Ladas wrote:
Xequecal wrote:
Colleges are just cutting back on courses that don't have practical application. I imagine this makes degrees a lot easier to get, as learning things outside of your area of interest is far harder than learning in your chosen field. The hardest classes for me in college by far were the English classes, there is no comparison.
To the contrary, I suspect most colleges are extending the "freshman" introductory classes to standardize the undergraduate learning experience at the expense of field specific classes, and those field specific classes are getting shifted in "professional" degree programs, such as Masters programs.
Undergraduate degrees have filled the gap left by high school education when HS became remedial years for what should have been learned in middle schools.
I find it very difficult to believe that the majority of eighth graders can conceivably master Calculus I. There's no way to do this without resorting to an extreme version of the German or Japanese educational system where successful students are expected to make school their entire lives and starts tracking the "failures" who can't handle this extreme load towards menial jobs as early as age 13.
Also, the German economic system makes me think this chain of events is unlikely. If you think an undergraduate degree is too necessary in the US, then, well, you've never been to Germany. There is a massive glass ceiling in virtually every line of employment for those who do not have one. In the US, you might get hired on the basis of experience with no degree. In Germany, this does not happen, ever. No degree, no job. If your papers are not in order you are ****, sorry. That's why German schools drive the kids so hard, everyone KNOWS that if you fail to get that college degree, it's a dead end for your life there.