generation limbo: 20-somethings today, debt, unemployment, the questionable value of a college education

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (2320 of them)

haha basically what iatee said

dayo, Friday, 2 September 2011 18:50 (twelve years ago) link

"Creating the Climate for Continuous Learning is a distinct Strategy Forum intended specifically for institutions already experienced with AQIP. This Strategy Forum requires an institution to have submitted a Systems Portfolio to AQIP, undergone a Systems Appraisal, and received and analyzed its Systems Appraisal Feedback Report. Registration is open."

listen to this - lifted RIGHT OFF THEIR SITE

Birth Control is Sinful in the ILE Marriages (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 18:50 (twelve years ago) link

did you c/p that randomly or what

i drive a wood paneled station dragon (La Lechera), Friday, 2 September 2011 18:53 (twelve years ago) link

haha

iatee, Friday, 2 September 2011 18:53 (twelve years ago) link

:(

Birth Control is Sinful in the ILE Marriages (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 18:54 (twelve years ago) link

Yeah I had a friend in HS who went to Duke of all places because with financial aid it was cheaper than UVA. The financial aid budget is the biggest fiscal concern at my college; our operating budget was like 85% tuition and fees every year (compared to places that have much larger endowments and draw on them for operating budget every year). Basically the full-pay students fund financial aid every year for the ones getting an average like 50% discount on the sticker price.

Do not go gentle into that good frogbs (silby), Friday, 2 September 2011 18:59 (twelve years ago) link

"Principles of Good Practice in Adult Degree Completion Programs
In order to facilitate the evaluation of adult degree completion programs in member institutions, the Board of Trustees has adopted a set of kick-ass principles developed by a special task force, as a framework for program implementation. These principles also are used by team members in evaluating patterns of evidence during accreditation reviews."

did you c/p that randomly or what (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:01 (twelve years ago) link

haha

it's like a black hole of jargon over there

i drive a wood paneled station dragon (La Lechera), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:02 (twelve years ago) link

is this from univ. of utility data?

Philip Nunez, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:04 (twelve years ago) link

No College Student Left Behind is just around the corner, once you pass the nationally applied gen ed integrated learning objectives that seem imminent :-/

i drive a wood paneled station dragon (La Lechera), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:06 (twelve years ago) link

(i sincerely hope i'm wrong about that btw)

i drive a wood paneled station dragon (La Lechera), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:08 (twelve years ago) link

"These best practices have been developed by the regional accrediting commissions in response to the emergence of technologically mediated instruction offered at a distance as an important component of higher education. CAn I get a what what!? Expressing in detail what currently constitutes best practice in distance education, specifically electronically offered degree and certificate programs, shit is whack, they seek to address concerns that regional accreditation standards are not relevant to the new distributed learning environments, especially when those environments are experienced by offcampus students."

did you c/p that randomly or what (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:08 (twelve years ago) link

No College Student Left Behind is just around the corner, once you pass the nationally applied gen ed integrated learning objectives that seem imminent :-/

I think a better situation would be a national credentialing system - if you graduate w/ an BA (or if you don't) you should have to take and pass a competitive national test for your field. some sort of post-college (or college alternative) skills and intelligence measure. having an alternate way to prove yourself would eventually take some pressure of people going to college just for the sake of going to college.

iatee, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:12 (twelve years ago) link

tho fwiw self-taught lawyers still can't practice if the pass the bar etc.

iatee, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:12 (twelve years ago) link

ah yes, but who will design that test
that is the terrifying question (for me, at least)

i drive a wood paneled station dragon (La Lechera), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:13 (twelve years ago) link

its nicer to have to pass a test than pass a workload

did you c/p that randomly or what (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:13 (twelve years ago) link

you would say that

i drive a wood paneled station dragon (La Lechera), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:14 (twelve years ago) link

hope self-taught doctors are barred too

Once Were Moderators (DG), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:14 (twelve years ago) link

take some pressure off* xp

iatee, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:14 (twelve years ago) link

