Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with going to grad school? I went to a SLAC and then went to grad school for an MBA. I've been very successful.
As an executive at a consulting company, I wish my company would stop hiring "newly minted" MBAs who went straight from undergrad. Even from a top school like Harvard, Wharton, Kellogg, Sloan, etc. I think people get much more out of an MBA degree if they have 3-5 years of real world work experience between undergrad and grad school.
When I see a resume where someone went right to B school, I wonder why they couldn't get a job.
Uhm . . . nobody goes to HBS, Wharton (for MBA), Kellogg or Sloan straight from undergrad. But I guess you would know that since you're an "executive" at a "consulting company", right?
Oh, and BTW, plenty of STEM kids these days plan to go on to grad school -- I know mine do.
Um, I went to Wharton and there were some kids there who came straight from undergrad. So save your snark. (I'm not the consulting exec you're talking to.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with going to grad school? I went to a SLAC and then went to grad school for an MBA. I've been very successful.
As an executive at a consulting company, I wish my company would stop hiring "newly minted" MBAs who went straight from undergrad. Even from a top school like Harvard, Wharton, Kellogg, Sloan, etc. I think people get much more out of an MBA degree if they have 3-5 years of real world work experience between undergrad and grad school.
When I see a resume where someone went right to B school, I wonder why they couldn't get a job.
Uhm . . . nobody goes to HBS, Wharton (for MBA), Kellogg or Sloan straight from undergrad. But I guess you would know that since you're an "executive" at a "consulting company", right?
Oh, and BTW, plenty of STEM kids these days plan to go on to grad school -- I know mine do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with going to grad school? I went to a SLAC and then went to grad school for an MBA. I've been very successful.
As an executive at a consulting company, I wish my company would stop hiring "newly minted" MBAs who went straight from undergrad. Even from a top school like Harvard, Wharton, Kellogg, Sloan, etc. I think people get much more out of an MBA degree if they have 3-5 years of real world work experience between undergrad and grad school.
When I see a resume where someone went right to B school, I wonder why they couldn't get a job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's silly to think that the most valuable thing in the job market is going to be any subject that can be taught in a semester or two at college. A engineer's knowledge has a half life of what, 4 years maybe? You need to learn to learn skills-- writing, working with people, creative thinking, analysis.
Instead of those STEM courses that become obsolete so soon, Wesleyan offers "unforgettable" courses like “The Biology of Sex” (the textbook is a sex manual), “Key Issues in Black Feminism,” and “Queer Literature and Studies.”
Most people defending SLACS have no idea how much they have changed.
You say it like these are the only types of courses offered at Wesleyan. We all know that's not true.
And anyway, what's so bad about taking 1-2 of these courses during four years in which you will take a total of 32 semesters' worth of courses? There is plenty of time to also take programming 100 through programming 450 and also Physics 100 through Physics 475 if you want.
Plenty of time for those courses at Wesleyan since Shakespeare is optional for English majors, as is study of the American founding and Civil War for history majors. That might be considered rigorous compared to Amherst, which no longer maintains a core curriculum or even distribution requirements. Apart from completing a major, students need only take a First-Year Seminar on a topic such as “Reading Gender,” or “Eros and Insight.” Everything else—including math, science, foreign languages, American history, and all of Western civ—is optional. English majors can skip the history of the language, Shakespeare, even all of British or American literature—instead mastering film, creative writing, or cultural and gender studies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with going to grad school? I went to a SLAC and then went to grad school for an MBA. I've been very successful.
As an executive at a consulting company, I wish my company would stop hiring "newly minted" MBAs who went straight from undergrad. Even from a top school like Harvard, Wharton, Kellogg, Sloan, etc. I think people get much more out of an MBA degree if they have 3-5 years of real world work experience between undergrad and grad school.
When I see a resume where someone went right to B school, I wonder why they couldn't get a job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You say it like these are the only types of courses offered at Wesleyan. We all know that's not true.
And anyway, what's so bad about taking 1-2 of these courses during four years in which you will take a total of 32 semesters' worth of courses? There is plenty of time to also take programming 100 through programming 450 and also Physics 100 through Physics 475 if you want.
