sturg33
I
Academics have ruined the consumers of their product, both financially and mentally
The jobs are still there for lots of degrees. The problem is universities pretending that the history of music genres, queer art in medieval Britain, or oppression of lgbtq+ aborigines in 19th century Australia are as important as STEM fields, and their students buying into it.Remember when people were showing how 'educated' people were not voting for Trump how they voted fro Republicans in the past
What a silly argument
I recall in my response to aces when he brought this is up is that I’d want to see a bifurcation of who is voting for who by area of study. That would be enlightening on the educated nature of the Democrat voter.The jobs are still there for lots of degrees. The problem is universities pretending that the history of music genres, queer art in medieval Britain, or oppression of lgbtq+ aborigines in 19th century Australia are as important as STEM fields, and their students buying into it.
I always enjoy counting majors on graduation programs. The number of majors in the first group of categories you listed is vanishingly small (at least where I teach). The number of majors in computer science and finance is enormous.The jobs are still there for lots of degrees. The problem is universities pretending that the history of music genres, queer art in medieval Britain, or oppression of lgbtq+ aborigines in 19th century Australia are as important as STEM fields, and their students buying into it.
It certainly varies by the school. Realistically there just isn’t a constant need for knowledge in those things that justifies most of them being a focus for a bachelors degree.I always enjoy counting majors on graduation programs. The number of majors in the first group of categories you listed is vanishingly small (at least where I teach). The number of majors in computer science and finance is enormous.
People focus on the shiny object of their choice and miss the real picture.