Opinion The Average College Student Is Illiterate - Spelling is atrocious, grammar is random, and the correct use of apostrophes is cause for celebration. Worse is the resistance to original thought.

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Oxford undergraduates on a late night drinking spree, 1824. By Robert Cruikshank. (Photo by Hulton Archive.)

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I’m Gen X. I was pretty young when I earned my PhD, so I’ve been a professor for a long time—over 30 years. If you’re not in academia, or it’s been a while since you were in college, you might not know this: the students are not what they used to be. The problem with even talking about this topic at all is the knee-jerk response of, “yeah, just another old man complaining about the kids today, the same way everyone has since Gilgamesh. Shake your fist at the clouds, dude.” So yes, I’m ready to hear that. Go right ahead. Because people need to know.

First, some context. I teach at a regional public university in the United States. Our students are average on just about any dimension you care to name—aspirations, intellect, socio-economic status, physical fitness. They wear hoodies and yoga pants and like Buffalo wings. They listen to Zach Bryan and Taylor Swift. That’s in no way a put-down: I firmly believe that the average citizen deserves a shot at a good education and even more importantly a shot at a good life. All I mean is that our students are representative; they’re neither the bottom of the academic barrel nor the cream off the top.

As with every college we get a range of students, and our best philosophy majors have gone on to earn PhDs or go to law school. We’re also an NCAA Division 2 school and I watched one of our graduates become an All-Pro lineman for the NFL. These are exceptions, and what I say here does not apply to every single student. But what I’m about to describe are the average students at Average State U.

Reading

Most of our students are functionally illiterate. This is not a joke. By “functionally illiterate” I mean “unable to read and comprehend adult novels by people like Barbara Kingsolver, Colson Whitehead, and Richard Powers.” I picked those three authors because they are all recent Pulitzer Prize winners, an objective standard of “serious adult novel.” Furthermore, I’ve read them all and can testify that they are brilliant, captivating writers; we’re not talking about Finnegans Wake here. But at the same time they aren’t YA, romantasy, or Harry Potter either.

I’m not saying our students just prefer genre books or graphic novels or whatever. No, our average graduate literally could not read a serious adult novel cover-to-cover and understand what they read. They just couldn’t do it. They don’t have the desire to try, the vocabulary to grasp what they read, and most certainly not the attention span to finish. For them to sit down and try to read a book like The Overstory might as well be me attempting an Iron Man triathlon: much suffering with zero chance of success.

Students are not absolutely illiterate in the sense of being unable to sound out any words whatsoever. Reading bores them, though. They are impatient to get through whatever burden of reading they have to, and move their eyes over the words just to get it done. They’re like me clicking through a mandatory online HR training. Students get exam questions wrong simply because they didn’t even take the time to read the question properly. Reading anything more than a menu is a chore and to be avoided.

They also lie about it. I wrote the textbook for a course I regularly teach. It’s a fairly popular textbook, so I’m assuming it is not terribly written. I did everything I could to make the writing lively and packed with my most engaging examples. The majority of students don’t read it. Oh, they will come to my office hours (occasionally) because they are bombing the course and tell me that they have been doing the reading, but it’s obvious they are lying. The most charitable interpretation is that they looked at some of the words, didn’t understand anything, pretended that counted as reading, and returned to looking at TikTok.

This study says that 65% of college students reported that they skipped buying or renting a textbook because of cost. I believe they didn’t buy the books, but I’m skeptical that cost is the true reason, as opposed to just the excuse they offer. Yes, I know some texts, especially in the sciences, are expensive. However, the books I assign are low-priced. All texts combined for one of my courses is between $35-$100 and they still don’t buy them. Why buy what you aren’t going to read anyway? Just google it.

Even in upper-division courses that students supposedly take out of genuine interest they won’t read. I’m teaching Existentialism this semester. It is entirely primary texts—Dostoevsky, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Camus, Sartre. The reading ranges from accessible but challenging to extremely difficult but we’re making a go of it anyway (looking at you, Being and Nothingness). This is a close textual analysis course. My students come to class without the books, which they probably do not own and definitely did not read.

Writing

Their writing skills are at the 8th-grade level. Spelling is atrocious, grammar is random, and the correct use of apostrophes is cause for celebration. Worse is the resistance to original thought. What I mean is the reflexive submission of the cheapest cliché as novel insight.

Exam question: Describe the attitude of Dostoevsky’s Underground Man towards acting in one’s own self-interest, and how this is connected to his concerns about free will. Are his views self-contradictory?
Student: With the UGM its all about our journey in life, not the destination. He beleives we need to take time to enjoy the little things becuase life is short and you never gonna know what happens. Sometimes he contradicts himself cause sometimes you say one thing but then you think something else later. It’s all relative.
Either that, or it looks like this:

Exam question: Describe the attitude of Dostoevsky’s Underground Man towards acting in one’s own self-interest, and how this is connected to his concerns about free will. Are his views self-contradictory?
Student: Dostoevsky’s Underground Man paradoxically rejects the idea that people always act in their own self-interest, arguing instead that humans often behave irrationally to assert their free will. He criticizes rationalist philosophies like utilitarianism, which he sees as reducing individuals to predictable mechanisms, and insists that people may choose suffering just to prove their autonomy. However, his stance is self-contradictory—while he champions free will, he is paralyzed by inaction and self-loathing, trapped in a cycle of bitterness. Through this, Dostoevsky explores the tension between reason, free will, and self-interest, exposing the complexities of human motivation.
That’s right, ChatGPT. The students cheat. I’ve written about cheating in “Why AI is Destroying Academic Integrity,” so I won’t repeat it here, but the cheating tsunami has definitely changed what assignments I give. I can’t assign papers any more because I’ll just get AI back, and there’s nothing I can do to make it stop. Sadly, not writing exacerbates their illiteracy; writing is a muscle and dedicated writing is a workout for the mind as well as the pen.

What’s changed?

The average student has seen college as basically transactional for as long as I’ve been doing this. They go through the motions and maybe learn something along the way, but it is all in service to the only conception of the good life they can imagine: a job with middle-class wages. I’ve mostly made my peace with that, do my best to give them a taste of the life of the mind, and celebrate the successes.

Things have changed. Ted Gioia describes modern students as checked-out, phone-addicted zombies. Troy Jollimore writes, “I once believed my students and I were in this together, engaged in a shared intellectual pursuit. That faith has been obliterated over the past few semesters.” Faculty have seen a stunning level of disconnection.

What has changed exactly?

  • Chronic absenteeism. As a friend in Sociology put it, “Attendance is a HUGE problem—many just treat class as optional.” Last semester across all sections, my average student missed two weeks of class. Actually it was more than that, since I’m not counting excused absences or students who eventually withdrew. A friend in Mathematics told me, “Students are less respectful of the university experience —attendance, lateness, e-mails to me about nonsense, less sense of responsibility.”
  • Disappearing students. Students routinely just vanish at some point during the semester. They don’t officially drop out or withdraw from the course, they simply quit coming. No email, no notification to anyone in authority about some problem. They just pull an Amelia Earhart. It’s gotten to the point that on the first day of class, especially in lower-division, I tell the students, “Look to your right. Now look to your left. One of you will be gone by the end of the semester. Don’t let it be you.”
  • They can’t sit in a seat for 50 minutes. Students routinely get up during a 50 minute class, sometimes just 15 minutes in, and leave the classroom. I’m supposed to believe that they suddenly, urgently need the toilet, but the reality is that they are going to look at their phones. They know I’ll call them out on it in class, so instead they walk out. I’ve even told them to plan ahead and pee before class, like you tell a small child before a road trip, but it has no effect. They can’t make it an hour without getting their phone fix.
  • It’s the phones, stupid. They are absolutely addicted to their phones. When I go work out at the Campus Rec Center, easily half of the students there are just sitting on the machines scrolling on their phones. I was talking with a retired faculty member at the Rec this morning who works out all the time. He said he has done six sets waiting for a student to put down their phone and get off the machine he wanted. The students can’t get off their phones for an hour to do a voluntary activity they chose for fun. Sometimes I’m amazed they ever leave their goon caves at all.
I don’t blame K-12 teachers. This is not an educational system problem, this is a societal problem. What am I supposed to do? Keep standards high and fail them all? That’s not an option for untenured faculty who would like to keep their jobs. I’m a tenured full professor. I could probably get away with that for a while, but sooner or later the Dean’s going to bring me in for a sit-down. Plus, if we flunk out half the student body and drive the university into bankruptcy, all we’re doing is depriving the good students of an education.

We’re told to meet the students where they are, flip the classroom, use multimedia, just be more entertaining, get better. As if rearranging the deck chairs just the right way will stop the Titanic from going down. As if it is somehow the fault of the faculty. It’s not our fault. We’re doing the best we can with what we’ve been given.

All this might sound like an angry rant. I’m not angry, though, not at all. I’m just sad. One thing all faculty have to learn is that the students are not us. We can’t expect them all to burn with the sacred fire we have for our disciplines, to see philosophy, psychology, math, physics, sociology, or economics as the divine light of reason in a world of shadow. Our job is to kindle that flame, and we’re trying to get that spark to catch, but it is getting harder and harder and we don’t know what to do.

Hilarius Bookbinder is the pseudonym for a tenured professor with an Ivy League PhD who writes Scriptorium Philosophia.

A version of this essay originally appeared in Scriptorium Philosophia.
 
Anyone in this thread brought up the fact that a big part of the problem is kids go to University just to get a degree?
The author did mention that briefly, but it should be mentioned more than briefly, it's as much of a problem as the phone.
If you have to study Chemistry or Math or Physics for 4 years and a lot of the jobs you end up applying to are paperpusher jobs that require no actual knowledge but only hire people with 4 year degrees, you're really not gonna care that much about the material.
I'd imagine this applies to the social sciences most of all. Write all your assignments with AI, don't go to class, party, and get your Bachelors in communications so you can apply for a cushy state job as a mail clerk or whatever.
 
It's why the SAT is a good proxy for IQ. It's not just a raw knowledge test.
The SAT hasn't been a proxy for IQ since 1994, and with every revision since then, the test has gotten easier and easier. Pre-1994, only a single digit number of students a year got perfect scores. Today, around a thousand students get a perfect score.

Nowadays they allow superscoring (taking the best score for each section from your best attempt; in the old days you only got one chance) and the modern test is designed to be studiable.

The changes were supposed to increase black scores, but since they don't even try, it had no effect. It did however boost Asian scores a ton because they all cram test prep and retake the test multiple times until they luck into a good score (since you can still get "perfect" even if you get a few questions wrong because some questions are always excluded from scoring):
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There are numerous factors as to why education at levels suck from stuff like DEI, greed, society and niggers etc.

I would like to point the finger at one particular problem though, modern educators and the material they are forced to use are TERRIBLE at teaching anything. I took correspondence and did my own schooling to get grade 12 because my parents were hard core christians and (rather rightfully) thought public school would corrupt me.

One of my parents who was helping me with my math homework one day became increasingly angry at the way the textbook was trying to teach algebra. They were an honors student in math and even they could not figure out why the book was using such a confusing and overcomplicated method to teach Algebra. Instead of just covering the concepts directly and simply they instead tried to teach this unintuitive "Algebra Tiles" system, I guess to try and help retards "visualize" the math or some dumb shit. Keep in mind we had been doing Algebra before in a different textbook the year prior and did not have this issue. They got so fed up wasting time trying to figure out this garbage that they threw the book to the side, grabbed a pen / paper and just taught me algebra like a normal person. They often commented that as they were instructing me throughout my grades they found each textbook got progressively worse even if it was by the same author and publisher.

Eventually I was doing all my own research and bought textbooks whose sole goal was to get self-taught adults to pass the grade 12 exam test and was not affiliated with any "official" education curriculum. Those books were significantly better at teaching or, perhaps, I had simply developed my ability to do my own research and teach myself concepts. That is a skill that nobody ever learns in school at all these days.
 
Poor grammar isn't exclusive to zoomers, nor do I think it's even particularly high among them. I've known too many boomers who would ask me how to spell the most simple words, or look clearly confused when I drop a word that's seemingly outside of their vocabulary (mine's not great either, mind you). My zoomer nephews and nieces are no less likely to have that problem than their parents.

It also seems irrespective of education level, I've known high school dropout millennials whose English skills are better than college educated people's across all generations. I think in this specific instance it's just a matter of giving a shit and getting practice. The only reason I don't write like a monkey despite being retarded is because I like to be as clear as possible, and I have always used forums and read a lot (albeit via RPGs and manga as opposed to many proper books). If you don't give a shit how you communicate and don't read, you're going to seem illiterate whether you are or not.
 
“unable to read and comprehend adult novels by people like Barbara Kingsolver, Colson Whitehead, and Richard Powers.” I picked those three authors because they are all recent Pulitzer Prize winners, an objective standard of “serious adult novel.”
Opinion discarded.

That’s right, ChatGPT. The students cheat.
They're doing nothing wrong. The litfag wants them to give the "correct" answer, they use ChatGPT (so, Markov chain) to get the statistically most likely correct answer.

to the only conception of the good life they can imagine: a job with middle-class wages.
They won't get even that. But he's obviously contemptuous of middle-class jobs. What does the litfag think the good life is -- AIDS orgies? And how much is he paid?

They don’t officially drop out or withdraw from the course, they simply quit coming.
So? They pay tuition. At some point, they stop paying, and then you know they're gone.

the reality is that they are going to look at their phones. They know I’ll call them out on it in class, so instead they walk out.
If you can't compete with a phone, it's your problem. But instead, you're being a jealous cuck.

Plus, if we flunk out half the student body and drive the university into bankruptcy, all we’re doing is depriving the good students of an education.
This means the university is at fault for turning into a large adult son daycare, for money. It's not the phones, stupid.

We’re told to meet the students where they are, flip the classroom, use multimedia, just be more entertaining, get better.
These same students sperg on the online for hours about the shit they like. You can't make a fun course on an inherently unfun topic. The good news is--
to see philosophy, psychology, math, physics, sociology, or economics as the divine light of reason
(see, 4 out of 6 are bullshit)
--the good news is
Barbara Kingsolver, Colson Whitehead, and Richard Powers
are not job requirements except for university professors. Linear algebra and elliptic equations may be, but English professors contemplating adultery are not; Dostoyevskies and Camuses can be replaced without compromising the student's job readiness. The litfag MUST agree because he did actually offer Dick Powers as a topic, so he can swallow his pride like he swallows pozcum and offer Sonichu.
 
What am I supposed to do? Keep standards high and fail them all? That’s not an option for untenured faculty who would like to keep their jobs. I’m a tenured full professor. I could probably get away with that for a while, but sooner or later the Dean’s going to bring me in for a sit-down. Plus, if we flunk out half the student body and drive the university into bankruptcy, all we’re doing is depriving the good students of an education.
THIS is the answer. I understand that younger people (myself included) use our phones more than we should. However, they (schools) will give up standards and care for their students because if they did what they should and fail them, no money. Why should students care when teachers and admin care more than just how much money they can suck out. Apathy is just the norm, the education system doesn’t promote striving toward anything other than doing the bare minimum to pass and get the certificate of completion and then a mid-wage job.
 
I don’t blame K-12 teachers. This is not an educational system problem, this is a societal problem
I disagree with the professor on this point. Public K-12 education in the US has gone down the crapper and the emphasis on all the wrong topics has come full circle by the time these kids enter college knowing more about stink ditches and Heinz 57 genders than they do about reading, writing, and arithmetic. But that's too problematic to admit out loud, amirite?

It also doesn't help that kids aren't being taught the basics of grammar/spelling at an early edge and instead get to write what they want with little to no correction to give them the good skills and habits they'll need as they get older.

had to spend like $1000 a semester on textbooks that were identical to the previous year's textbooks but they changed the order of the quiz questions in the test section of the book, so if you borrowed the previous edition of the book from someone you knew who already bought the $300 textbook, you would end up failing the class because the questions and the quizzes the teacher were using were wrong.
During my time in college, the same thing happened with text books for all sorts of classes. A new edition would release each year with some of the wording slightly tweaked and the in-chapter problems rotated through a larger bank of questions to justify the new costlier edition and make it impossible to sell your old textbook back at semester's end. Even if you could sell it back, you got $ after paying $$$$$$$$$$ for it as a new book.

I had finally learned that being in contact with professors and engaged during lectures really helps with getting amnesty on assignments, but these kids had a different experience, because there was always somebody ensuring they would be pushed through.
I'll agree with this point. I took a couple of classes with the same professor and my coming to class every week and actively participating by making comments or asking questions made the difference when I was 3 points away from the next highest grade. He told me my participation plus my improving trend on my weekly quizzes was enough to persuade him to give me that higher grade.

Wanna fix chronic absenteeism? "Every day you miss unexcused will cost you a grade"
I had a professor who did something similar. We were allowed two or three missed classes without penalty because stuff happens beyond one's control that might lead to missing class. Each beyond that reduced one's grade by a small amount that would add up over time.

I was taught that you show up where you're expected to. Be it a class, a job or a promised meeting. You don't like it? You give two weeks and find another way to get it done. But you honor ALL obligations until you have given fair effort. (which also would cure a lot of the ghosting mentioned here too).
I was taught similarly in terms of having personal discipline and a structured schedule. It's also why the two self-paced classes I had to take drove me crazy because I was to accustomed to having a set time to do everything and not having that was a challenge. Today's students lack any sort of concept of time, structure, or time management and it shows.

I had one class (communications such bs) where it was a couple hundred for a binder textbook written by the teacher. On the first day the teacher made us rip out the first page, sign it and turn it on for a grade.
During my times taking college classes, textbooks always seemed on the pricey side compared to the cost of anything else even when factoring in inflation, etc. I always found it rich (no pun intended) when professors would require self-written supplementary course materials on which they received royalties for every purchase.

(NOTE: I saw someone posted about having to take a required "fuck whitey" class. They didn't have these when I was in school. I'd consider skipping that.)
I thankfully earned my bachelor's degree before this was required, but it was discussed as a future requirement as I was preparing to graduate. Unfortunately, these classes are now hard and fast graduation requirements and not taking it means no degree.

When I lurked the site, there was a Kiwi in college who posted their experience with such a class throughout the semester. From what I recall, they found it to be the horrific experience you'd expect it to be.

The OP author refuses to acknowledge the elephant in the room: reduced admission standards and the poor quality of public K-12 education almost guarantees incoming freshman are coming to college ill-equipped for that level of coursework. Lack of social skills also plays a factor as too many people feel socially uncomfortable interacting with other people unless it's done through a screen.

And of course when all else fails, blame the (racist) system.
 
There was a kid who had to "google" how to spell Banana... And a day later when meeting with my academic advisor, I used the word "antithetical" to describe my relation to math class.... The teacher 20 years older than me didn't know what the word "antithetical" meant, I had to explain it to him.
I one time had to explain what the word bombastic meant to someone in their 50's. I was so baffled I had no idea what to say.
 
There was a retiring history professor that did exactly that. He had three exams during the course and would drop one. Most students would badly fail that first exam, and the course was required for graduation. It scared the students into actually reading their textbook.

I got asked to be part of a study group (because I'm a wargamer and history geek) where I tutored them on the French Revolution and the rise of Italy and Germany in the 19th century, One was a very intelligent (and very Leftist) person who was a published author on Native American history who had refused to learn about "white" history. Another was a nursing student who didn't know anything at all about history. We had pizza as we spent the day on it.

I very much do blame the K-12 schools, particularly after elementary school, but it's mostly a corruption problem at the administrative level. The groups they shortchange aren't "favored" - they're poor kids from ethnic minority groups who are deliberately passed along the system like cattle. Season 4 of The Wire by David Simon is a good depiction. Many graduates come out of the other end with poor reading skills (or no reading skills) and poor math skills.

Dan Rather did an enlightening report on this dynamic in the Detroit Public Schools:


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This isn't some inexplicable problem. It's very intentional and planned. It's not a bug - it's a feature.

I missed a class on occasion (everyone did), but I observed many people that habitually did not go to class except for exams. Granted, many of these classes were low level or general requirements, and my guess is that many people in these classes did not finish university (or finished with a C+ GPA in some worthless lib art degree). But why the fuck would you sign up for college and not go to class?

Because many classes are taught by associates and aren't important. Some of the students taking these courses have a job waiting for them and just need a piece of paper to qualify - a degree, a diploma, a certification, etc.

(NOTE: I saw someone posted about having to take a required "fuck whitey" class. They didn't have these when I was in school.

In an education major this is the most important course you can take. The AFT doesn't care if a teacher knows anything. They want to know if these new candidates are One with Landru. This course is a loyalty test, and how you respond to it is one of the most crucial determinants on whether or not you get your certification. This is where they weed out the libertarians and conservatives.
 
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Basically skimmed this.

Why do students need to be able to read and comprehend novels? Believe it is far more important for students to be able to read and comprehend non-fiction works. Few novels these days are worth reading, in my opinion. I get far more from histories and other non-works.

And let's be serious....if there had been smartphones in the 1920s people then would be just as addicted to them. They sure loved their radio back then, and those phones. The technology changes, but the desire to be where it's at doesn't change.
 
And let's be serious....if there had been smartphones in the 1920s people then would be just as addicted to them. They sure loved their radio back then, and those phones. The technology changes, but the desire to be where it's at doesn't change
I recently acquired a set of "Gateway to the Great Books" from 1963. In the introduction the editor mentions that people are hard pressed to focus on anything for more than 30 minutes. Some of the blame for this was laid on the television.He also goes on to mention how children are getting worse at reading in school. I was surprised to see just how much still rings true.

I do believe that if education is ever going to get better, it's going to have to come from parents. It's in the government's interest to keep its citizens as retarded as possible. It's much easier to get niggercattle to do what you want.
 
It's in the government's interest to keep its citizens as retarded as possible. It's much easier to get niggercattle to do what you want.

This has been established policy with the American aristocracy for over four centuries. Why would they change it now.
 
Reading bores them, though. They are impatient to get through whatever burden of reading they have to, and move their eyes over the words just to get it done. They’re like me clicking through a mandatory online HR training
Yeah being forced to read the dreck these lisping homosexuals call "literature" does that to you. Pick better books ass hole. School systematically destroyed my enjoyment of reading for pleasure. I think I've read like 2 books since I graduated college, because i had to read so much pretentious slop that the fags in the humanities consider "classics" or "serious adult novels" or whatever the fuck, I reflexively can't do it anymore. Fuck you John Irving and fuck college English class, you made me hate reading you cunts.

The average student has seen college as basically transactional for as long as I’ve been doing this. They go through the motions and maybe learn something along the way, but it is all in service to the only conception of the good life they can imagine: a job with middle-class wages. I’ve mostly made my peace with that, do my best to give them a taste of the life of the mind, and celebrate the successes.

Things have changed. Ted Gioia describes modern students as checked-out, phone-addicted zombies. Troy Jollimore writes, “I once believed my students and I were in this together, engaged in a shared intellectual pursuit. That faith has been obliterated over the past few semesters.” Faculty have seen a stunning level of disconnection.
People don't give a fuck because your mandatory busy work is standing between them and the irrelevant piece of paper required to get into many lucrative trades. And that's the smart and motivated ones. The phenomenon the author is noticing is basically both academia and the students going full mask off regarding what a scam college is.

“Students are less respectful of the university experience —attendance, lateness, e-mails to me about nonsense, less sense of responsibility.”
This is happening because academia is no longer a respectable institution. It now serves no purpose but to sell you a piece of paper that will put you 100 grand in debt, and if you're lucky, might get you considered for a humiliating, underpaid entry level position. Why would anybody respect academia? It's a fucking ripoff. Never mind there's a chance you get groomed by your sociology professor to be an antifa or a troon, or both. Better to learn to be an electrician, you'll make more money and do something objectively useful with your life.

I don’t blame K-12 teachers. This is not an educational system problem, this is a societal problem. What am I supposed to do? Keep standards high and fail them all? That’s not an option for untenured faculty who would like to keep their jobs. I’m a tenured full professor. I could probably get away with that for a while, but sooner or later the Dean’s going to bring me in for a sit-down. Plus, if we flunk out half the student body and drive the university into bankruptcy, all we’re doing is depriving the good students of an education.
There it is, people. Academia has Catch-22ed itself. They give out $100k pieces of paper that are worthless because there are no standards. There are no standards because the school exists to sell $100k pieces of paper and enforcing standards reduces the number they can sell. Counter to the author's intuition if he wants his institution to garner respect, they need to flunk the fucking bums. Then passing the course means something, and the degree means something. Academics truly are some of the dumbest retards imaginable.
 
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Every day you miss unexcused will cost you a grade
Grading attendance is asinine and extra work. Some classes require discussion; the good profs are usually able to build regular attendance into other grades. For example, grading class discussions, requiring reference or rebuttal to in-class discussions on essays, etc. Or, you can just rock tests and understand that the best students will likely perform well even without attending, and everyone else should plan to show up and learn or fail.
I don’t see how thousands a year on books is affordable
The US middle class is funded strictly through crippling debt. The lower class is funded through tax redistribution and debt. If you think, “this is unsustainable and doesn’t make any economical sense,” well, yes.
modern literature is so woke and so badly written that it repels the vast majority of the adult population
People don’t read classic literature either, though.
Why do students need to be able to read and comprehend novels? Believe it is far more important for students to be able to read and comprehend non-fiction works.
Reading novels trains and demonstrates comprehension and stamina (and reading novels usually happens for fun). Reading them isn’t per se causal to literacy; rather, reading them is highly correlated to (all forms) of literacy. It’s a signal moreso than a standard: if a kid can’t make it through Doestevsky, he for sure won’t hack Solzhenitsyn.
 
Colleges still have delusions about creating a "well-rounded" student and force those classes on students who don't have a background in those subjects, aren't majoring in them, and don't care about them beyond getting a decent grade.

This sort of bullshit is also something that needs to go. Gen eds are largely horseshit, they should only be necessary if you fail some sort of admittance exam. I was required to spend an ungodly amount of money retreading shit I learned in high school to tick some boxes so the English and art departments didn't realize that they were near worthless. I already consider that stepping far over the bounds of what is reasonable.
Any curriculum that forces any sort of "social awareness" classes that center on race, sex, or any other sort of libtard bullshit should be illegal and the person that drafted them should be shot. Students shouldn't even have the option to pay for bullshit classes like that with government backed loans.
Liberal Arts once served a purpose. For example, Doc Holliday, a man who shot people for a living in the Wild West, was a college graduate. He could understand Latin and Greek, was capable of playing musical instruments and if you read his letters, you'll find them to be infinitely more eloquent than even the most brilliant Ivy League grad these days. This, in addition to his actual degree: Dentistry. The contrast between him and modern college graduates is stark.

What happened was that Classical Liberal Arts taught the skills you needed to appreciate the high cultural works of our society and its predecessors. This was probably done to help ensure that a nation's most educated would have an intellectual connection to that nation and its society. When the Marxists took over the academy during the first half of the 20th century, they set about attempting to deprive society's brightest of these skills and the ensuing connection to their culture. In so doing, the Marxists created the modern liberal arts: glorification of niggerdry, feminism and faggotry and the denigration of the host society and its cultural achievements as, quote, "fascism". This was a total success, the liberal academy was utterly defenseless. It's so bad that at this point, you're legitimately more likely to learn something fulfilling from an Asmongold stream, because he sometimes reacts to people that cover interesting concepts and topics.


As a software dev, I can certainly attest to reading comprehension being in the toilet. Most users now won't read two sentences of instructions to get something to work. I literally can't simplify the process anymore; just read!
I feel your pain buddy. It gets worse when the fucking devs won't read instructions either and then demand you do their job for them. I always assumed that was a pajeet thing though.
 
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