions will expand.  Some examples:
A: An automated McDonald's would require someone to know the machinery to repair the technology.
B: Because technology is the defining field now and in the coming eras, businesses will increasingly rise and fall based on how they create and adapt to the pace of technological advances.  This would require a great number of people in research fields.


Humanity is not a physical being.  We are an intellectual being.  Modern times are indicating this more than ever before, but you can see that technology has been the definition of power in the world going back as far as the Enlightenment, and probably much further in the past.  That being said, our strength as individuals, as a nation, and as a species all rely on our ability to find ways for our technology to take on the roles of menial tasks which humans have previously been relegated to doing, freeing up minds to contribute to intellectual capabilities.  The more we can educate people, the more we can add to the pace of technological advance.  The more we add to technological advance, the quicker we can solve problems plaguing the world, while discovering and preparing for dangers we may not even recognize today...




Remember, the purpose of mandatory education is to ensure that everyone has the basic opportunity to survive in the world.  As a result, you have to ask this question when considering whether to extend the mandatory length of school:
By the time a student leaves the public education system, will society advance far enough to where that person will be unable to find work, given the education given to him, immediately following departure from the education system.

If the answer to this question is yes, then you're fine.  A student who doesn't want nor need a college degree, yet is forced to go to college will only drain the system and fuel resentment.  However, in just the same way, a system who tells students they're prepared for the world when they have an inadequate education is simply wasting the resources already used.  Plus it dooms that person... kind of the equivalent of telling a person who just got out of 8th grade to quit school and find work today... not too easy.

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Re: College as a right?

Geeze.  I need to get a two year degree today to get a higher wage job.  And even then the job says I must have 2 years prior experience in that job line.   So I'd waste 2 years of my life to get a job I can't get, because i don't have Prior job experience in the field i studied for.  This is no joke, this is how job searchs for large companies work.  The 2 years minimum education does not count towards prior job experience when looking for the job you educated yourself for.

Besides South Korea has already implemented this years ago.  You want college, you'll have to serve military time and earn the right, depending on which profession you really want to get into.

=^o.o^= When I'm cute I can be cute.  And when I'm mean, I can be very very mean.  I'm a cat.  Expect me to be fickle.

Re: College as a right?

Key, right now, we're in a particularly shitty job market... remember, that may be an additional factor causing the problems you're facing...

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Re: College as a right?

Yeah Zarf is right.

If taxes were severely down, then companies could not get people fast enough, they would offer to give a loan for schooling and promise to pay it off, plus pay bonuses in exchange for a few years work after the schooling...

It's been done in great economic times before.


The problem is the same that faces my business ventures. There is no pay off with the higher taxes for anything I do. So I choose a lower bracket where I actually keep more money in my pocket...

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: College as a right?

big_smile I'm not personally facing any job related problems except maybe being overworked and taking over the jobs of those that were layed off.

No, you look in a paper for a job, and you'll read, "Must have 2-4 years prior work experience."  Doesn't say college experience, it's asking for those that have 2-4 years JOB experience in that field or the job that they're hunting for.

This was ten years ago, before the housing crisis.  And I just picked up the local paper and even shopped around online like the New York times.  And there they were asking for 2-4 years prior experience in the job market.

=^o.o^= When I'm cute I can be cute.  And when I'm mean, I can be very very mean.  I'm a cat.  Expect me to be fickle.

Re: College as a right?

I thought it was lame that a company was looking for 2-4 prior years of experience in a cashier.

Re: College as a right?

As for the big Zarf post...

Wrong


How many students in the 1800's understood Geometry and Calculus?

How many students in 1950 knew about computers and software languages?


My argument is we learn from multiple sources, and this learning is only limited by what we can see and envision. Take a child from a 3rd world hell hole, bring him to a house with a computer and internet connection, and that child is able to use the computer (not immediately, but over time).


The same is for all the desired 'advanced learning' your up wanting. We can learn it easily by the time we are 18, in Europe they push this all the time for it is the only way to make their college degrees worthwhile (since handed out like candy)


We can instead focus on leaving degrees as a way to set someone apart from others...

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: College as a right?

> Einstein wrote:

> As for the big Zarf post...

Wrong


How many students in the 1800's understood Geometry and Calculus?

How many students in 1950 knew about computers and software languages?<



Probably not much.  However, how much did you need to know at the time?  During the 50's, computers were still in their infancy.  It's insane to think I'm trying to train people in emerging market areas... the very definition of an emerging market means that's impossible.  The same goes for geometry and calculus in the 1800's as well (the vast majority of the population was still an agricultural society, and those who were in urban regions were generally in fields that didn't need to know geometry and calculus as much, such as factory workers). 

