by Jester on Thu Jan 18, 2007 12:17 am
Laxfan,
A couple other things occur to me, though, all coming from an educational basis, as I would all but ignore the possibility that religious anti-science attitudes are holding us back. They might well be, but I am struggling my way through an M.A. in higher education administration, and finding the leaks in the education ship are flooding the lower decks quickly.
One of the first things that comes up in everything education is the idea of student as consumer, where what the student wants to learn, and is willing to pay for, they will get. Sciences are unforgiving disciplines, since if the equation is wrong, you can't argue it right or have your parents chastise the professor into a better grade. Given the number of high schoolers entering colleges every year who require remedial math and basic writing correction, the thought that large numbers of them will go on to advanced technical fields is sadly laughable.
Sure, some money comes in to biology and chemistry departments from private enterprises doing research, but its a drop in the bucket, and rarely ever pays for more than the profitable material produced for the companies.
Why don't kids come in willing to take the medicine of the educators? My feeling is the Athens bit as well - pure entitlement. I have friends who teach all kinds of subjects in high schools, and they can't get the majority of the kids to stop texting each other in class, much less actually do trig.
The current generation of kids in schools has never had to worry about their nation being second place in anything. Why would they assume anything else was possible and work to avoid it?
Dan Henrich
St. Olaf Lacrosse '03
Coach - Coon Rapids Lacrosse