Today’s Wall Street Journal has a good article on graduate student debt http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303949704579459803223202602 It gave me an idea that I posted as a comment. I haven’t carefully thought it through but here it is. (If you regularly read this blog, you can skip the third paragraph.) “…”…if we had some sort of underwriting standards…” …[the author […]
“Common Core” or “Missing Core”?
I posted this comment on today’s New York Times’ Op-Ed http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/23/opinion/sunday/a-common-core-for-all-of-us.html?ref=opinion&_r=0 “The discussion about the Common Core is interesting, both politically and intellectually. But without the “missing core”, all of these discussions and disagreements about the nature and goal of education, won’t matter. What is this “missing core”? Call it integrity, scrupples, whatever. But, until we, as […]
The Atlantic Again. They Point Out That If You Are Big Enough, Who Cares?
That is what I think touting that we have a high percentage of high-performing students implies. (The link is the same article as the previous post.) My comment should make all clear. “Did I read that right? “…taking more math and science courses…” is evidence of learning? Then is “…investing more with Bernie…” evidence of […]
The Atlantic Publishes Yet Another Misleading Article Equating “Degree” with “Education”
Here is the link http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2014/03/the-myth-of-the-science-and-engineering-shortage/284359/#comments My comment should make it clear that what the confusion is. “The article talks about “…college-educated information technology workers under age 30…”. I don’t disagree that there is no shortage of “…college-DEGREED…” STEM workers under age 30 but the evidence is overwhelming that “college-degreed” does not equal “college-educated”. Colleges and […]
I Hope Princeton and its New President are Listening
I commented on the article http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304756104579453570560473730 . As I have posted before, I am concerned that Princeton faculty don’t see what is happening as clearly as the University of Chicago faculty saw in the nineties. (See my post Princeton Giving Up on Using Grades As Motivation and Feedback? for Princeton and “Content Deflation” Part II: University of […]
NYTimes Op-Ed Has Interesting Details On College Costs to Families
The op-ed is titled “A Quick Way to Cut Costs”. Though I don’t think it is realistic, or the right approach (I describe why in my comment, which is copied below.), I think it is excelllent for the information it contains, especially about the Expected Family Contribution. I recommend it. Here is the link. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/21/opinion/a-quick-way-to-cut-college-costs.html Here […]
From the New Yorker: Successful Book Publicist (And Author) Describes Reading High Scoring SAT Essays: “Horrified
WSJ: Pressured to State Facts, Schools Give Excuses and Questionable Data
There is a good article in today’s WSJ: http://online.wsj.com/public/page/reader-comments.html?baseDocId=SB10001424052702303546204579435050684294642&headline=Colleges%20Are%20Tested%20by%20Push%20to%20Prove%20Graduates’%20Career%20Success I commented as follows: from my experience as a former professor (I taught math at Wsshington University at St. Louis.), I read the opening paragraphs of this article as follows: “Marketing and sales departments of universities tout their schools qualities, but are unwilling to release data […]
Do Princeton’s Administrators Pass Their Letters Through the “Office of Communications” Before Publication?
It seems like it from this, http://dailyprincetonian.com/opinion/2014/03/letter-from-the-editor-increasing-transparency-in-guest-submissions/. If so, why? and what changes happen to the letters? Does the Office just help adminstrators? Are the administrators encouraged to seek help from “public relations”? Is the “Office of Communications” just a marketing department? I don’t know but it seems worrisome. Here is my comment. ” This letter does a good […]