(no title)
c0redump | 11 months ago
IMO, this is not the problem, but it’s definitely a problem. I think that we should, in fact, fail these kids. And if they repeatedly fail, they should be kicked out. I know that it’s politically untenable, but it also seems right.
It also seems wrong to me that these kids are accepted in to the university to begin with. It seems to me that there is a maturity gap here. Have these people never had the experience of not getting something that they want because they failed to obtain it?
butterlettuce|11 months ago
Free revenue for universities. Also, when your high school counselors, teachers, and administrators tell you to apply to college or else, this is what you get. When you convince employers to require degrees for middle class wages, this is what you get.
If these professors don't want to deal with illiterate kids, they should put the blame on the group that didn't prepare kids for college while telling them to apply anyway.
jack_h|11 months ago
Many years ago when I went to university my state created a fund to pay a certain portion of a student's credit hours. This was implemented in my second or third year from what I remember. I noticed that my direct out of pocket cost (or really how large the loan I took out was) never went down from before this program and after. The university was pretty flush with funding though.
bilbo0s|11 months ago
How is a college realistically supposed to reject a guy with a clearly qualifying 28 or 29 on the ACT? You're going to have to give a helluv-an explanation for that, because I can guarantee, you do that to too many kids and the politicians are gonna come after you.
The problem is enormous. That kids can pass these entrance exams without being truly literate is what makes this issue so intractable.
To me, the only politically and socially acceptable option is to fail them in their college coursework. We don't do that though. Most students live by the "curve".
marcosdumay|11 months ago
Yes, that.
Also how did this happen?
And also, middle-school (high-school? what is it called on the US?) children are supposed to be able to read a small text and understand it too. This is one of those things everybody should be able to do, and employers have good reasons to require.
pc86|11 months ago
IMO any professor who doesn't fail a student who deserves it should be fired, tenure or no.
I had a professor who was in a tenure-track role in our math department and he was "brave" enough to fail me (just barely - 59.8 or thereabouts) in his first semester. I retook the class the very next semester and did better than most but it was definitely a wake up call for me about what it takes to actually do well at the collegiate level.
The classes I took in college didn't really help me very much in my career, but the work absolutely did. Whatever your metric of "professional success" is I would almost certainly be worse off if I had just been able to check off a few boxes and get through college without having to put in that effort.
Passing kids who should be failing does them a disservice. Graduating kids who should flunk out entirely does everyone else in society a disservice.
Finnucane|11 months ago
reverendsteveii|11 months ago
If you're about to type the word "trade school" that's an entirely different debate that I'd love to have with you but trade school, while potentially viable for a single person to fix their own situation, is not the answer to the overall problem at a societal level. We need to either return to a situation where the additional post-secondary training and education aren't required or we need to figure out a way to get people the additional post-secondary training and education.
pc86|11 months ago
Isn't it? Isn't being realistic about your skills in relation to the rest of the world in the current time and place (as opposed to some idealistic past that may or may not have ever existed) a way to "fix this" at a societal level?
Whether or not it's easy or even possible to live a middle-class without starting a business or getting a college degree is irrelevant to whether or not we should be giving college degrees to people who submit this as an answer to a final exam:
> > With the UGM its all about our journey in life, not the destination. He beleives [sic] we need to take time to enjoy the little things becuase [sic] life is short and you never gonna [sic] know what happens. Sometimes he contradicts himself cause [sic] sometimes you say one thing but then you think something else later. It’s all relative.
toomuchtodo|11 months ago
The domestic educational pipeline to college, broadly speaking, is in poor shape.
https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/parents-under-pressu... ("When stress is severe or prolonged, it can have a deleterious effect; 41% of parents say that most days they are so stressed they cannot function and 48% say that most days their stress is completely overwhelming compared to other adults (20% and 26%, respectively)."
https://medium.com/@madougherty90/the-hollowing-of-america-h...
https://pudding.cool/2024/03/teenagers/ | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40053774
https://www.honest-broker.com/p/whats-happening-to-students
no_wizard|11 months ago
My central question is what are other countries doing that we aren't? Because other countries aren't seeing such a dire and systematic drop in student's academic ability. Germany being the most notable for how it directs its resources, even though its a fairly rigid in many respects.
I don't get the sense that parents in Europe are overwhelmingly more involved in the schools either, but I have limited purview into that specifically, having only had the pleasure of meeting europeans of different backgrounds (UK, Sweden, Germany most specifically) via work, its a limited subset of understanding, however most of the folks I've worked with who grew up in any of these European countries really seemed to believe in hands off parenting even more so, and experienced it often in kind.
I have one theory, which is that education is highly politicized in the US in a way that perhaps its not in other western countries. This has been happening since the 1960s but it really accelerated in the last 30 years or so.
NoMoreNicksLeft|11 months ago
One could make the argument that they can't even do anything. They exist at this point mostly because if they didn't, we'd have packs of naked feral 10 year olds roaming the streets and butchering any human they found for cannibalism. Have you ever seen a reddit thread where someone randomly thanks the gods because the kids finally school age and they can stop spending $40,000/year (or more) on daycare?
But, I think, in the coming decades all these problems will evaporate like some nightmare that fades away upon waking... public schools will continue to close at ever-increasing rates as our population rapidly ages.
milesrout|11 months ago
thefz|11 months ago
This is an issue with nonpublic education, where there much economic incentive in keeping students in.