Go to Post Wait hold the phone. Do you mean its physically possible to not spend time on robotics during the season?!!! Too much.......for brain......to compute!...goes against.....beliefs........aaaaarrrrrrghhhhhh!!! [syntax error] - BuddyB309 [more]
Home
Go Back   Chief Delphi > FIRST > Career
CD-Media   CD-Spy  
portal register members calendar search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read FAQ rules

 
Reply
 
Thread Tools Rating: Thread Rating: 8 votes, 5.00 average. Display Modes
  #1   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 01-04-2015, 10:39
rich2202 rich2202 is offline
Registered User
FRC #2202 (BEAST Robotics)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Jan 2012
Rookie Year: 2012
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 1,192
rich2202 has a reputation beyond reputerich2202 has a reputation beyond reputerich2202 has a reputation beyond reputerich2202 has a reputation beyond reputerich2202 has a reputation beyond reputerich2202 has a reputation beyond reputerich2202 has a reputation beyond reputerich2202 has a reputation beyond reputerich2202 has a reputation beyond reputerich2202 has a reputation beyond reputerich2202 has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Focus on STEM education only, good or bad?

The article is mixing two different issues: 1) How many technicians are being educated; and 2) The average knowledge of STEM subjects.

The latter is the average performance of students in math/science tests. The former is the number of graduates of STEM fields.

The question of "focus on STEM" education is similar. Do you teach everyone to be better at STEM, or do you create more STEM workers?

The article implied the USA does not need to raise the general level of STEM knowledge. That is a separate issue from whether the USA needs more STEM workers.

If you look at Graduation Rates as Graduate/Job, there is a higher ratio of Graduates Per Humanities Job than there is Graduates per STEM job. Thus, the Higher Education System needs to focus more effort into graduating more STEM majors than Humanities majors.

That is not to say that Humanities (as knowledge) is not valuable ("Companies often prefer strong basics to narrow expertise."). Many STEM programs require a certain component of Humanities classes. It would be nice if STEM majors could write like Hawthorne, but, in general, that is not there forte. Just as, we don't expect Humanities majors to be able to do physics like Hawking. What a student needs is "strong basics" and a marketable skill (some type of expertise). Just be careful about what you define as "basics".

Note: There is an argument whether the USA really does have a STEM Graduate deficiency. Whether we do or not, there is much more excess in non-STEM fields than there is in STEM fields.

Last edited by rich2202 : 01-04-2015 at 14:15.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 14:56.

The Chief Delphi Forums are sponsored by Innovation First International, Inc.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi