Paco Dennis
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- Mid-Missouri
Ok, of course what you said is not true, all dogs do not like rib eye steaks, right?All dogs like rib steaks, preferably raw, but I'm just kidding, Paco.
Ok, of course what you said is not true, all dogs do not like rib eye steaks, right?All dogs like rib steaks, preferably raw, but I'm just kidding, Paco.
What a tired, old complaint, except the part about the money. So old it has whiskers! Heard that load in the sixties.I think a lot of kids come out of college dumber than they were when they went in. Four years of smoking pot and listening to Marxist professors drone on would rot anybody's brain. Good thing it only costs $80,000 per year.
If the messenger is that bad then THE message should be pretty easy to shoot(metaphor for the hypersensitive).
Ive seen too many stories over the last few years in which a lot of college students need to take remedial course just to get started in college. Mediocracy in education winds up spreading into medical schools, flight & law schools.
Exclusive | Nearly half of NYC DOE grads at CUNY need remedial classes
Most colleges enroll many students who aren’t prepared for higher education
I think when a headline or comment involves sweeping generalizations is where my radar bings. Sensational generalizations are a way to get clicks. The bias blinder comes from all perspectives, even the arguments against the bias become bias, with sweeping generalizations. Are we aware of that?
Click bait articles, IMO.Original source is The Atlantic.
The Elite College Students Who Can’t Read Books
This is exactly the problem when people on both polarized 'teams' have a 'trusted' sources list. It's intellectually lazy and leaves gaps in information when content is ignored due to blind bias.
Is the Atlantic article filled with data, numbers, graphs, or is just a couple of profs voicing opinions?
Also interesting are statistics of what many people, especially young people are reading. Much romance novelettes, comic books, celebrity bios.I find this hard to believe, considering the number of new authors trying their hand at writing novels. The book store in my town can hardly keep the shelves stocked.
In high school during mid 1960s, I received an Incomplete one semester in an English class because she loaded us down with a ridiculous list of long fiction classics that greatly bored me. (ie Oliver Twist, Hamlet, Moby Dick etc) Although I read a bit of science fiction as a twentysomething adult, I almost never read fiction and instead large amounts of science, technology non fiction.
Sorry to displease you. When I went to college there were actually both liberal and conservative professors -- an exchange of ideas, if you will. There are essentially no conservative professors anymore. And students are treated now as consumers, rather than as, well, students. Remember, this thread started with the observation that college students have become unused to reading entire books.What a tired, old complaint, except the part about the money. So old it has whiskers! Heard that load in the sixties.
We've provided links to it, why don't you read it and find out?Is the Atlantic article filled with data, numbers, graphs, or is just a couple of profs voicing opinions?
I think you need to change your post title to........Most students can't be bothered to read books. Its not that they are incapable of the art of reading, it is a lack of motivation, I suggest. Be carefull
Exactly. That's why I read across ideological spectrums. Our Congress can pass or not pass legislation and liberal legacy vs conservative sources will have entirely different headlines though they're discussing the exact same subject. And the headlines are written in language to sway readers to the publication's bias. (Sadly some people stop at the headlines and believe the BS spin.) Cherry picking is rampant and politicians or other people identified with Team Whatever are partially quoted out of context in order to support a news source's bias. Then there's news that simply isn't reported on by one side or the other because it's too damning to their agenda.
It takes a little extra effort thinking (and voting) independently but is ultimately so rewarding.
And what are you doing to correct this flaw in your teaching methods?During my brief and unhappy tenure in front of the classroom, I had 8th grade students who could not read at a 3rd grade level, yet I was expected to teach them Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. Even prior to the advent of cell phones and social media, there were vast numbers of students who expected school to be an entirely passive process, and wanted to be entertained, not educated.
“Why do I have to do this?” was a common complaint. I think the turning point for me was when they started to light fires in their desks…
We've provided links to it, why don't you read it and find out?
My concern was not whether students are sufficiently prepared for college. My concern was Fox's headline "We've provided links to it, why don't you read it and find out?
My concern was not whether students are prepared for college. My concern was Fox's headline "
Elite colleges shocked to discover students 'don't know how' to read books: 'My jaw dropped'
was based on "several university professors." "Several college professors" is pure opinion, not a verifiable statistical analysis. And explain why this phenomenon only exists in "Elite colleges". Could it mean Fox's spin on those liberal college types? And, if your SAT scores are sufficient to get into an "Elite" college, you know how to read a book.
My concern was not whether students are prepared for college. My concern was Fox's headline "
Elite colleges shocked to discover students 'don't know how' to read books: 'My jaw dropped'
was based on "several university professors." "Several college professors" is pure opinion, not a verifiable statistical analysis. And explain why this phenomenon only exists in "Elite colleges". Could it mean Fox's spin on those liberal college types? And, if your SAT scores are sufficient to get into an "Elite" college, you know how to read a book.
My concern was not whether students are sufficiently prepared for college. My concern was Fox's headline "
Elite colleges shocked to discover students 'don't know how' to read books: 'My jaw dropped'
was based on "several university professors." "Several college professors" is pure opinion, not a verifiable statistical analysis. And explain why this phenomenon only exists in "Elite colleges". Could it mean Fox's spin on those liberal college types? And like the National Inquirer's headlines, colleges are "shocked". If your SAT scores are sufficient to get into an "Elite" college, you know how to read a book.
Very well said.Tersely..the US could still support chip factories as they originally dominated the rest of the world doing for several decades. The problem is, Wall Street and financial bean counters types became very envious of how tech industries supplanted all the old industry powers.
So increasingly moved into Silicon Valley themselves taking over corps and putting their Ivy League elites into HR departments.
These late comers that didn't create that tech, off shored, outsourced, and technology transferred our tech to highest bidders in the rest of the world, screwing all those who created it and the prosperous American public.
Originally, the foreign offshore corps Wall Street sold our tech to, used lower wages to unfairly compete but as soon as their US competition crumbled, jacked up costs. In the process, we lost control of much manufacturing engineering and with it ability to work with technology.
Much of our manufacturing closed while Wall Street fat cat types became rich. With money chasing those wealthy, inflation followed them creating the wage gap to the level, tech domestic corps could no longer hire workers at pay levels to compete.
Our universities taught myriad wealthy foreigners how to do what we used to do further screwing the American public. Wall Street outsourced to Asia much of our high paying computer software jobs that experts had for decades encouraged young people to get into. A huge lie. American young folks no longer had incentive to go into technology careers.
Maybe if those with bias read more books they would see the reference in the context.You can always tell the bias blinder people when a source is made the focus instead of content.
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Maybe if those with bias read more books they would see the reference in the context.