By Professor Doom
I focus on higher
education, but it’s a simple fact that what goes on in the public (more
accurately, government) schools before college has a major influence in what
happens in college.
There are many
reasons 90% of the
coursework in community colleges isn’t college work, is
generally 9th grade or lower material, but the sad fact is: if high
school graduates really learned 9th grade material, we wouldn’t be
teaching (nearly so much) 9th
grade work in “higher” education. Most students in higher education are high
school graduates, after all.
The government
schools have been failing, and failing extravagantly, since their inception,
not simply by failing to teach the things that used to be commonly known, but
by graduating even the students that fail to learn under the ever reducing
standards. Depending on what one means by “illiterate,” a large
percentage, likely more than half, the students moving on to community college
are illiterate…and these illiterates are all high school graduates.
Part of the
justification for the ever lowering of standards is the public schools complain
they “have to take everyone,” including problem students, often students with
very serious problems which drain resources from the system, making it hard to
do a good job (those
rising autism rates, combined with parents of such children consistently
saying their kids were fine before the vaccinations, are placing an ever higher
drain, by the way, as my friends in public education assure me). I can’t help
but laugh a little at this excuse—before public education got serious in the 20th
century, literacy rates were much higher, and a casual examination of popular written
works in the 19th century shows we were generally far more literate
before we turned education over to government professionals.
Anyway, “everyone
goes to school” is the justification for the miserable standards to the point
that a high school diploma doesn’t even mean the graduate can sign his name.
Despite these
essentially non-existent standards, there are still plenty of high school
dropouts. It’s a bit of a problem. Although a high school diploma is basically
worthless, not having one make it tough to get a job, or so I’m told. Most
folks lie rather than admit such a lack, and it’s no big deal…as long as the
employer doesn’t check up.
California, ever
the source of stupid-crazy ideas, is leaping to the rescue here:
California Will Give Free High School Diplomas To Kids Who Flunked Out
On principle alone, this is just more California-crazy, and reading the explanation for the thinking behind this doesn’t help:
“…to
counter the phenomenon of students receiving passing grades while learning
almost nothing. The test is hardly complex. The math test, for instance, only covers 8th
grade-level material…”
Honest, there’s a reason our “colleges”
start at the 9th grade now, what’s happening in California,
academically, is comparable to the rest of the country: what a high school graduate
knows today is comparable to the 8th grader of decades ago (outside
of the exceptional students).
The gentle reader really needs to
understand how minimal the standards are now, and how many of our victims in
the public schools are gaining nothing despite the kind of tax dollars spent:
249,000 students failed to
pass the test by
the end of senior year from 2006 to 2014.
Now back to today’s regularly scheduled
blog. You can’t get into college without a high school diploma. Well, legally,
you can’t, but admin overlook this law as well as they overlook every other law
that would cut into growth. It’ll be a moot point soon, as dropouts can just
get a California diploma in short order.
Now let’s connect the dots. There are no
standards in the public schools, so we graduate illiterates, and this is
justified because these schools have to take everyone. Seeing that isn’t even good enough, we’ll be
awarding diplomas to anyone who wants one, and this is justified because people
“need” a diploma to succeed in today’s world (or so they say).
“I look at my framed degree every day. Then
I go to work and deliver pizzas…”
--a
smart friend with a supposedly jobs-related degree said this recently.
The justification had some truth in it
back when college degree holders were pretty scarce. But now college degrees
are worth about as much as a high school diploma, which is to say…not much at
all.
Hmm. Standards in college are in free fall
in our higher education system, to the point that many campuses, even the ones
that are not outright frauds, are still academic jokes…this is justified
because “we need growth” says the administration. We’ve been trained as
children to believe that we “need” a college degree to succeed in today’s
world. We already award degrees to people that can barely read nor write (nor
do arithmetic, at the risk
of overplugging my book).
The only question that remains is how
long until one of our governmental leaders decides “hey, why don’t we just give
college degrees away” as well?1 I do suspect there’s a big
difference between giving away college degrees and high school degrees.
Student debt is well over a trillion
dollars now, and those dollars bought a whole lot of worthless (or nearly worthless)
degrees. If a state, or worse yet, the Federal, government starts just awarding
college degrees, all these indebted graduates are probably going to complain,
loudly, that their own degrees are being debased.
Sanders’
insane “free college for everyone” idea
has already received some negative observations, but does anyone think our
government would really care about screwing over citizens?
Will anyone make the connection between
printing up a bunch of degrees debases the value of current degrees, and
realize it works the same way with our fiat currency system?
I suspect the answer to both questions
is “no”…but I sure hope I’m wrong.
1. Actually,
there’s a politically-connected graduate school that seems poised to do this to/for the connected
already, perhaps I’ll touch on what this place is doing soon.
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