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Poll: Do you think education properly prepared you for your career?
- Yes
- No
- Dr. Peter Nigger Ph.D.
Do you think education properly prepared you for your career?
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2020-02-28 at 10:12 PM UTC
The Learning to Lead report showed students and teachers think the second level education system is struggling to keep up with the needs of the working world.
https://fora.ie/education-poll-5021090-Feb2020
“If we want Ireland to continue to provide a talent pool for the innovative companies based here, as well as improve the prospects of home-grown businesses, we must think hard about what they will need,” Alastair Blair, the country managing director at Accenture Ireland, said.
“We have a good education system in Ireland but, according to our report, there are challenges earlier in the education journey – particularly at second level – where the focus is more on aptitude than attitude,” he said.
Keeping this in mind, we are asking Fora readers this week: Do you think education properly prepared you for your career? -
2020-02-28 at 10:17 PM UTCeducation is for retards.
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2020-02-28 at 11:24 PM UTCFuck no
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2020-02-28 at 11:25 PM UTCThe modern education system is designed to create obedient workers not independent thinkers. That’s why most of school is just rote memorization and task repetition. It’s to prepare you for the assembly line.
My job requires critical thinking and improvisation -
2020-02-28 at 11:27 PM UTC
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2020-02-28 at 11:29 PM UTCFun fact, the modern US education system was created by Rockefeller.
I don't want a nation of thinkers, I want a nation of workers.
-John D. Rockefeller -
2020-02-28 at 11:29 PM UTC
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2020-02-28 at 11:34 PM UTC
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2020-02-29 at 2:01 AM UTCYes, my education helped. Half of my classes were “hands on”, and done in a clinical setting.
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2020-02-29 at 2:17 AM UTC
thread theme
Dr. Peter Nigger Ph.D. -
2020-02-29 at 3:03 AM UTCAt my school you can graduate with an "Individualized Studies" degree, which is like lol why didn't you just buy a house
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2020-02-29 at 4:21 AM UTCPrimary/secondary education? Hell no.
Tertiary education? Eh, kinda. CS as vocational training for being a code monkey is strange. It's kind of the training you need to be highly valuable, but not the training you need to be basically economically productive. So if you go and grind out the nuts and bolts of code slinging on the side it's great, but if you don't or can't then it's close to worthless. I imagine the same is true for a lot of fields. Maybe like engineers manage to put a significant part of what they learn in school to use even at a low level but like if you go get a degree in economics or mathematics or something your dayjob probably connects to vanishingly little of your education until you get pretty far on. -
2020-02-29 at 4:46 AM UTCthe answer is both yes and no.
education, low to high is a place of socialization, to foster connections with one another so that by the time you work your connected to the sons of those in power.
just look at your presidents and the one they hire to prominent positions.
and no if your just living in a small town and goes to non elite schools.
are any of your school mates became somebody ?
no ?
aldra -
2020-02-29 at 4:48 AM UTC
Originally posted by vindicktive vinny the answer is both yes and no.
education, low to high is a place of socialization, to foster connections with one another so that by the time you work your connected to the sons of those in power.
just look at your presidents and the one they hire to prominent positions.
and no if your just living in a small town and goes to non elite schools.
are any of your school mates became somebody ?
no ?
aldra
before television, i don't think anyone would understand what you mean by 'becoming somebody'. since obviously everybody is somebody. -
2020-02-29 at 4:53 AM UTC
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2020-02-29 at 4:58 AM UTC
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2020-02-29 at 8:12 AM UTCnot really
things like math, language and social skills are important to be able to integrate into society, but outside of those there's very little that's contributed to my ability to work.
I never went to uni but a guy I work with now is doing a masters in computing or something and it's incredibly far below the web development work he does. He's literally getting nothing out of it but a very expensive certificate -
2020-02-29 at 12:05 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra not really
things like math, language and social skills are important to be able to integrate into society, but outside of those there's very little that's contributed to my ability to work.
I never went to uni but a guy I work with now is doing a masters in computing or something and it's incredibly far below the web development work he does. He's literally getting nothing out of it but a very expensive certificate
If that's what passes for a master degree in Australia IDK what to tell you. I don't have a masters but my imouto has a bachelor in biopharmaceutical sciences and is doing a neuro oriented master. She had to learn R and Python just for the data science part of her education.
I guess brains beats computers in complexity, but it won't be long now. -
2020-03-01 at 7:36 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra not really
things like math, language and social skills are important to be able to integrate into society, but outside of those there's very little that's contributed to my ability to work.
I never went to uni but a guy I work with now is doing a masters in computing or something and it's incredibly far below the web development work he does. He's literally getting nothing out of it but a very expensive certificate
you'll be so jelly of him when he becomes your supervisor because he went to the same U as your future boss. -
2020-03-01 at 7:52 PM UTCedited for privacy