"The Commission invites participation in of one seven Regional Forums on Commission Initiatives. Think you can bring it? These forums provide the opportunity to hear about proposed changes in the Criteria for Accreditation and the development and implementation of the new Open Pathway model for continued accreditation, and to provide comments, ask questions, and raise issues.Also booty blast session and 1$ drafts"

did you c/p that randomly or what (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:16 (twelve years ago) link

if a self-taught doctor can pass the same test as one who had to spend 200k to learn that stuff, not sure what the problem would be. obv doctors require hospital and lab experience and the institutions for this alternative don't exist. but they could.

iatee, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:18 (twelve years ago) link

there's also a gap growing w/r/t private schools in that the best schools can all pretty much give full-rides to the poor/middle class kids they admit. I think going to a no-name local private school is prob the worst deal you can get right now tho. xp

― iatee, Friday, September 2, 2011 11:49 AM (17 minutes ago)

yeah, this wasn't quite the case 20 years ago, but the disparity was pretty large, in that my first choice college, while it may have given me a pre-eminent proto-hipster education, was a 2nd/3rd tier liberal arts college that waitlisted me for financial aid, and my second choice college gave me 1/2 a free ride, and that's how i ended up at an ivy.

sarahel, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:19 (twelve years ago) link

I think a better situation would be a national credentialing system - if you graduate w/ an BA (or if you don't) you should have to take and pass a competitive national test for your field. some sort of post-college (or college alternative) skills and intelligence measure. this isn't even well-implemented for high schools yet, i think colleges doing something like this is years/decades off. not to mention that a lot of fields can't be measured using a 'competitive national test' b/c education doesn't work like that.

having an alternate way to prove yourself would eventually take some pressure of people going to college just for the sake of going to college. - yes, absolutely.

remy bean, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:20 (twelve years ago) link

sarahel was your first choice sarahelawrence

dayo, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:22 (twelve years ago) link

(sorry I actually don't want to know the answer to that)

dayo, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:22 (twelve years ago) link

xp - it was Reed College in Portlandia

sarahel, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:23 (twelve years ago) link

fwiw I didn't know quite what I wanted to do and was mystified by all the college application stuff so while my peers had parents who were helping them around on it or looking at schools I felt oddly guilty -- I didn't know what I wanted to do, and that would help me pick a school, so why am I going to spend money and time applying to all these schools?

It didn't take me too long to figure out I was wrong once I was in college, but then I was all mopey and just tried to explain this to my parents so it'd count in for my sister, but then she ended up going to the state university, too, since she had reasons to stay close at the time and they gave her a full ride scholarship

unwarranted display names of ilx (mh), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:23 (twelve years ago) link

kinda lol at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston for such a huge tutiotn and there are no grades just at the end of the semester "pass or fail" based on them looking at your stuff - why pay for that

did you c/p that randomly or what (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:25 (twelve years ago) link

It's a decent article, though who the fuck thought that the example "girl gets swept into a fairly popular American rock band" was somehow
even remotely appropriate? Maybe a reunited LCD Soundsystem will save me from my temp job?

I'm certainly jaded after college and I find the most terrible thing about it is my current career path. I was able to get a student
employment job working medical admin and have since been bouncing from temp admin job to temp admin job for the past three years.
I can't complain about being gainfully employed, but the fact that I'm 26 with an MA and was only able to afford to turn my hot water on a month ago
is certainly depressing. Lately I've taken to working on my writing as a full time job. Though I'm reaching mixed success with that, it at least makes me feel like I'm not wasting the years I put into school.

Ryan, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:25 (twelve years ago) link

One though I keep having is that despite my ambivalence about having children (I don't believe I should reproduce personally, and adoption is a lot more of an ordeal than signing up for free baby delivery), I will be saving for their hypothetical college educations until I am quite positive that they are never going to manifest themselves in my life. Or my sister's life.

