
http://www.spectator.co.uk/2017/01/what ... education/
Oh, what an excellent article!Conoflex wrote: ↑Mon Jan 09, 2017 4:05 pm Yes I know admin asked for no links, but this is a very easily digestible and thoughtful piece that seems to hit a few nails on the head. It certainly struck me as typical of many people and views I have encountered since the UK voted to leave![]()
http://www.spectator.co.uk/2017/01/what ... education/
I don't regret not doing the university thing - I started work at 16, started a business at 30 and retired at 42.Conoflex wrote: ↑Tue Jan 10, 2017 12:01 pm I had a house guest recently -a product of the modern education system and society
She got the GCE's she got the degree, she has a good job (indeed all de rigeur amongst the aspiring middle classes) but doesn't have a clue how the world works and has never been challenged to think for herself in her entire life. Lots of opinions on everything but when questioned about them just not able to justify them other than believe that they were right because that was what she had been taught. Linking the various tenets made most of her opinions self contradictory, and by the end of the evening I thought her head was going to explode.
By the time she pays off her student loan she will we about 35 and still won't be able to get a mortgage on her salary in the area where she rents/lives and works and will struggle to be able to afford to have kids (not that is a woman's only role of course, but it is an social necessity ) She and her boyfriend's combined income would not buy a bedsit in London - to pay their mortgage on top of their other living costs would leave them with virtually no disposable income. They are very happy, but it strikes me as a bit of a rat race existence and they will probably have to work into their 70's. Without the bank of mummy and daddy (and they both have money in there) then I wouldn't fancy their lot.
I had a very privileged education, but I learned more working in a bar than I ever did in a lecture hall and the most intelligent people I have ever met never went to university !!!!! If it wasn't for the fact I never had to study to pass exams and university was to me in effect a 4 year paid holiday (you used to get grants and no tuition fees) I would have considered the biggest waste of time of my life in a "learning"sense. Given that I spent pretty much every day getting up to all sorts of "extra curricular" activities that Oliver Reid would have been proud of I am lucky to say it was time well spent. I never used my education at all, started work at 27, and retired at 48 (should have been 40, but I got married and my overheads went up), never went bust, paid all my debts and treated my staff extraordinarily well.
Most of my contemporaries are still working away at their degree based professions and will have to do so until the are at least 65- but at least they could buy their house and afford to pay for their kids. The debt saddled products of the Blair/EU social engineering project gone wrong will have to work until they are about 75 with less reward than my generation had - at least most of them don't have the gumption to work out they got shafted![]()
I remember reading about a huge surge in students taking forensic science degrees because of the number of 'crime' programmes on TV that featured them.Conoflex wrote: ↑Tue Jan 10, 2017 12:49 pm The above link contained the following quote
"They think that because they studied English literature at Durham they understand the world better than a plumber in Croydon"
Not only is that highly unlikely, it should also be noted that any plumber worth his salt anywhere in Britain earns a lot more than an English teacher as well![]()
As "Judge Smails" brilliantly said in Caddyshack when Danny said he couldn't afford to go to university: "The world needs ditch diggers too"
We probably now have more British lawyers than British brickies in the UK- which explains a lot when you think about![]()
Indeed... you can pretty much guarantee that is taken out to study a course with 'studies' in the title will never be repaid...Conoflex wrote: ↑Tue Jan 10, 2017 1:27 pm An "EU national" friend of mine in Cyprus sent his child to the UK for higher education. The course studied is one that does not have enough graduates to supply the necessary demand for them in the UK , so the NHS paid all the tuition fees for this course (about £24,000 in total?)
The child in question has not worked in the UK, does not want to work in the UK and never has to work in the UK- these skills are sought in various private clinics throughout the world and not one penny of those earnings will ever go the the British exchequer
I have no problem with those involved in taking advantage of this because that is the "rules", but the rules are a joke- in this case an expensive one at the UK tax payers expense.
Not applicable in this case, but the number of student loans that are never going to be repaid for all sorts of reasons is going through the roof - much of the outstanding and growing £82 billion is going to have to be written off![]()
Thank you Conoflex. Interesting article.Conoflex wrote: ↑Mon Jan 09, 2017 4:05 pm Yes I know admin asked for no links, but this is a very easily digestible and thoughtful piece that seems to hit a few nails on the head. It certainly struck me as typical of many people and views I have encountered since the UK voted to leave![]()
http://www.spectator.co.uk/2017/01/what ... education/
Road Warrior wrote: ↑Sun Jan 29, 2017 8:37 pm I spoke to a lot of ex pat Brits in Cyprus concerning the Brexit result, to a man (or woman), they were delighted at the result, their reason, they said, there are too many foreigners, in the UK. I asked them if they understood "irony".
I'd have to say that the evidence I've seen from universities in the UK and the US recently would indicate precisely the opposite...
I'm sure that used to be the case... But now we have targets for university admission and degrees in pointless subjects with names that often end in 'studies'...OhSusana wrote: ↑Sun Jan 29, 2017 8:57 pm Read some articles about IQ, intelligence, and degrees.
- rather than the evidence that you have "seen".
There is lots of info on the internet.
There are some incredibly intelligent people without degrees, and some incredibly stupid people with degrees - but -
but -
given a million people... on average, there is a strong correlation between people with degrees and intelligence.
Most people go to university to learn. Only a small proportion get involved in the political side of things. This is why the loons get away with daft rulings. Everybody else there just gets on with what they have to do.cyprusgrump wrote: ↑Sun Jan 29, 2017 8:49 pmI'd have to say that the evidence I've seen from universities in the UK and the US recently would indicate precisely the opposite...![]()
Jazz hands? No staging? Safe areas? Banning 'red tops'...? Are these really the intelligent people that our future will depend on...?
This is very, very true.