I have to say, Black Mamba, that's the strangest reading of the purpose of College I've ever heard, and I'm still trying to parse it. My initial thought is if that's how you really view it the implications would be that it's incredibly inefficient in the long run. If you're already a highly skilled worker, why are we forcing you to go through 4 years for essentially nothing? I mean if you literally learn nothing that qualifies you for a job, just spend four years showing your dedication to something, then that's really just inefficient as all hell to everyone involved.
I think viewing tertiary education through the sole lens of employment is the wrong way of look at it. Education is much bigger than that, and has far reaching implications for the well-being of society.
Those 4 years are your signal to employees that you're a high skilled worker. It's an adverse selection problem
Spence won a Nobel prize for devising this model, btw. http://staff.bath.ac.uk/ecsjgs/Teaching/Advanced Microeconomics/Articles/spence.pdf
Here, this seems to be a piece on signalling in adverse selection scenario from a lecture, though in more mathematical terms.
http://economics.mit.edu/files/552
I mean, I get what you're saying as far as adverse selection. It's just really odd that you think you gain absolutely 100% nothing that qualifies you for a job through college. That college is literally just to help employers select good from bad employees that were already good or bad in high school. It seems weird, and it's the first time I've heard anyone at all say that. And if that truly were the case then we've got a lot of work to do, because we shouldn't be sending people to school to gain literally nothing but an indicator that they were a good worker 4 years ago.
In the fields of computer science and law, colleges are in no small part an expensive sorting function.I mean, I get what you're saying as far as adverse selection. It's just really odd that you think you gain absolutely 100% nothing that qualifies you for a job through college. That college is literally just to help employers select good from bad employees that were already good or bad in high school. It seems weird, and it's the first time I've heard anyone at all say that. And if that truly were the case then we've got a lot of work to do, because we shouldn't be sending people to school to gain literally nothing but an indicator that they were a good worker 4 years ago.
In the fields of computer science and law, colleges are in no small part an expensive sorting function.
It's not their intent, but it's their function.
Expensive in terms of processing time or memory footprint? I mean, what, are they using Bubble Sort or something?In the fields of computer science and law, colleges are in no small part an expensive sorting function.
It's not their intent, but it's their function.
This is a strange approach. You're basically arguing the libertarian argument that whatever humans decide collectively is always right even if it's inefficient. Very weird considering I thought you were a socialist.
Employees use universities to help them figure out which people to hire. If every single person goes to university, then employees are guessing and this is highly inefficient. granted they guess now too, but the risk of being wrong is a lot lower. It would be inefficient to just have everyone go to college.
At the same time, even just allowing it free to all would make it inefficient as those who shouldn't be there are.
I do agree university is good for everyone in a vacuum because the more educated and the more experienced the better, but there are downsides and those are related to the issue of signalling.
Again, the issues of finance can be dealt with in numerous ways. People entering massive debt is not the way it should go but neither is the other extreme. As usual, the sensible solution lies in the middle.
I think I meant to quote Byakuya769's post.
And for some reason I thought you come for a different background, but I'm terrible at keeping track of those things.
p.s.
You should read the Onion's Biden book(ish).
Vis a vis nothing but your avatar.
I said there are exceptions. Surely you gain in STEM if you're becoming an engineer, for instance. I mean, you have to learn calculus otherwise you'll come across situations you wouldn't know how to figure out.
Let's face it, it's mostly a time to have sex, smoke pot, drink, go to concerts, and dick around while studying (don't get me wrong, I loved my time in college).
Employers use universities to help them figure out which people to hire. If every single person goes to university, then employees are guessing and this is highly inefficient. granted they guess now too, but the risk of being wrong is a lot lower. It would be inefficient to just have everyone go to college.
I'll leave law degree for the lawyers, but for computer science, 4 years of coding will prepare you much better than 4 years of college for most of the jobs out there.Computer Science and Law in college don't actually teach you anything?
Computer Science and Law in college don't actually teach you anything?
