Sujet : Re: Job Offer
De : Soloman (at) *nospam* old.bikers.org (Catrike Ryder)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.techDate : 21. Mar 2025, 23:51:34
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <s4rrtj52o5vovchne5bi1t59u296fdrq0u@4ax.com>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
User-Agent : ForteAgent/8.00.32.1272
On Fri, 21 Mar 2025 18:33:53 -0400, Frank Krygowski
<
frkrygow@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
On 3/21/2025 4:49 PM, AMuzi wrote:
People (me) who worked two jobs to pay tuition at retail in cash were
miffed at least.
>
I'm sorry you felt bad. It didn't bother me, and I did work my way
through college. (Well, Bachelor's degree, anyway. The school paid me to
get my Master's.)
>
I'm reminded of a pretty close parallel in the Bible: Matthew 20: 116
>
You and I got what we paid for, just as Matthew's early workers got what
they expected to be paid. No skin off either set of noses if those
arriving later got a better deal.
>
Since your and my time in college, the cost of a college education has
skyrocketed unreasonably. Based on my experience in the field, I'd say
there are two main reasons: Tremendous increases in administration
overhead (far exceeding any increase in faculty salaries & benefits; and
greatly reduced support from the government. I think ridiculously
luxurious physical facilities are another factor, but a minor one.
>
Because of that now obscene expense, students need support one way or
another.
>
Should the government support higher education? I think it's a very wise
investment, especially in fields that contribute to the industrial base
- although I also support much of the funding for the pure sciences,
for arts, for fields like history, psychology, etc. Society is better if
people are educated. Political decisions tend to be better if those in
charge have decent knowledge of history. Industry does better if it's
staffed by people with actual education and training, not by Kunich clones.
>
When the state of Ohio was founded, support for education was recognized
as a wise move. The state's founders preferred education over ignorance.
They preferred education specifically because they judged it would make
society and the state more prosperous in the long run.
>
I know that's out of fashion now, but it's yet another way I'm a
retrogrouch.
Instead of funneling taxpayer money into colleges, cut them off. Make
them drop the nonsense courses and fire the administrative parasites.
The more you give them the more they demand. Same as the federal
government.
-- C'est bonSoloman