Comments by "Republitarian" (@republitarian484) on "Kim Iversen" channel.

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  107.  @adamcorfman573  . . . LOL. . . I've heard that line of crap for years. "You're a better more well rounded student. . .blah blah blah". it isn't necessary and they aren't learning that much. I "earned" my college degree (it was a joke) from a prestigious private college over 25 years ago and even I knew back then that much of it was useless and that the curriculum was basic and just touching on the surface; two majors and a minor. Most kids have no clue what they want to do because they have not been exposed to any jobs or professions to determine if it would be a good fit for them and/or their personality. A kid may be smart enough to be an electrical engineer but are more suited to just be an electrician. Or how about that kid that decides to go into "business administration" when they don't have the personality or natural leadership characteristics (yep. . .hierarchies are natural). How about the "Business Administration" kid just open up their own small business to learn about it. . . DUH! Most kids study to just get a good grade on a test to then only forget 80% of what they thought they might have learned by the time next semester rolls around. Most people, even intelligent people, learn by doing something not by sitting in a classroom listening to some overpaid tenured unionized professor lecture on a subject that they probably do not even work in. And at least 30% to 40% of the general core classes and pre-req's are useless and not necessary. So that even further devalues the degree because now you have students wasting their time studying subjects that are not part of their major which distracts them from learning more about the field of work (that they have no clue about). Actually, most kids just "pick" a major because they have no clue on what they want to do. . . because they haven't been out in the real world yet. And by that student "picking" a major because they have no clue then adds more macroeconomic inefficiencies because now you have a mismatch of skills, education, abilities, personality, passion, drive, etc. You have students that should have been accountants that took engineering because they had no clue on what they would enjoy or excel at. Or you have a psychology major having to take a job in Human Resources because they didn't want to pursue their psychology profession. Why are there so many college degreed workers working in professions that does not match their degree? Because a college degree is pretty much useless for most professions. I can ramble on and on about this subject.
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