Warren Dew wrote:hadespussercats wrote:Well, fuck. My parents couldn't afford to send me to school. I should have been a ditch-digger, I guess. That's what you're meant to be, if your parents aren't wealthy. Right?
Are you "unable" to pay your student loans? If not, I don't think the comment applies to you.
He's talking about the people who complain about the government taking action to collect on student loans that people left unpaid. Often, those people use excuses like "I can't afford to pay, the degree didn't help me so I shouldn't have to pay", even if they actually could afford to pay if they wanted to. His point is that, if the degree didn't help you, then you probably shouldn't have gone to college and taken on the loans in the first place. Since you chose to do so, you get to be obligated to repay the loans, whether or not you think those loans helped you.
On this point - I don't think anyone has much of a leg to stand on about "affording" student loans. There is no reason a person doesn't know EXACTLY what he or she will have to pay, and when they will have to pay it, years in advance of their obligation to repay kicking in. It is an individual's responsibility to know if they ought to be borrowing the money they are borrowing.
I suppose the question might become whether college age students with the advice of their parents are sufficiently able to manage the weighty decision of how much to borrow to pay for college. If, however, we live in a country where an 18 year old can't be expected to decide whether to borrow money, and to understand that it has to be paid back according to the terms that they are expressly and explicitly explaining...well...we live in a pretty fucking stupid country and we have bigger problems on the horizon.
Warren Dew wrote:
Personally, I think a better solution would be to tie repayment terms to income to make sure it's affordable - X% of income for Y years, or something like that - but that's not an option anyone has suggested, and the government workouts do come close. And it would still mean that people who think the degree didn't help them would still have to do some repayment.
I think that's o.k. in principle. Although, nowadays, they almost do that. Generally, for student loans they give you repayment options - 5, 10,15 or 20 years - one of those choices ought to be enough. But, to absolutely tie repayment to income has some issues - I mean - do people who go to college but then become house-husbands get to not pay their student loans?
I loved this, too:
"I went to a community college and all I saw were people sitting in front of computers typing away, their eyes were fixed. Probably just facebooking away."
Or, taking notes? Getting work done? Diligently pursuing a degree at a college they can afford?
He's talking about what people are doing that while attending lecture - and it's absolutely true that many of them are ignoring the professor and surfing Facebook. A lot of the professors complain about this.[/quote]
Most students attending college today, IMHO, either do not belong there or are not being "diligent." Some are. Most aren't. My evidence is the fact that most people these days who graduate college are not very well educated.
One quick example: The average English major graduates knowing much about racial, ethnic, and sexual politics, but very little about literary history and classic authors, according to a new study of undergraduate English programs by the National Association of Scholars, a higher education reform group in Princeton, New Jersey.
http://www.popecenter.org/clarion_call/ ... tml?id=855
A study (PDF) released Thursday by the U.S. Department of Education shows that only 25% of college graduates were “proficiently literate,” that is, “using printed and written information to function in society, to achieve one’s goals, and to develop one’s knowledge and potential.”
http://www.makestupidityhistory.org/200 ... re-stupid/
Warren Dew wrote:
Personally, I think the answer is for the professors to make their lectures more interesting. On the other hand, I do think it would be more polite for the students to simply skip lecture if they are going to be surfing Facebook, or even if they are getting other work done. They aren't taking notes, because you can't see what the professor has written on the board if your eyes are fixed only on the computer.
What colleges need to do is toughen up the standards. I mean - come on - most college students today take something like 12 credits per semester. 15 credits (5 classes) which was the norm 30 years ago, is rarer now. So, kids wake up hung over at 9am and run in their pajamas and flip flops to their 10am class, sleep through it, then go to lunch. Then they go to their 2pm class. Then they go back to their dorm or apartment throw their "ENG 230-003 Introduction to Lit: The Spirit and the Center: Of Magic in Literature" books on their desk and break out the bongs and the beer.
The courses taken by the vast majority of college students in the US, let's face it, are not very demanding and the course loads they take are not very demanding. They can go 1/2 the semester without opening the book, and then cram. They party 3 to 5 nights a week, spending way too high of a proportion of their time engaging in nonsense.
Up the credit hours to 18, and make the tests harder and more frequent. Penalize students for not attending class and use the "Socratic Method" of teaching
http://www.garlikov.com/Soc_Meth.html instead of lecturing. Put students on the spot to know what's going on in a class every time they go to class. Then they'll learn the subject.