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9 votes
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A writing professor’s new task in the age of AI: Teaching students when to struggle
20 votes -
AI was eroding trust in my classroom — so I got rid of typed papers and bought my students notebooks instead
37 votes -
ArXiv is separating from Cornell University, and is hiring a CEO, who will be paid roughly $300,000/year
42 votes -
The average US college student is illiterate
53 votes -
The film students who can no longer sit through films
24 votes -
Is higher education still valuable?
Hi friends, Given the current state of AI and other technologies, do you consider higher education to still be worth pursuing? For those of you with children, will you be advising them to go to...
Hi friends,
Given the current state of AI and other technologies, do you consider higher education to still be worth pursuing? For those of you with children, will you be advising them to go to college?
I’m asking because I am enrolled in a masters program for statistics and have ~2 years left. I’m concerned that by the time I’m finished, the degree won’t be worth the paper it’s printed on. Like many of you, I work in software. Some days I think I should be learning an entirely different skill set in a non tech related field to diversify my value instead of doubling down on a potentially dying field.
I am not really interested in “you should pursue education for the sake of education”. While this is probably true, at the end of the day I need a way to make money to survive and education is the historical way of increasing one’s value in the job market. Furthermore, I can educate myself for far cheaper if education from a university is no longer considered valuable.
Anyone else in the same boat? Am I being dramatic? Would love to hear your thoughts.
33 votes -
C'mon, professors, assign the hard reading
32 votes -
Texas A&M, under new curriculum limits, warns professor not to teach Plato
44 votes