Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised so few of them signed this letter. Where are the rest? Are they happy with the current state of UC education?
You think 280 STEM professors at Berkeley isn't a lot? That's half the total STEM faculty.
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised so few of them signed this letter. Where are the rest? Are they happy with the current state of UC education?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised so few of them signed this letter. Where are the rest? Are they happy with the current state of UC education?
If they’re not tenured, it’s hard to speak out. Plus even some tenured professors may not want to speak out in order to not draw attention to themselves. They may fear getting canceled by students or going against the grain while trying to secure research funding in a competitive environment.
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised so few of them signed this letter. Where are the rest? Are they happy with the current state of UC education?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised so few of them signed this letter. Where are the rest? Are they happy with the current state of UC education?
No. But you need tenure to speak out. No assistant or associate professor at a state school is speaking out about anything that relates to politics.
But it goes without saying that every STEM professor everywhere would like test scores to be mandatory for admissions. No one likes failing students because they are not prepared to be there. Waste of time for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised so few of them signed this letter. Where are the rest? Are they happy with the current state of UC education?
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised so few of them signed this letter. Where are the rest? Are they happy with the current state of UC education?
Anonymous wrote:Alarmed by rising failure and remediation rates, professors argue that test-blind policies obscure preparation gaps, leading vulnerable students to struggle in rigorous gateway courses.
https://ucstudentsuccess.org/