• hexi [they/them]
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    82 years ago

    Colleges act like Scientology in the states. Equating education with how much money you’ve handed them.

    Meanwhile anything can be learned online, but it counts for nothing because corporations treat purchases credentials as the only legitimate form of “education”.

    • Jim
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      172 years ago

      Ah yes, I’m sure the formal training received by doctors, nurses, lawyers, teachers, and engineers is just an over-hyped “education” that can all be replaced by online MOOCs.

      There are real problems with education, especially with the costs, but “anything can be learned online” is the worst take I’ve heard in a long while.

        • Jim
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          62 years ago

          Just because you can get part of your education remotely or through self-learning didn’t mean “anything can be learned online”.

          And if you were hiring a math tutor for your kid, would you prefer a self-proclaimed expert from watching YouTube videos or would you want someone who got a degree from a credentialed university? And even if you don’t care, why are you surprised that others would be skeptical of the YouTube expert?

          Remote learning can be fine for some things, and self learning through informal channels are also fine, but it’s not a full on replacement for formal education in all cases.

                • @WetBeardHairs@lemmy.ml
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                  12 years ago

                  Lmao. Nope. I’ve done both. Online classes are a fucking joke. Maybe some schools do it well, but most treat online classes like a correspondence course.

                  • hexi [they/them]
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                    22 years ago

                    It’s beside the point whether you like it personally.

                    If someone was able to pass advanced math tests, does it matter how they learned it?

                    Why should it count for less because they did it online, so long as they did understand the concepts in the end?

        • Sinonatrix [comrade/them]
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          22 years ago

          For one, you can have a second screen and Google the answers. It’s a little bit harder in person.

          I’d really like to see a system of online learning where extension offices are built out into testing center networks. This still disenfranchises people sadly, but staves off some existential questions about what passing an exam even means now.

      • Sinonatrix [comrade/them]
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        02 years ago

        Anything can be learned online, with enough drive and determination

        But if you’re that powerful: why bother learning from others? You could simply leave and create your own community called name’s Gulch.

        • Jim
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          52 years ago

          No sorry, that’s just fundamentally false. You can’t just learn titration techniques from watching a video. You can’t learn phlebotomy without an instructor watching you do it to a patient. Hell, you aren’t learning how to drive a car from playing a video game.

          And I’m not sure where you are pulling the “if you are that powerful” from. You really have an ax to grind don’t you.

          • Sinonatrix [comrade/them]
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            42 years ago

            And I’m not sure where you are pulling the “if you are that powerful” from.

            (The preceding comment was a parody of Great Man ideology)