Posted on 02/06/2012 4:51:08 PM PST by gabriellah
On January 27th, 2012 at the University of Michigan, President Obama outlined his plan to cut public college and university costs down by working with states, universities and Congress. Meanwhile, he also emphasized that he wants America to be a big, bold, generous country where everybody gets a fair shot, everybody is doing their fair share, everybody is playing by the same set of rules.
We can all attest to the rising costs that come with attending college, but does everybody need to go to college after all? Sure, people should get a fair shot and be judged based on their merits when it comes to college admissions. But do all Americans need to waste away their lives learning theories far removed from reality or pursue purposeless majors such as Ethnic Studies or Womens Studies?
Although college for all sounds like a marvelous principle, it is an idealist concept that countries like Sweden are paying a heavy price for pursuing. As Per Bylund explains in The Modern Welfare State: Leading the Way on the Road to Serfdom, many young people were gently pushed into free (tax-financed) higher education programs to get an (additional) advanced degree while receiving grants and heavily subsidized student loans to cover living expenses as Sweden became progressively more socialist (43).
Because the government heavily invested in public-sector services such as higher education and discouraged low-productivity labor and firms from the labor market, Swedes came to regard higher education as a right, not a privilege (43). As a result, Sweden collapsed as an individualistic, self-reliant nation and thus, transformed into a welfare state favoring government dependency over individual achievement.
But what happens when everybody goes to college and low-productivity labor is discouraged? A weak society that lacks a strong workforce enriched with basic trades emerges. Without such a workforce, a society lacks the very self-reliance needed to produce and sustain economic prosperity. America is experiencing such a crisis as both middle and high schools continually do away with courses focusing on basic trades and instead promote the need for everybody to go to college.
High schools in America used to prepare adolescents for successful futures by requiring their students to participate in woodworking, auto shops, and home economics classes. Even though some high schools still continue to offer these essential courses, many have discontinued them.
In Oregon, teacher Glenn Campbell is trying to prevent the Hillsboro School District from closing the last auto shop existing in the district. Concerned about Americas decaying quality of STEM education and lack of manufacturing jobs, Campbell says that if we dont design it here, what are the odds were going to build it here?
In 2010, Superintendent Shawn Himes of Enid Public Schools in Oklahoma announced woodworking would be cut from high schools due to budget cuts. As both of these courses are continuing to disappear from high school campuses across the country, Americas young men are being deprived of the skills needed to develop industries that produce real economic growth.
In addition, home economics, which emphasizes interior design, commercial cooking, consumer education, sewing, and other essential skills need for successful homemaking, is also being cut from K-12 education. This year, two middle schools in South Orange and Maplewood, New Jersey will have their cooking and sewing classes replaced with a technology course. By doing away with home economics, such schools are depriving young people of basic skills needed to be a functioning adult. Learning how to operate technology is important as well, but what happens when technology fails, and the future generation would have to operate without a technological device to do everything for them? Everyday activities that used to be considered standard have puzzled the dependent, entitled young people of America because we rid our schools of programs not college focused.
Instead of discouraging basic trades, K-12 education should promote trade schools as an alternative to college education, because not everybody wants or needs to go to college. Trade schools are not only perfect for people who want to directly enter the workforce, but are also important for feeding real GDP.
The author has Utopian education stars blinding his eyes, and he wants to force, **you** the taxpayer, to pay for his idealistic social-planning daydreams.
I have a better idea: Abolish government owned and run, K-12, socialist-entitlement schooling! Abolish compulsory attendance laws.
Reforming a government owned and run, socialist-entitlement, K-12 school is like trying to reform an abortion center.
I’m warning you right now that if the professors don’t make enough money, the cabana boys are going to start going hungry!
where everybody gets a fair shot, everybody is doing their fair share, everybody is playing by the same set of rules.
We are doing all that sh!t...except for the 47% who aren’t doing their “fayerrrr sharrre”.
Gawd...what in insufferable ass.
FUBO!
The American university student is the new Sharecropper in our country.
Bes be bowin and scrapin to de ol man professor plantation massah lessen he throw you off de land. He need dat new BMW.
‘Meanwhile, he also emphasized that he wants America to be a big, bold, generous country where everybody gets a fair shot, everybody is doing their fair share, everybody is playing by the same set of rules.’
Marxist code for equal outcomes, NOT equal opportunities.
Except, of course, for the Commissars,such as Obama himself; for the Commissars, it’s always extra privileges and all premium shops closed to the proles.
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