That isn't a libertarian argument. It's a collectivist argument, but it's not the one I'm making in any event. I'm not talking at all about what is right or wrong. I was responding to your judgment about what is right or wrong that was disguised as an objective assertion. Whether any given resource is "misallocated" is an individual judgment. There is no such thing as an objectively "correct" allocation. There are only allocations upon which humans pass individual judgment. In other words, if you tell me there is a misallocation of resources, I'll tell you to let me be the judge of that. And in a society, we are all the judge of it. And in a democratic society, we can decide what the "correct" allocation is. We can have disagreements about allocations, but we can't have correct and incorrect allocations.
That is what employers use universities for. It is not what students use universities for nor what society uses them for.
It's inefficient to give everybody health care. It's inefficient to have parks. It's inefficient to give everybody education through high school. It's inefficient to have libraries.
So what if it's inefficient? Again, however, nobody is suggesting that everybody in the society attend college, so I don't know why you keep running back to that. We are saying that every qualified individual who wants to attend college ought to be able to attend college for free (or even be paid for it). Nobody is talking about making university education mandatory or standardless.
I don't give a shit about signalling, but allowing qualified people who want to attend college to do so for free will not have any affect at all on "signalling." The only change will be that people leaving college will not be encumbered with debt that constitutes a severe drag on the economy.
The middle being free university education (as opposed to the other extreme of paying people for attending university, which I personally believe we ought to do).
It's a good way to guarantee you're not going to stir shit up, no sir, gotta keep making those payments so my credit is good so I can get a loan and buy a house so I don't get homeless when I'm old.I'm going to graduate law school with about $200k in student loan debt in May.
My salary as a clerk, which I will be doing for a year after I graduate? $49k. LOL.
I'll leave law degree for the lawyers, but for computer science, 4 years of coding will prepare you much better than 4 years of college for most of the jobs out there.
And it's not that they don't teach you anything, it's comparing university's way of acquiring the tools of the trade with the readily available alternatives.
Yes, there are jobs out there that require strong academic background, but they are few and far between (slight hyperbole, I think, didn't ran the proverbial numbers) everything else, it's stuff you can pick on your on.
p.s.
Not that it matter, but I'm for the most part a product of academia.
I'm sure you can throw medicine and law in there as well easily, as well as a host of other specialist areas.
Just because some people do that doesn't mean that it is "mostly a time" to do that. If that's what people are going to college for in the US, then the system is fundamentally broken, and obviously your "money is the arbiter" approach is the wrong one.
There are ways to filter candidates for the suitability, interest and benefit of college other than ability to pay.
Er, I'm not sure you have an accurate picture of the process here. If more people had college degrees, it would not add any additional overhead to the candidate filtering and selection process for my business.
I, for one, don't disagree that college does not do much to prepare one for skilled employment in narrow terms. But I don't have a problem with that, because I don't think that's what university education ought to do in the first place. University is where people who want a liberal education should go to become educated. It is not a means to an end, it is the end.
(Not trying to imply that you would disagree with any of that, mind you. Of course, also not implying that you agree. Your post just prompted the thought.)
In the abstract I wholeheartedly agree, but I', not sure how much you can apply that to something like computer science.I, for one, don't disagree that college does not do much to prepare one for skilled employment in narrow terms. But I don't have a problem with that, because I don't think that's what university education ought to do in the first place. University is where people who want a liberal education should go to become educated. It is not a means to an end, it is the end.
(Not trying to imply that you would disagree with any of that, mind you. Of course, also not implying that you agree. Your post just prompted the thought.)
You don't need a university to become educated...
and how much do you even remember from university? 5%? 10%? At some point, education outside what you directly use is just superficial.
Imagine a world with no college. Everyone stops at high school. How would you choose to hire someone?
I guess I'm part of that "almost nobody" thenNo, it's what students use them for as well. Almost nobody goes to college to get that superficial stuff. It's all to get a good job.
Before a pathway to citizenship can happen, the group says that new border security measures first must take effect, including an increase in the number of unmanned aerial vehicles and agents at the border, new rules tracking people entering the country on temporary visas and the creation of a commission of southwestern political and community leaders to ensure the new enforcement mechanisms take effect.
