LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,760
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Nah, it's just that I can't get home delivery of the paper anymore and need to read something disposable while I'm eating my sausage.
Thread drift is a long and hallowed tradition at the Lounge. Somebody could throw out a comment here about whether or not Tom Brady deflated those footballs, and somebody else would find a way to tie it in to the decaying evolution of education. We're like that here.
I was taught early on that formal education is to teach you how to actually think for yourself, give you a set of basic skills to enable you to continue your education on your own after you graduate, ideally for the rest of your life, and an appreciation for and an interest in a broad range of subjects and ideas. I was blessed with a number of teachers who taught to those standards and encouraged us to embrace that philosophy. And I've conducted my life accordingly.
What I see a lot today are academics who act, at least, as if knowledge you gain anywhere outside of the institutions they are part of is at best suspect and at worst worthless and invalid. They regurgitate facts and ideas they have been fed and little else. To many academics the word "autodidact" is a perjorative and represents someone who couldn't possibly know as much as they do about anything at all, not just their academic specialties. What arrogance!
Before I retired I spent 12 years working at a major university, rubbing sholders with academics every day. With rare exceptions they all acted that way.
The fact that so many academics act like that indicates a fundamental failure of the education system and its institutions.
But don't just read textbooks. Read some of the books and other sources cited in the textbooks.
I had an interesting conversation with one of the carpenters building my garage 3 years ago. He was quite skilled, enjoyed his work and glad to have it. What he wasn't so thrilled with was still paying off his student loans for his masters in midieval English.
That's a real problem with parents, too, above and beyond the educational system. Talk to the typical middle-class parent today and ask them if they think their kid should become an electrician and they'll throw their hands up in horror and declare CERTAINLY NOT, MY KID IS GETTING A DEGREE AND WILL THEN MAYBE TAKE A YEAR OFF TO TRAVEL BEFORE GOING ON TO GRAD SCHOOL!
I've said it before and I'll say it again. This society is headed lickety-split toward the day when it's a nation of Ph. D's standing in a dark room, up to their knees in backed-up sewage because everybody's too good to work in the trades.
That's a real problem with parents, too, above and beyond the educational system. Talk to the typical middle-class parent today and ask them if they think their kid should become an electrician and they'll throw their hands up in horror and declare CERTAINLY NOT, MY KID IS GETTING A DEGREE AND WILL THEN MAYBE TAKE A YEAR OFF TO TRAVEL BEFORE GOING ON TO GRAD SCHOOL!
I've said it before and I'll say it again. This society is headed lickety-split toward the day when it's a nation of Ph. D's standing in a dark room, up to their knees in backed-up sewage because everybody's too good to work in the trades. Let's see Schopenhauer figure out an answer to that one.
Every electrician I know in my own town is at least sixty years old. And without exception they all make very very good money. I know they do, because they send me their bills.
You don't need a college degree to work in the trades, or most other jobs that get your hands dirty. Electricians and plumbers make good money. But the educational system has tried mightily over the past 30-40 years to convince kids that they are too good to work in those jobs and that those jobs are beneath them.
I had an interesting conversation with one of the carpenters building my garage 3 years ago. He was quite skilled, enjoyed his work and glad to have it. What he wasn't so thrilled with was still paying off his student loans for his masters in midieval English.
...I've said it before and I'll say it again. This society is headed lickety-split toward the day when it's a nation of Ph. D's standing in a dark room, up to their knees in backed-up sewage because everybody's too good to work in the trades. Let's see Schopenhauer figure out an answer to that one.
That might be a Maine-specific issue (maybe) as in NYC, the electrician and plumbing trades are chock full of people of all ages and nationalities..
Ya gotta love it....right....Only in America....I'm not going to worry about it because after I win that 700 million in the PowerBall, my Life will change, you think ???
You don't need a college degree to work in the trades, or most other jobs that get your hands dirty. Electricians and plumbers make good money. But the educational system has tried mightily over the past 30-40 years to convince kids that they are too good to work in those jobs and that those jobs are beneath them.