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mediocrity of teaching at high tuition universities - Printable Version +- DL Truth: Distance Learning Truth (https://www.dltruth.com) +-- Forum: Discussion (https://www.dltruth.com/forum-6.html) +--- Forum: General Education Discussions (https://www.dltruth.com/forum-10.html) +--- Thread: mediocrity of teaching at high tuition universities (/thread-1294.html) |
mediocrity of teaching at high tuition universities - ham - 01-15-2012 The item has been mentioned here often. Are traditional universities just a haven for politicking leftists? Hungry contractors eager to build the fifth indoor swimming pool? Sleazy coaches paid fortunes to teach Jethro and Rufus how to chase a ball? What concerns me most, though, is the mediocrity of teaching imparted...and i am not referring here to any political bias. Since itunes university, academicearth and other venues have made many courses from many traditional universities available for free, everybody can freely judge the quality of such courses. I personally have followed many over the years. As one who has been involved with learning over a long period, i can say that none was excellent; most were mediocre; quite a few were weird, sub-par or both. The toss of coins that determined whether your course was to be just mediocre or even sub-par was the same whether Yale or Wallawalla community college was concerned. The luck of the draw may be less important if all that's at stake are a few dollars to buy a copy -maybe used- of THE GREAT COURSES or THE TEACHING COMPANY products, whose average quality is much higher than the average at Yale or the like, as far as I could say. It becomes paramount when one is paying a fortune and getting in debt for life to attend supposed platinum universities. It's like the teenager who buys a pair of shoes to brag about...they are made in Vietnam, are crummy and uncomfortable but he paid them 299$ only to be hispals' envy. RE: mediocrity of teaching at high tuition universities - Albert Hidel - 01-18-2012 (01-15-2012, 08:26 PM)ham Wrote: Are traditional universities just a haven for politicking leftists? Yes. (01-15-2012, 08:26 PM)ham Wrote: The toss of coins that determined whether your course was to be just mediocre or even sub-par was the same whether Yale or Wallawalla community college was concerned. Yes. So why pay for Yale when the same or better is available at the local JC or state uni for 1/10th the price or less? Some people need a Cadillac to go grocery shopping, the rest of us do fine with a Ford. The more choices available the more people see that "RA" and "Quality" are not correlated concepts. RE: mediocrity of teaching at high tuition universities - Virtual Bison - 01-18-2012 There is an old expression I heard many times: Those who cannot do teach. And its not entirely incorrect. Does anyone think that the best entrepreneurs are professors at business schools? Or what about the best artist, journalists, engineers, doctors etc etc etc... People who are drawn towards teaching at a University level tend to be those looking for easy success. Academia works like this, get a degree, get a masters and then a PhD and latch on to a good school. Publish a few books (and use the slave labor of a few graduate assistants), get your tenure and voila you got it made! You can be the biggest dick on earth but with that tenure it does not matter. Go ahead and say that Stalin was a great leader or that Holocaust never happened (like a professor at Northwestern actually did), it does not matter. I got tenure and you do not so fuck you!!!
RE: mediocrity of teaching at high tuition universities - Armando Ramos - 01-25-2012 The great Walter Williams explains today's education decline. Schools of education are "academic slums," failing due to "harebrained thinking, coupled with multicultural nonsense" aimed at students "lacking in academic skills." Quote:Schools of Education RE: mediocrity of teaching at high tuition universities - Martin Eisenstadt - 01-26-2012 Walter Williams Wrote:Education majors are woefully lacking in academic skills. This is discussed further in another thread, but I couldn't help but notice this unfortunate lady fit the "education major" profile described in Williams' article. Quote:Negative Experience (1 review)http://www.bbb.org/phoenix/Business-Reviews/schools-academic-colleges-and-universities/grand-canyon-university-in-phoenix-az-34001345/customer-reviews/ RE: mediocrity of teaching at high tuition universities - ham - 01-26-2012 Quote:I am an education major at Grand Canyon U. Is that the short classes give you no time to set up observations in a timly manor. The councilers tell you that you have a list of over 10 to 15 options of observing a public, priviate, schools and tutoring services. The class requirements and teacher says it must be a title one school. Public Title one schools in my city would take as long or longer as your class last. this puts you in a bind becasue even if the teacher gives you and incomplete and gives you more time, your next class starts and it has observation requirements too. That's American English, rait? |