The basic knowledge required to even get your foot in the door in the world was limited.  If you're a kid whose family owns a small farm, you could, and would, learn all you need to know about your farming operation by your teenage years.  Hell, although this is going to sound harsh, underaged labor during the Industrial Age proves that many of the manufacturing jobs in the time can be done in childhood years.  So yes, at those times, education wasn't needed as much.

We're a new type of economy now.  Knowledge is the key to our society.  In addition to being needed in order to conduct specific occupations, a broad knowledge is needed in order to know and understand the future advances to come (remember, technology advances exponentially... the further we've advanced in knowledge, the faster we will move forward, requiring even more knowledge of what we already know in order to understand what will be introduced to us).






> My argument is we learn from multiple sources, and this learning is only limited by what we can see and envision. Take a child from a 3rd world hell hole, bring him to a house with a computer and internet connection, and that child is able to use the computer (not immediately, but over time).


The same is for all the desired 'advanced learning' your up wanting. We can learn it easily by the time we are 18, in Europe they push this all the time for it is the only way to make their college degrees worthwhile (since handed out like candy)


We can instead focus on leaving degrees as a way to set someone apart from others... <


1: Education is uniquely valuable due to verifiability.  Alternative methods don't have any way to ensure you actually know what's going on.  I can go on my own and read a bunch of randoms stuff about nanotechnology.  Does reading "Engines of Creation" and hearing a BBC news article mention something called "gray goo" mean I know everything there is to know?  How about getting different perspectives regarding an issue?  A person certainly couldn't be considered a good student of economics if they only read classical liberal authors.

This verification isn't really established in independent study, so businesses can't verify it.  While a person may be able to prove themselves through work (there's a couple cases of this), it's extremely difficult to get that first job in a field where employers have no verification of the process.

2: Some fields are just too serious to let independent study fly.  I wouldn't want an independent study doctor.  There's a reason why people are highly discouraged from representing themselves in court.  Hell, most fields would be too serious in their own way, whether it be safety concerns or simply abiding by laws about the field...

3: Education is key to guiding people to areas they may not even begin to read.

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Re: College as a right?

and yet the majority of knowledge needed is still available for us in grades k-12. We can easily provide training for many occupations. It i supposed to be the hard occupations, where we would never trust someone who has not undergone college courses for it, to be for college. A truck driver does not need college, a cop in a city needs 2 years for most positions but a rural cop can make do with a 6 week course, a mechanic needs only 6 months to enter starting stuff (and sometimes not even that), grocery clerks need none... nor does a day care center employee. Most positions do not need a 2 year or higher, and even then it is possible to make it a reduced time class.

There is a big disconnect that "all jobs need degrees". This is simply not true. Nor should we want to expend that sort of money to make us all have the extra knowledge, just in case...

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: College as a right?

Ok I think I've come up with a solution to prevent the decline in value of College/University degrees and keep people who shouldn't be in College from taking up valuable space at educational institutions while still giving everyone the benefit of a post secondary education.

Upon graduating highschool every student is given a Bachelor of Arts Degree.  Since BA's are practically worthless as it is there is no decline in the value of a real education, and since a labotamized monkey can complete any of the fine programs that give you a BA there's no point in sending anyone capable of graduating highschool to College for it.

Everybody wins.

There are 10 kinds of people in this world, those who understand binary and those who don't.

Re: College as a right?

Education is a human right. The state must provide equal access to education for all people. That means financial support for the poor and no fees for higher education.

Re: College as a right?

Firewing,

Empirically prove it.

Re: College as a right?

How about this, Firewing you have a budget, do you always go over it, or do you try to balance it?

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: College as a right?

US should look to countries that are more successfull, and as usual i want to point to scandinavia. All person are applicable for a student loan of up to 8 years here. All education in universities are free of charge (you pay about 100$ twice a year in registration fees). The loan is not to be repaid until you are finished with your degree, and no interests accrue in that period. Ofcourse this leads to some overeducation in useless fields such as arts, languages, social studies etc, but overall it secures a high level of education, making sure scandinavian workers are among the most productive in the world. From a society point of view, the key is really to offer equal terms on education for everyone, so that all the bright minds in society is taken advantage of.

LORD HELP OREGON

23 (edited by Justinian I 17-Mar-2010 10:42:05)

Re: College as a right?

Noir,

I don't see a problem with seeing education as an investment. One of the problems in the US for financial aid in education is that it rewards the poor and useless people, while making things difficult for the middle class. All our government seems to do with its tax revenue is make high-risk investments.

Oh, and don't get me started on the high price for Athletics.

Re: College as a right?

Why are you putting poor and useless people into the same category?

Young people can be perfectly skilled and intelligent and still poor as hell, basicly becuse they have not had the time to accumulate a fortune

LORD HELP OREGON