I am being spoken about in this thread quite a lot, and it's had the effect that my position - by virtue of those arguing against me - has mostly been determined by those other people by their process of 3rd personing my perspective.
Unfortunately my positition has been grossly missunderstood, most notably by 5haz and Jakg who have consistently demonstrated such a poor grasp both of my position and of the subject at hand that it's no wonder they are fighting to get a university education - they need another 4 years of study just to cope with putting the latest XBox games onto the correct shelf at PC World for living.
I have not said education is a bad idea, I said it's nothing without experience and that students would be much wiser if they got some of that experience BEFORE university. And I have not said that education should be paid for up front by students. Intrepid spoke using my name to emphasise that point and that's not the case. Intrepid is a hardline conservative, I am a hardline liberal. We do not share this viewpoint, we just happen to be something of a coalition on this particular issue...
I think the students have a very generous settlement package and I think they should be very happy with it. The settlement package that they have - pay nothing back until you earn £21k, and the debt written off after so many years - is extremely forgiving!
If somebody wants to get themselves a university education - for whatever reason - and they believe that that deal is unfair in todays world then they are clearly to thick to get a degree, and a little bit of hard reality would serve them well.
I do think that we have far too many degree students in this country. This is because A levels have been reduced to such a meeningless standard now. I had a look at what is being taught in schools a few years ago, and it saddened me - the stuff exam students were expected to know I mostly covered in the 1st and 2nd year of senior school.
It's not the kids fault, the system has let them down because of a political need to show improvement... The way to do that is to dumb things down, "Our kids are 80% better educated now" based upon A levels issued rather than that piece of paper being worth what it's printed on.
For a university education to have any value at all we have to have a lot less places than we do now. University must not be the "norm". It should be for the top 3-5%.
If you're not in that top 3-5% then you're too thick.
Because the reality is there just aren't that many professional jobs.
We also need a long hard look at the degree courses people are doing, how is it possible to get a degree for so many industries which do not require degrees to work in.
As Jakg pointed out, my job as a software developer is - according to him, non academic. Apparently I don't need any theory to do my job. So I had a look online and the very first degree that I found happened to involve I.T. It uses the word internet and everything.
[code=Northampton Prospectus]
Media Production and Business ... Systems BA (Hons) (P3GM)[/code]
Is that a business course, a media course, or an I.T. course? It can't make up it's mind because it's so damned general - what of any value can be learned from a course that doesn't even know what it is meant to be teaching?
That was literally the first search result, and I could go on...
We need to get rid of all the green card courses and reduce prospectii to only those professions which require a degree: law, medicine & engineering.
Oh and to answer the earlier question by 5haz I think it was, on how do nVidia make their chips... Well firstly we dont have much of a silicon industry in the UK - but it so happens that one of my first jobs when I was about 19 was working in R&D. I didn't design chips, I was young and inexperienced, but I worked in the same division as guys that did... albeit they where based in other countries because as I said we dont have much of a silicon industry here. So theoretically, if we had a silicon industry, I could have learned from my peers and moved across. So yes, it's possible.
Personally I was never that interested in electronics and hardware, but in my previous job I worked next to a guy that was, he developed custom firmware and hardware solutions for sports telemetry equipment. I could have learned from him - if I had been interested, which I wasn't.
Oh, sorry did you think that the only way to get a job was to get through a job interview already knowing how to do the job?