Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I saw posts recently that described a city as being “highly-educated” due to its hospital presence and I thought to myself, no. I don’t consider nurses, nurse practitioners or PAs to be highly educated. Hospital admins usually have degree mill MBAs. Now the doctors are obviously highly educated!
Even among doctors, a family medicine DO from Arkansas isn't equal to a Neurosurgeon from Johns Hopkins.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can tell me when the two WWs started and ended. In Europe that would mean most people are highly educated.
This is an incredibly low bar.
Anonymous wrote:On paper, the math major course sequence may seem superficially identical. But at a place like Harvard or MIT, a lot of students will have a lot of course work under their belt (multivariable calculus, differential equations, probability, linear algebra). Many take graduate courses while an undergraduate.
The atmosphere is fundamentally different. You have top students learning from top professors. Students are super-motivated to take on a lot of hard material fast. That's a norm, not a rare exception.
Anonymous wrote:I guess you've never heard of Math 55. It wouldn't make sense to offer it at Penn State or Ohio State - probably one student a decade that could get through a course like that.
Anonymous wrote:Not true. If you do a math degree, say, at Harvard, MIT or Princeton you're not learning "the same math" as a student at Penn State or Ohio State. The material is more advanced and the students are better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Educated" refers to having a college education
"Highly educated" refers to an advanced degree beyond a college education
This exactly
Anonymous wrote:"Educated" refers to having a college education
"Highly educated" refers to an advanced degree beyond a college education