Konosuba
New Member
This was sparked by the TA complaint post.
I personally can't find the validity in liberal arts degrees, specifically English, Art and Philosophy. That isn't to say what is produced by those fields is bad but that education in them is egregious. A writer can learn tips to write but they don't become a writer by studying, they become a writer by writing. Mankind doesn't hash out their differences in carefully timed debates but in everyday life. Great works of art may move people but they move through inner-reflection and interpretation.
What is the point of having a liberal arts degree? Does it provide for others? Does it make the world a better place? Does it make bridges, create new technology or truly provide anything in a pragmatic sense?
What about psychology? Does one become a healer or has one always been a healer?
But someone can write an incredible book with no previous experience or education and in fact those who have are often given honorable scholarships.
The amount of science, technology, engineering and mathematics students is surprisingly low in the world because they are not easy fields. I can write seven twenty-page papers on seven different novels if I need to but I find it is a much harder to determine the final amount of force a particle traveling around a set gravity with air resistance... See where this is going? Science isn't something pulled from the ether.
So RPN, why should anyone go to school for a non-STEM program? Why do liberal arts thrive as a field of study? What use is an " economics" degree versus a degree in engineering ? Shouldn't colleges start concentrating on what really matters : STEM degrees. STEM= science , technology, engineering, mathematics .
After all an engineer is worth their weight in gold today versus someone who can spout off the common sense mechanics of economics.
I personally can't find the validity in liberal arts degrees, specifically English, Art and Philosophy. That isn't to say what is produced by those fields is bad but that education in them is egregious. A writer can learn tips to write but they don't become a writer by studying, they become a writer by writing. Mankind doesn't hash out their differences in carefully timed debates but in everyday life. Great works of art may move people but they move through inner-reflection and interpretation.
What is the point of having a liberal arts degree? Does it provide for others? Does it make the world a better place? Does it make bridges, create new technology or truly provide anything in a pragmatic sense?
What about psychology? Does one become a healer or has one always been a healer?
But someone can write an incredible book with no previous experience or education and in fact those who have are often given honorable scholarships.
The amount of science, technology, engineering and mathematics students is surprisingly low in the world because they are not easy fields. I can write seven twenty-page papers on seven different novels if I need to but I find it is a much harder to determine the final amount of force a particle traveling around a set gravity with air resistance... See where this is going? Science isn't something pulled from the ether.
So RPN, why should anyone go to school for a non-STEM program? Why do liberal arts thrive as a field of study? What use is an " economics" degree versus a degree in engineering ? Shouldn't colleges start concentrating on what really matters : STEM degrees. STEM= science , technology, engineering, mathematics .
After all an engineer is worth their weight in gold today versus someone who can spout off the common sense mechanics of economics.