Do not go gentle into that good frogbs (silby), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:26 (twelve years ago) link

(xp to Latham) I dunno, it kind of makes sense to me? Why should you be graded on your output as a Masters' candidate artist? You either do the work or you don't, and the feedback is valuable but the grade is irrelevent.

remy bean, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:27 (twelve years ago) link

well then I will pass or fail you and your work for 30$ - don't worry - I'm awesome

did you c/p that randomly or what (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:29 (twelve years ago) link

i'm interested in your 'just go to a state school argument' because how much does that then start closing doors to possible future careers? or at least certain career paths? i mean the % of ppl who are ever going to sit on the supreme court or be an svp of an investment bank or write for the simpsons or w/e is negligible already but the idea that anyone who cant afford/doesnt want to risk huge debt to pay for a private school shldn't even dream of it is p dispiriting

There's another thread about this somewhere - I remember posting a study from five or six years ago that looked at the socioeconomic class of students who attend the top-tier colleges (public and private) - 75% were drawn from the top-quarter of the socioeconomic scale, 3% from the bottom quarter.

Given the representation of those institutions in the arts, upper echelons of the business world, politics, etc., it's essentially a self-perpetuating oligarchy.

It's one reason I didn't finish my fine arts degree from a run of the mill public 'national research university' (UT-Arlington, god knows how national it actually is) - what the fuck does that piece of paper do for me? Am I really competitive getting into a good MFA program vs someone with lesser work from SVA/an Ivy/etc.?

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:30 (twelve years ago) link

in the art world that presumably these students are preparing for, it really is often just an issue of pass/fail

sarahel, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:31 (twelve years ago) link

is there an art world anymore?

did you c/p that randomly or what (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:32 (twelve years ago) link

what is art?

dayo, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:33 (twelve years ago) link

last year, i participated in a group discussion of art school MFA students and recent grads about a "just arts economy." it was very frustrating and i felt like an asshole.

sarahel, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:34 (twelve years ago) link

must have been painful

remy bean, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:36 (twelve years ago) link

what i meant to ask was whether the conversation flowed smooth and easy, or was hard and uncomfortable?

remy bean, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:36 (twelve years ago) link

the upshot was that 90% of them were upset that they had paid $30k-$40k a year in tuition and were not making a living as artists.

sarahel, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:36 (twelve years ago) link

I mean I think the "art world" was this rich patron thing that eventually just become irrelevant - Andy Wrhol was the last vestige IMO

did you c/p that randomly or what (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:37 (twelve years ago) link

my friend Sean, who has an MFA and makes a living as a financial planner tried to raise the issue of supply and demand, but they shot it down as hegemonical bs or something like that.

sarahel, Friday, 2 September 2011 19:38 (twelve years ago) link

There are more obscenely rich people today than when Warhol was alive.

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:38 (twelve years ago) link

Oh no, there still some very wealthy people supporting artists. I think we call them "trustafarians" now.

unwarranted display names of ilx (mh), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:39 (twelve years ago) link

"the upshot was that 90% of them were upset that they had paid $30k-$40k a year in tuition and were not making a living as artists."

Shocker.

Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:40 (twelve years ago) link

I call them "people who should be gving ME money instead to make my shitty songs"

http://www.meca.edu/news/support-meca
actually we have one here - Roxxame Quimby

did you c/p that randomly or what (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:40 (twelve years ago) link

I'm kind of sad that democratizing art via the Internet has kind of taken the form of 20x200 (and similar), which is okay for photography but renders everything else they put out more decoration than art (because it's all just scans and inkjet prints, more like a poster you buy at the mall than 'art' with any kind of engagement with the artist).

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:40 (twelve years ago) link

yeah like this is why we can't be telling people that college is a purely economic decision (even though the BLS indicates that it still has that effect). If you want to spend four years training as an artist, that is awesome and you might have a great time, but nobody should be telling you that you are going to graduate into a well-paying sculpture job.

Do not go gentle into that good frogbs (silby), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:41 (twelve years ago) link

I was in "the art world" allot at least in academics as a youngster and now I am fille dwith a sense of fear and loathing when ever I pass Maine COllege of Art

did you c/p that randomly or what (Latham Green), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:41 (twelve years ago) link

Is anyone telling sculpture students that? Cuz that would be truly irresponsible.

Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Friday, 2 September 2011 19:42 (twelve years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.