As those security measures take effect, the proposal says, illegal immigrants would be forced to register with the government, undergo a background check, and pay a fine and back taxes so they can obtain a legal status on a probationary basis. That would allow them to live and work legally in the United States, unless they have committed serious crimes, which could subject them to deportation. Those who have obtained probationary legal status would not be allowed to access federal benefits.
After the enforcement measures take effect, those who have obtained their probationary legal status would be required to undergo a series of requirements — including learning English and civics and undergoing further background checks — before being able to obtain permanent residency. The proposal insists that those who have entered the country illegally would not get preferential treatment over legal immigrants playing by the rules.
Details from the bipartisan senate immigration plan are out:
Bah, I knew I shouldn't have clicked, now I'm sad (as if the whole thing wasn't sad enough already).The Israel thread.....
Details from the bipartisan senate immigration plan are out:
So we're going to do this whole mess of surveillance and bureaucracy and make our future fellow citizens' life miserable just so that those who were on the wrong side of history could feel better about themselves?Details from the bipartisan senate immigration plan are out:
The Israel thread.....
You personally should consider that thread as the "don't" section of the posting manual.Yup.
hahahahahathe call is coming from inside the house!
You personally should consider that thread as the "don't" part of the posting manual.
Oh watched 60 minutes, 2 things -
a. Hillary is running.
One doesn't always need an institution to become liberally educated, but institutions are indeed useful for liberal education.
You see no value in liberal education. I do. We are obviously going to disagree, then, on how it ought to be allocated.
mario said:Pretty much exactly the same way. People would apply with their resume including educational records, work experience if any, extracurricular stuff, samples/portfolio, references etc. We'd screen on the basis of that, interview and test as appropriate, and hire the most qualified candidate that was above our minimum standard.
There would be no effective difference in the process, though of course in a world without college the nature of the company and roles within would be fundamentally different (in a world without college my company would probably not exist).
cooljeanius said:I guess I'm part of that "almost nobody" then
Details from the bipartisan senate immigration plan are out:
You're going to make Neil Young proud, just like Kurt did.How lovingly condescending of you. Let me feel free to not take your advice.
(Unless of course I get "forced" to, which happens to people in Forum vs. 1 situations.)
People who are not going to run for president don't get the leader of the free world say to America how awesome they are on television.Haha, can you elaborate?
My point was, without college there would be a much larger pool of candidates and a lot of them unqualified but hard to distinguish from the qualified people. Companies would be wasting a lot of resources on mistakes. Again, if your business requires an actual portfolio of samples of what they do it might be a business that doesn't get affected. An author hiring an illustrator doesn't need to see their academic record at all, for instance. Just what they can draw.
You're going to make Neil Young proud, just like Kurt did.
too soon? nah, not too soon.
People who are not going to run for president don't get the leader of the free world say to America how awesome they are on television.
Goodnight sweet prince, the forum was never meant for one as crazy as you.Sorry, I missed the reference. Please, if you want to take a pot shot, at least let me in on it, too.
You included the word "all" before:Is it really not about a job for you?
Sure, it's about a job, but it's also about all that "superficial stuff", too.No, it's what students use them for as well. Almost nobody goes to college to get that superficial stuff. It's all to get a good job.
Why are you going all the way to without college, though? Shouldn't you be pointing to a hypothetical if everyone went to college type scenario? That's not going to be the same as eliminating college at all. If everyone that wanted to could go to college you'd still be able to weed people out by qualifications (did they take classes that put them above others for this particular position?), interest (is their major or accomplishments close to what we're trying to do at this company?), overall accomplishments (they'd have more time for internships and other accomplishments at college), overall performance in college, possibly portfolio of work (depending on what it is you're going into), or even their own testing for their particular job. I don't get how suddenly with a wider crop of people to choose from this becomes crippling for employers... there's more than enough criteria they could use to figure out who might be the best pick.
cooljeanius said:You included the word "all" before: