Oroku wrote:anyone with average to below average intelligence can complete post-secondary school
you have never been to a bad school.
Oroku wrote:anyone with average to below average intelligence can complete post-secondary school

cooly wrote:i'm not gonna read that but if you're pro-students on this you're a retard

can wrote:old lady [whispering]

can wrote:old lady [whispering]


can wrote:old lady [whispering]

can wrote:old lady [whispering]



can wrote:old lady [whispering]




waldojeffers1 wrote:Iand what _chimp said about free post-secondary benefiting the middle- and upper-classes disproportionately because they're the ones who go to college, but that's because they get the well-funded high schools, which poor neighborhoods do not have

can wrote:old lady [whispering]




can wrote:old lady [whispering]




cooly wrote:just gonna ask a question here that i don't mean to be offensive, because i don't understand a lot of the motivations of this stuff:
i think the reason there is a lot of hostility to this sort of stuff is that not every job that needs to be done requires a college education, and there's no real need for the government to pay for people to get degrees that aren't going to translate into higher utility for the country as a whole. in particular this worry extends to people pursuing degrees in things like english and art history, most of whom are not going to become professors or researchers in those fields. that sort o thing also extends to things like physics, mathematics, linguistics, and philosophy. why isn't the best option to allow the cost of tuition to raise significantly and using a chunk of that money to provide full scholarships either to people who are pursuing degrees in fields that will more directly serve the populace (engineering, pre-med, etc.) or are particularly talented in their field and could not otherwise afford school reasonably?

cooly wrote:just gonna ask a question here that i don't mean to be offensive, because i don't understand a lot of the motivations of this stuff:
i think the reason there is a lot of hostility to this sort of stuff is that not every job that needs to be done requires a college education, and there's no real need for the government to pay for people to get degrees that aren't going to translate into higher utility for the country as a whole. in particular this worry extends to people pursuing degrees in things like english and art history, most of whom are not going to become professors or researchers in those fields. that sort o thing also extends to things like physics and philosophy. why isn't the best option to allow the cost of tuition to raise significantly and using a chunk of that money to provide full scholarships either to people who are pursuing degrees in fields that will more directly serve the populace (engineering, pre-med, etc.) or are particularly talented in their field and could not otherwise afford school reasonably?

can wrote:old lady [whispering]


