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University is messed up (in my opinion)
I think that education is extremely important, but I think that the University system is corrupt.
I studied my brains off for a math test. I expected a very high grade, but I ended up with a marginal pass. Back in high school, if I studied really hard for a test, I would end up with a very high grade. I have another complaint... My friend would like to study business, but the University is forcing him to perform extremely well in mathematics. My friend dislikes math. Mathematics is not relevant to business. Let's be honest. Business students don't use a lot of math. If the University told him that he had to perform extremely well in a business course, now THAT would make a lot more sense... Freedom of speech... University is turning students into robots (caffeine-addicts). Society has been fooled into believing that University is the only direction towards success in life. But Bill Gates dropped out of University and he is very successful. I can't believe that University is actually getting my tuition fees. I'm pissed off. I sound stoned right now. But according to my experience, University really does suck. If you think that exams can measure a student's capabilities, I invite you to read this: are examinations a fair way of testing our knowledge? | Debatewise Where great minds differ |
I wanted to answer, but then I read your other posts and realised you're a joker.
Good one.:) |
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I think this is the first time I've heard anyone say that math isn't important to business. :rofl:
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Wow, a higher level education than high school is more difficult than high school. That's crazy, man, there's definitely something going on.
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yo math is absolutely important in business dood
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To offer a serious response
I do believe because of the high saturation that schools are more likely to expect "over achievement" though I can do nothing but speculate that this wasn't always the case. Perhaps it's simply a lot more students who wouldn't otherwise be attending university are now being "forced" to. I do think some form of education reform is overdue, but don't dare offer any insight as to what this would entail. I think classes should offer multiple forms of grading.Students who are adept at retaining vast amounts of information should score high marks on tests alone. Students who struggle in this capacity should be allowed alternative, but equally grueling, measures in which to score high marks. For a math course this could be taking 20 quizzes over the course of the semester as oppose to one final, or something along those lines. Personally, I find the variability in professor's kind off frustrating. You may have an extremely difficult course that is relatively manageable because of an understanding and competent professor. You may, on the other hand, have a relatively familiar course that is needlessly complicated because of a incompetent, non understanding professor. I recommend online courses. You don't have to attend lectures, you get to interact with students without the air of superficiality(I'm going to sit at this table because of hawt chix) and get to dictate your own pace to a larger extant. I think online courses is where this reform may come into place. |
Obviously you need to comprehend basic math functions to survive in the business world, but some of the math courses that universities require students to take in order to graduate are a bit ridiculous. I'm technically a liberal arts student, and my degree program and future career will have little to do with the course I'm required to take (finite mathematics). I really don't understand the logic behind it, or why other, more sensible, math courses can't be taken instead. I would think a class like statistics would be much more beneficial to a liberal arts major planning to work in the public sector than finite or calculus.
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