Plenty of time for those courses at Wesleyan since Shakespeare is optional for English majors, as is study of the American founding and Civil War for history majors. That might be considered rigorous compared to Amherst, which no longer maintains a core curriculum or even distribution requirements. Apart from completing a major, students need only take a First-Year Seminar on a topic such as “Reading Gender,” or “Eros and Insight.” Everything else—including math, science, foreign languages, American history, and all of Western civ—is optional. English majors can skip the history of the language, Shakespeare, even all of British or American literature—instead mastering film, creative writing, or cultural and gender studies
Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with going to grad school? I went to a SLAC and then went to grad school for an MBA. I've been very successful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's silly to think that the most valuable thing in the job market is going to be any subject that can be taught in a semester or two at college. A engineer's knowledge has a half life of what, 4 years maybe? You need to learn to learn skills-- writing, working with people, creative thinking, analysis.
Instead of those STEM courses that become obsolete so soon, Wesleyan offers "unforgettable" courses like “The Biology of Sex” (the textbook is a sex manual), “Key Issues in Black Feminism,” and “Queer Literature and Studies.”
Most people defending SLACS have no idea how much they have changed.
You say it like these are the only types of courses offered at Wesleyan. We all know that's not true.
And anyway, what's so bad about taking 1-2 of these courses during four years in which you will take a total of 32 semesters' worth of courses? There is plenty of time to also take programming 100 through programming 450 and also Physics 100 through Physics 475 if you want.
Plenty of time for those courses at Wesleyan since Shakespeare is optional for English majors, as is study of the American founding and Civil War for history majors. That might be considered rigorous compared to Amherst, which no longer maintains a core curriculum or even distribution requirements. Apart from completing a major, students need only take a First-Year Seminar on a topic such as “Reading Gender,” or “Eros and Insight.” Everything else—including math, science, foreign languages, American history, and all of Western civ—is optional. English majors can skip the history of the language, Shakespeare, even all of British or American literature—instead mastering film, creative writing, or cultural and gender studies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's silly to think that the most valuable thing in the job market is going to be any subject that can be taught in a semester or two at college. A engineer's knowledge has a half life of what, 4 years maybe? You need to learn to learn skills-- writing, working with people, creative thinking, analysis.
Instead of those STEM courses that become obsolete so soon, Wesleyan offers "unforgettable" courses like “The Biology of Sex” (the textbook is a sex manual), “Key Issues in Black Feminism,” and “Queer Literature and Studies.”
Most people defending SLACS have no idea how much they have changed.
You say it like these are the only types of courses offered at Wesleyan. We all know that's not true.
And anyway, what's so bad about taking 1-2 of these courses during four years in which you will take a total of 32 semesters' worth of courses? There is plenty of time to also take programming 100 through programming 450 and also Physics 100 through Physics 475 if you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's silly to think that the most valuable thing in the job market is going to be any subject that can be taught in a semester or two at college. A engineer's knowledge has a half life of what, 4 years maybe? You need to learn to learn skills-- writing, working with people, creative thinking, analysis.
Instead of those STEM courses that become obsolete so soon, Wesleyan offers "unforgettable" courses like “The Biology of Sex” (the textbook is a sex manual), “Key Issues in Black Feminism,” and “Queer Literature and Studies.”
Most people defending SLACS have no idea how much they have changed.
You say it like these are the only types of courses offered at Wesleyan. We all know that's not true.
And anyway, what's so bad about taking 1-2 of these courses during four years in which you will take a total of 32 semesters' worth of courses? There is plenty of time to also take programming 100 through programming 450 and also Physics 100 through Physics 475 if you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's silly to think that the most valuable thing in the job market is going to be any subject that can be taught in a semester or two at college. A engineer's knowledge has a half life of what, 4 years maybe? You need to learn to learn skills-- writing, working with people, creative thinking, analysis.
Instead of those STEM courses that become obsolete so soon, Wesleyan offers "unforgettable" courses like “The Biology of Sex” (the textbook is a sex manual), “Key Issues in Black Feminism,” and “Queer Literature and Studies.”
Most people defending SLACS have no idea how much they have changed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's silly to think that the most valuable thing in the job market is going to be any subject that can be taught in a semester or two at college. A engineer's knowledge has a half life of what, 4 years maybe? You need to learn to learn skills-- writing, working with people, creative thinking, analysis.
Instead of those STEM courses that become obsolete so soon, Wesleyan offers "unforgettable" courses like “The Biology of Sex” (the textbook is a sex manual), “Key Issues in Black Feminism,” and “Queer Literature and Studies.”
Most people defending SLACS have no idea how much they have changed.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's silly to think that the most valuable thing in the job market is going to be any subject that can be taught in a semester or two at college. A engineer's knowledge has a half life of what, 4 years maybe? You need to learn to learn skills-- writing, working with people, creative thinking, analysis.