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[email protected] October 14th 15 12:58 AM

We can't do nuttin'...
 
On Tue, 13 Oct 2015 15:34:49 -0400, Keyser Söze
wrote:

I think the purpose of education is to instill a
desire to learn, and to teach students how to use their minds, and where
to go to acquire the facts they need in order to make intelligent
decisions.


===

The part about "making intelligent decisions" seems to have escaped
you in any number of ways. Perhaps you could file for a refund of
your tuition money?

Califbill October 14th 15 02:23 AM

We can't do nuttin'...
 
Keyser Söze wrote:
On 10/13/15 5:48 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 10/13/2015 3:34 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 10/13/15 12:48 PM, Califbill wrote:
Keyser Söze wrote:
On 10/13/15 11:08 AM, Califbill wrote:



Never said college and education should not be subsidized. I stated
that
for education for self enjoyment should not be.

Bilious, it's not my problem if you didn't enjoy your college
courses. I
enjoyed many, if not all, of mine. Oh, wait...was that allowed? Perhaps
you are referring to electives...electives were required, and I did
take
a couple that had only peripheral connections to my majors, and I did
enjoy them.

Education for self-enjoyment. Now there is a concept. Are you referring
to guitar lessons? Making rubber molds for dildos? I managed to work in
some courses in art history, music, and archeology. Perhaps you should
have worked in some courses in English as she is written.



I enjoyed college. Except for some ****ty professors, was great. And
electives are needed. But to have a four year+ regimen of studies, that
lead to no useful skills, is a waste of taxpayer money. Society pays
for
primary schools, so our youth can be contributing members of society.
Not
to make them good at Trivial Pursuit. Big problem in certain large
cities
is the amount of youths who forgo education and decide dealing drugs and
robbery is going to be their contribution.


I'm fairly certain you are not in charge of deciding what comprises
"useful skills. We also differ on the purpose of education. You and most
others here have the trade school concept...you get educated in order to
get and hold a job. I think the purpose of education is to instill a
desire to learn, and to teach students how to use their minds, and where
to go to acquire the facts they need in order to make intelligent
decisions.



Lovely thoughts but most people like to eat.




Oh? And somehow instilling a desire to learn, learning how to use your
mind, and learning how to acquire facts interferes with earning a living
so you can eat?

How interesting.


In your estimation it does. University is for "learning". Trade school
for real information.


[email protected] October 14th 15 05:27 AM

We can't do nuttin'...
 
On Mon, 12 Oct 2015 11:55:20 -0400, Keyser Söze
wrote:

On 10/12/15 10:17 AM, wrote:


If you simply seek the information for your own enlightenment, it is
free.


You don't understand the college experience. It's not just "the
information," and, no, I am not referring to fraternity parties.


I understand the "experience" I did do 2 semesters (including a summer
one)
I was never in a fraternity tho, although I was at a party or two.

[email protected] October 14th 15 05:42 AM

We can't do nuttin'...
 
On Mon, 12 Oct 2015 21:02:31 -0400, Keyser Söze
wrote:

Posit: a degree in electrical engineering is obsolete the day it is
issued. A degree in mechanical engineering, however, is not.


That is exactly the reason why IBM guys laughed at "computer science"
degrees.
One of my customers was Montgomery College and I used to stick my head
in those classes occasionally. It was more like a "computer history"
class, talking about crap, nobody cared about.
These kids were interested in getting a system analyst job and they
were not getting what they needed from the college.
OTOH I had my own "classes" with a few of the smart kids.
My information was fresh off the presses at IBM schools.

I was asked to stop when one of the kids hacked into the operating
system of the college with a little assembler language routine I was
using in a diagnostic program I wrote. (hint:, look at the STIXIT
instruction and the notation about the save file in "Supervisor and
I/O macros"). ;-)



[email protected] October 14th 15 05:52 AM

We can't do nuttin'...
 
On Mon, 12 Oct 2015 21:06:31 -0700, Califbill billnews wrote:

Keyser Söze wrote:



Posit: a degree in electrical engineering is obsolete the day it is
issued. A degree in mechanical engineering, however, is not.




Actually mine is an Electro-mechanical discipline. And is never obsolete.
May need some continuing education, which I did. But other than faster,
and smaller, most notably is still appropriate. Actually, they big want
these days, is for old analog engineers.


Actually Harry is beyond his depth here. If your goal os a PE in
electrical engineering, the basics will still work for the rest of
your life.
Like you say, the hardware changes but the electrons stayed the same.
If you are computing heat rise in transformers or ampacity of
conductors in hostile environments, those old formulas still work,
although you can probably do the whole thing on your phone (AKA pocket
mainframe) now.



[email protected] October 14th 15 06:03 AM

We can't do nuttin'...
 
