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5 votes
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This 33-year-old made more than 1,000 Wikipedia bios for unknown women scientists
15 votes -
Inside a highly lucrative, ethically questionable essay-writing service
10 votes -
Two powerful US unions have come together to fight the right’s attack on higher education
12 votes -
The Biden-Harris administration's US student debt relief plan
35 votes -
The new US Income-Driven Repayment system could cause some big problems
7 votes -
My students cheated... a lot
27 votes -
My college students are not ok
23 votes -
A look inside the first HBCU police academy
4 votes -
How an Ivy League school turned against a student
10 votes -
MIT is reinstating its SAT/ACT requirement for future admissions cycles
10 votes -
US lawsuit says sixteen elite colleges are part of price-fixing cartel
8 votes -
Notes on work
3 votes -
The SAT will go completely digital by 2024
5 votes -
University loses 77TB of research data due to backup error
17 votes -
Why I'm tired of hearing about wokeism
7 votes -
Where the humanities aren't in crisis
3 votes -
Goodbye, MIT
14 votes -
Improving MIT’s written commitment to freedom of expression
4 votes -
Architect resigns in protest over UCSB mega-dorm
21 votes -
As women become 60% of all US college students and continue to outpace and outperform men, the WSJ takes a look at how colleges and students feel about it
16 votes -
US to erase student debt for those with severe disabilities
15 votes -
I signed up to write college essays for rich kids. I found cheating is more complicated than I thought.
29 votes -
WeChat deletes Chinese university LGBT accounts in fresh crackdown
16 votes -
Am I Doctor Stallman?
15 votes -
Becker College (Worcester, Massachusetts) closing its doors
8 votes -
Defrauded students to receive loan forgiveness
9 votes -
How our brutal science system almost cost us a pioneer of mRNA vaccines
8 votes -
Beer company Natty Light is the unlikely force behind the 'Da Vinci of Debt', now on view in Grand Central Station
11 votes -
Is college still worth it?
11 votes -
I just got accepted to do a Master's degree!
I'm dead excited, and I just wanted to share somewhere! Since graduating from my Bachelor's I've been working in IT support, and it's slowly killing me. Progression is slow, the work is boring,...
I'm dead excited, and I just wanted to share somewhere!
Since graduating from my Bachelor's I've been working in IT support, and it's slowly killing me. Progression is slow, the work is boring, and at the end of the day all I have to show for my efforts is (hopefully) a slightly lower number of open tickets than at the start. It all feels incredibly pointless, and like I'm not making a difference in peoples' lives.I decided earlier this year to start looking into possible Master's degree programs, to help me enter a different field, and I'm happy to say that from next September I'll be returning to my alma mater to study Linguistics and English Language Teaching. From there, I'm hoping to go into teaching English as a foreign language, first abroad, and then to immigrants and refugees back here in the UK.
I'm super excited, and also a little nervous. I coasted through my Bachelor's and the past few years of my working life, so it'll be a shock to the system to have a proper workload again. I've got to get through the next 8 months or so first, but that will be easier knowing that I have something different and exciting waiting for me at the end of this particular career path. I'm desperately saving up as much money as I can to cover my living expenses for the year (I don't intend to work during my degree), which is another thing to feel nervous about.
But right now, I'm mostly just ecstatic, and wanted to share! In the interest of discussion, I'd love to hear about your experiences studying a Master's degree, and whether or not it helped you in your life after graduation.
25 votes -
Scientific publishers consider installing spyware in university libraries to protect copyrights
9 votes -
The enduring relevance of college radio
5 votes -
America will sacrifice anything for the college experience
8 votes -
Bad arguments against teaching Chinese philosophy
10 votes -
The dollars and sense of free college - Georgetown University analysis of Biden's free college plan finds that it pays for itself within a decade
11 votes -
“I feel that the future I’ve been working towards my whole life is gone now” — What United States college students have to say about the coronavirus
15 votes -
Edinburgh Philosophy – Voices on Hume
3 votes -
Here’s how Cornell kept low covid-19 rates on campus
5 votes -
College newspaper reporters are the journalism heroes for the pandemic era
5 votes -
Is the University of Edinburgh right to rename its David Hume Tower?
9 votes -
Are illegal strikes justified?
This question is inspired by the university of Michigan's grad student union's announcement that it will strike this week. As noted in the university's response Michigan state law prohibits state...
This question is inspired by the university of Michigan's grad student union's announcement that it will strike this week. As noted in the university's response Michigan state law prohibits state employees from striking and GEO's contract with UofM (signed in April) has a clause that prohibits work stoppages.
Are strikes performed in violation of the law (state or otherwise) or a contract justified? Why or why not?
22 votes -
GWU investigating whether White professor invented her Black identity
7 votes -
A math problem stumped experts for fifty years. This grad student from Maine solved it in days
19 votes -
How men’s rights groups helped rewrite regulations on campus rape
6 votes -
National trends in grade inflation, American colleges and universities
15 votes -
US Justice Department says Yale discriminates against Asian, white applicants
10 votes -
Thoughts on a management information systems degree?
i'm currently on the path to receive a BS in business administration management information systems concentration from a four year state school. i was accepted to my major near the end of this...
i'm currently on the path to receive a BS in business administration management information systems concentration from a four year state school. i was accepted to my major near the end of this spring. my university also has a data analytics minor that i am heavily considering.
once i am done with summer classes i plan to really dive deeper into excel and ease into learning sql b/c that will help in lots of MIS contexts it seems.
i read online that MIS is a great degree that can lead into system admin, database admin, network admin, or business/it/system analyst roles. id find any of these careers interesting so at this point in time i feel on the right path. most importantly i just want to a job that will allow me to live a comfortable life, ya know?
i have never really met anyone that has an MIS degree before so i have no idea what the job market is actually like for degree holders beyond clickbait articles that say how great it is. if you have an mis degree, what is your experience with it and what kind of role are you working? would you recommend this degree to someone else? what skills do you recommend most for hire-ability? id assume this is area specific, but i live in the PNW and live near an area with a strong biz/tech scene and lots of govt opportunities.
i was recently speaking with some CS majors and they were talking about how MIS is a garbage non-technical degree that isnt good for much. obviously CS is a harder more technical degree that can result in higher salary but i feel they were just trying to put my down for pursuing what they saw as a lesser degree, but nonetheless it put a sense of fear into me about my potential career opportunities.
i just need some guidance and would like to hear your experience.
thank you
7 votes -
Stanford cuts eleven sports from their varsity program
5 votes -
Researchers at Cornell University concluded that an online semester would result in more COVID-19
16 votes