Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:STEM people are losers
I know! Why anyone would do that when they can make 2X+ doing easier things is a mystery.
Anonymous wrote:STEM people are losers
Anonymous wrote:Once the belief that education was simply career training became mainstream, it was only a matter of time until STEM would be forced down everyone's throat.
Anonymous wrote:I hate trends in education. We need to go back to having a well rounded education! The fine arts are just as critical to development. It is shameful that so many school districts do not offer art once a week for elementary school kids. All of these early skills lead to great mathematicians and engineers too. I have an undergrad degree in Fine Arts and a graduate degree in computer science. I love both!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The whole STEM shortage is largely fabricated to justify outsourcing and depress wages.
+1 Asian run all STEM fields anyway
What a racist generalization, you bigot!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm an engineer, and I hate the buzzword. I also hate the belief that you can "inspire a passion" for "STEM" by having kids build with LEGOs, or some other such nonsense.
Typical engineer.
Oh are you going to scream "nerd" next?! You are an ass with the "typical engineer" crap! I agree with the engineer, you cannot "inspire a passion" for engineering with Legos. I think you either have it or you don't.
Anonymous wrote:The whole STEM shortage is largely fabricated to justify outsourcing and depress wages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm an engineer, and I hate the buzzword. I also hate the belief that you can "inspire a passion" for "STEM" by having kids build with LEGOs, or some other such nonsense.
Typical engineer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The whole STEM shortage is largely fabricated to justify outsourcing and depress wages.
+1 Asian run all STEM fields anyway
Anonymous wrote:The whole STEM shortage is largely fabricated to justify outsourcing and depress wages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it became a buzzword when liberal arts majors, myself included, realized there are no jobs for us and the good jobs go to STEM fields. I've already told my kids they cannot major in a humanities. Take classes for fun if they want but career focus should be on stem or business.
What a sad, sad state of affairs. This certainly demonstrates a complete failure to appreciate the genesis of STEM and pretty much guarantees that humanity is looking forward to a very shallow existence. It also completely fails to appreciate the fact that when asked, senior executives prefer liberal arts over business majors. The former can think and communicate clearly. The latter, not so much.
Also nice to know that there are parents who mandate their children's futures. That's pretty sad too.
Um...no. I'm a senior executive and I've never said that. Don't know any of my peers that have either. You have a cite, or did you make it up?
Thinking and communicating clearly, are certainly critical, but not the exclusive domain of humanities people. In fact, clear and logical thinking seems to me to exist more often in people with a STEM background.
lol have you met any stem background people?