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posted by on Thursday March 16 2017, @12:41PM   Printer-friendly
from the sit-stay-cook dept.

If you ever need to strike up a conversation with a group of academics, a surefire way to get them talking is to ask about their graduate training. Where did they train, in what methods, in which lab, under what mentor? People will speak with great pride about their training as an economist, historian, chemist, philosopher, or classicist. If, on the other hand, you need to make a quick exit, try sharing the opinion that undergraduate education should include a lot more vocational training. You'll soon find yourself standing alone or responding to accusations of classism and questions about your commitment to social and racial equality. You might even hear that "training is for dogs," a common refrain in higher education that carries the unpleasant implication that skills-based education is the equivalent of teaching students to sit, stay, and shake hands.

For reasons that are not entirely clear, in the United States training is widely understood to be the end, not the beginning, of an educational journey that leads to a particular job or career. Undergraduates are supposed to get a general education that will prepare them for training, which they will presumably get once they land a job or go to graduate school. Any training that happens before then just doesn't count.

It is because of this belief that general-education requirements are the center of the bachelor's degree and are concentrated in the first two years of a four-year program. The general-education core is what distinguishes the B.A. from a vocational program and makes it more than "just training." It is designed to ensure that all degree holders graduate with a breadth of knowledge in addition to an in-depth understanding of a particular subject area. Students are exposed to a broad range of disciplines and are pushed to think critically about the social, cultural, and historical context in which they live. It is supposed to guarantee that all graduates can write, have a basic understanding of the scientific method, have heard of the Marshall Plan and Maslow's hierarchy of needs, and know that iambic pentameter has something to do with poetry.

While few would challenge the importance of general education, both to students and to a well-functioning democracy, there is good reason to question why it has to come at the beginning of a B.A.—and just how general and theoretical it needs to be. The pyramid structure of the bachelor's degree, which requires that students start with the broad base of general requirements before they specialize, is what makes college unappealing to so many young people.

It doesn't have to be this way. There is no iron law of learning dictating that students must master general theories or be fully versed in a particular historical or cultural context before learning how to do things. Some students will do well under this approach, but there is solid evidence that some students learn better through experience. For these students, theory does not make sense until it is connected to action. Putting a lot of general or theoretical courses on the front end just leaves them disengaged or, even worse, discouraged. They will do better if they start by learning how to master certain tasks or behaviors and then explore the more abstract concepts behind the actions.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 16 2017, @07:46PM (3 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 16 2017, @07:46PM (#479993)

    Is that to which you refer the classes where the self-righteous outrage gets taught? Or is this spirituality learned in the classes where the students focus their cultural bubbles so completely inward that they come out turning into a four year old when faced when attitudes and opinions outside it?

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 16 2017, @08:29PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 16 2017, @08:29PM (#480010)

    Yadda yadda sjw cuck MAGA! Speaking of bubbles...

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 17 2017, @04:21AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 17 2017, @04:21AM (#480206)

      Ethics class: So is it alright to punch a Nazi in the face?

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 16 2017, @11:08PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 16 2017, @11:08PM (#480091)

    I'll address your question seriously even though your approach doesn't merit one. I refer to spirituality in the broadest sense, you could call it self-improvement if you want. Taking only STEM classes and ignoring history, literature, art, music, and philosophy is a good way to create a narrow minded population capable of doing anything to attain an objective. With history and philosophy people learn more what being human is all about, and they have can gain a worldly perspective that few were capable of just 100 years ago.

    These wild SJW courses are probably as prevalent as the cross burning conservative, and pretty doubtful that they are requirements anyway. Research your professors and your courses, take what appeals to you. Where is the personal responsibility meme on those counts?