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You know what I don't get...
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Tera, First Chick
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Aug 05, 2011 02:17PM

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That's exactly what I've been thinking for the last 48 comments. lol. ;)

Sorry, you're right. I didn't mean to be off-putting. In my mind's..."
I know a few people who have this attitude myself. I once met a girl in a college lit class who refused to speak to another classmate who admitted (a little overenthusiastically) to liking the Twilight series. Book snobs exist. ;) But so far I haven't seen any around here...lol.

A snob-free zone. I love it!
I think people who are widely read have an advantage when it comes to obscure jokes and other references. I like to watch the Simpsons and impress my kids with the fact that I understand the Tom Wolfe references.
(Actually, my kids aren't too impressed...)




It can work both ways- my elder daughter was a Math whiz- she enjoyed it but found that she'd have to continue with Physica and Chem to be an engineer, so she went back to her other love- media studies. Now she finds she wants to be well-rounded , so she wants to do her Masters in Political Science and Sociology and is looking for a scholarship! Circles!
I did history, Pol Sci and Soc in my undergrad course and then did Law, all of which helped me write Middle Time.
Such an interesting discussion! I don't believe one ever becomes 'well-rounded' and therefore complete - especially when young. You can round until you're the size of a helium balloon, and still have more to learn. Since school I have learned a range of subjects not taught in my classroom days, from ancient history to quantum physics to creative writing, all through books. If you can read, you can round out forever.
Malla wrote: "Since school I have learned a range of subjects not taught in my classroom days, from ancient history to quantum physics to creative writing, all through books. If you can read, you can round out forever..."
Excellent comment Malla! And I completely agree. I have learned, and continue to learn, so much through reading.
Excellent comment Malla! And I completely agree. I have learned, and continue to learn, so much through reading.


LOL!! I love that!
I teach at a community college (which, I guess, would be like a technical college). Yes, most of our students are on their way to getting degrees in more 'hands-on' professions like nursing or food preparation, but they are very insightful. My school does not have a liberal arts focus, but that doesn't mean the students (and faculty) aren't interested in courses in literature or humanities.

The worst part was that they cut back the required number of hours for structural design to 3 from 5 so they could fit in the extra humanities courses. How does that make sense in a civil engineering program?

Are you referring to my engineering degree? Because the required courses are set by a committee of people and are the same across the board. If an engineering college is accredited, then the requirements are the same for all the other accredited schools. The course I took at the University of Missouri is the same as that at MIT civil engineering. And, to answer your question, yes. I do believe that degree requirements could use some tweaking.
Malla, I like what you have to say. And I totally agree. Probably 85% of what I use in my job I learned after college by reading books. We didn't take timber design (there wasn't enough time what with all the American poetry - lol), but that's what I use every day so I just learned it on my own.


I would think that a purely liberal arts school wouldn't necessarily offer technical degrees and that, if they did, it would be divided up into different schools within the university.
I have no idea.
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