Lucifer_Carroll
GOATS!!!
- Joined
- May 4, 2004
- Posts
- 3,319
Joe Wordsworth said:Oh, my stance hasn't much to do with those things. Its why I exluded private education from it (private education is a right, its not something that concerns me being at a public institution).
I got my degrees from a public institution. I work on my masters at a public institution. I teach in a public institution. I was of the opinion, all throughout my undergrad years that I was paying for the classes (even if scholarships did, they were mine) and my attendance was my business. If I wanted to only take the tests, I shouldn't be penalized for it.
It wasn't until I was on the other side of the educational fence that I learned better what was going on, a senior professor helped me understand that.
Around 75%, on average, of the costs of public education (on the collegiate level) rests on the state. Tuition and scholarships fund the rest. Ultimately, the tax payers are the ones that are paying the vast majority of the money for someone's education because that education is an investment in the future.
Someone may be entirely brilliant and fantastically gifted, but their class attendance and ability to show responsibility and dedication are things that justify the investment for the public. Those things are in place to protect the people that work hard to pay their taxes so that student can complete their education and benefit society. To shirk class and homework is to, effectively, waste their money.
Private college? They have their own rules. I can't speak intelligently about that. Their system, their justification.
Public universities and colleges? Even were I not part of the system, I wouldn't want a university to abolish homeworks and attendances and class participations and such... because I'm paying for that person's education, and I want to know that every precaution is being taken to make sure that people aren't wasting the money.
Take public high schools, next... so much higher a percentage is paid for by the people. Their rights, as well as the students' rights, are important. They're the ones footing the bill.
Enngh. Not another "tax-payer's money" asshole. Surely as a man in the public school system, you realize where the vast majority of that money goes.
The highest expense on a college campus is not the students, but rather the labratories, the equipment, and the experiments that the professors conduct. The research is what lies most important in many schools.
Students have expenses yes, but the exclusive expenses are only in terms of wasted professor's time, lecture hall costs, and professor salaries.
Perhaps, it's cause you had a major where attendance was important. A teacher's lectures were the basis of the final, not a book with equations and formulas. In the sciences, it's all more of a competence issue. The point of the lectures is domination of material and is set for those who don't. If one has dominated a subject on his own, his attendance in class is frankly, stupid and counterintuitive. He will glean nothing from his professor and only serve to take up space "for the taxpayers". Such time would be better spent by the student learning more in his textbooks, doing independant knowledge acquisition and so on.
Perhaps, it's because I'm a science major in a research university that I say this. Perhaps it's because my learning process is self-teaching (I'm actually inferior at learning something just by having someone else teach it). Perhaps, it's because I've seen people who would sooner burn homework than do it repeatedly ace finals and midterms. Perhaps it's because every professor I've worked with favors a midterm and final system with optional homework and a philosophy of self-dependance. I don't know. There's a lot of perhaps for why I advocate the system.
Attendance isn't the same as intelligence, repition not the same as competence. The state invests in public schools because (at least in the UCs) they are looking for an investment in competent future people, not mere good attendance drones. The former invent shit, the latter work good hours.
I don't force the kids I TA to come, I force them to show competence in their subjects, because without that they will fail despite how attentively they wasted taxpayer's money.
Mandatory attendance, bah.
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