On Tue, 13 Oct 2015 09:23:39 -0400, Keyser Söze
wrote:


Gee, Bill, I hope the taxpayers of your state didn't subsidize your
education. Why was college necessary, anyway? Couldn't you have picked
up some workbooks at the library or gotten your education in the
military? :)


I did get most of my education in the military and over the span of 30
years at IBM. I am sure I have 10 to 15 times as much classroom hours
as a guy with an MS degree.
We were typically in school at IBM for around 2-3 months a year, 8
hours a day, 5 days a week in the 60s and 70s.
It really did not slow down that much in the 80s but a lot of it was
online learning, before it had the name..
(It was Field Instructional System for us) They had the facility in
your office to avoid travel cost.
That was followed up with a couple of weeks of "hands on lab" in an
education center somewhere and some stand up lecture.

[email protected] October 14th 15 06:12 AM

We can't do nuttin'...
 
On Tue, 13 Oct 2015 10:48:45 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

Turns out I would have followed the same career path and would have been
able to accomplish whatever I have in my accomplishment bucket without
the degree. It certainly helped. But, (and you may find this impossible
to understand or believe), the Navy electronic and electrical schools
covered the same technical material in a much more comprehensive way
when compared to the civilian colleges and universities where I also
took courses.


That was my experience. I took basic electricity 101 and basic
electronics 101. (Essentially DC circuits and AC circuits
respectively)
All it really did for me was allow me to get 104 out of 108 on the
ETST and allowed me to go to FT school
Once I got there, I had pretty much wrapped up everything I learned in
"college " in a couple of weeks, my coasting was over and I had to
"turn to".

[email protected] October 14th 15 06:18 AM

We can't do nuttin'...
 
On Tue, 13 Oct 2015 08:08:02 -0700, Califbill billnews wrote:

Never said college and education should not be subsidized. I stated that
for education for self enjoyment should not be. I paid a lot more back in
to the state than they ever put out for my education. Maybe if you had
actually studied something useful, you would not have had to file
bankruptcy twice. Maybe a simple economics 101?


My navy training was totally wasted in the CG. I did get some basic
ballistics concepts that applied, if we were actually ever going to
shoot that 5" gun an anything important but the fact was, the hardware
I was learning about in FT-A school was never going to show up on a
ship I would be on.

It did get me the job at IBM tho and like Bill says, they took a lot
of tax money from me and the enterprise I was supporting so it was not
a macro economic loss for the government.

[email protected] October 14th 15 06:39 AM

We can't do nuttin'...
 
On Tue, 13 Oct 2015 15:34:49 -0400, Keyser Söze
wrote:

I'm fairly certain you are not in charge of deciding what comprises
"useful skills. We also differ on the purpose of education. You and most
others here have the trade school concept...you get educated in order to
get and hold a job. I think the purpose of education is to instill a
desire to learn, and to teach students how to use their minds, and where
to go to acquire the facts they need in order to make intelligent
decisions.


Most "useful" skills come from things I learned on my own and
experience. I think "useful" is the ability to take care of everything
around me. (house, car, boat etc) without having to call anyone.

Things I do just for esoterica are "hobbies" like reading statutes and
SCOTUS decisions. Again it was "useful" when I was trying to buy the
house next door in a tax deed sale and later a foreclosure auction. I
did hire a real lawyer but I was a little disappointed when his title
search looked exactly like mine, his advice looked exactly like the
notes I had already made and the last straw was when I pointed out to
him a little known blurb in the Florida law that allows a mortgage to
be un enforcible if the holder does not service it for a period of
time. He had the gall to call me a day later and tell me about it,
like I had not just given him the exact statute number and line number
the day before.

I will never have a law degree but it doesn't mean I can't read the
law with a pretty good degree of understanding.

I dabble in astrophysics. I will never be Neil Degrasse Tyson but I
think I could have a decent conversation with him.

I like history but I will never be a degreed historian. That doesn't
keep me from reading about it. Perhaps without listening to lectures
that are loaded with opinion, I am actually free to have one of my
own.
At that point, who is the person with independent thought?

[email protected] October 14th 15 06:44 AM

We can't do nuttin'...
 
On Tue, 13 Oct 2015 17:49:01 -0500, Boating All Out
wrote:

In article ,
says...

Harry ... you commented to Greg the following:

"You don't understand the college experience. It's not just "the
information," and, no, I am not referring to fraternity
parties."


Never the twain shall meet.
They are both intolerant in their own ways.
Greg will never understand Dostoyevsky, and Harry will
never understand Ayn Rand.
The big difference between them is their exposure to both.
And so it goes.


I made it through Crime and Punishment but I thought I was the one
being punished.

"Come on man, just tell the damned story"
In the end I didn't care.



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