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Why America's Obsession With STEM Education Is Dangerous

HughPickens.com writes According to an op-ed by Fareed Zakaria in the Washington Post, if Americans are united in any conviction these days, it is that we urgently need to shift the country's education toward the teaching of specific, technical skills, expand STEM courses (science, technology, engineering and math) and deemphasize the humanities. "It is the only way, we are told, to ensure that Americans survive in an age defined by technology and shaped by global competition. The stakes could not be higher." But according to Zakaria the dismissal of broad-based learning, however, comes from a fundamental misreading of the facts — and puts America on a dangerously narrow path for the future.

As Steve Jobs once explained "it's in Apple's DNA that technology alone is not enough — that it's technology married with liberal arts, married with the humanities, that yields us the result that makes our hearts sing." Zakaria says that no matter how strong your math and science skills are, you still need to know how to learn, think and even write and cites Jeff Bezos' insistence that writing a memo that makes sense is an even more important skill to master. "Full sentences are harder to write," says Bezos. "They have verbs. The paragraphs have topic sentences. There is no way to write a six-page, narratively structured memo and not have clear thinking." "This doesn't in any way detract from the need for training in technology," concludes Zakaria, "but it does suggest that as we work with computers (which is really the future of all work), the most valuable skills will be the ones that are uniquely human, that computers cannot quite figure out — yet. And for those jobs, and that life, you could not do better than to follow your passion, engage with a breadth of material in both science and the humanities, and perhaps above all, study the human condition."

8 of 397 comments (clear)

  1. Way too many humanities majors by jfdavis668 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The push to expand STEM is the result of so many people in the past rushing toward humanities majors that we have a glut. I don't think people are trying to eliminate them, but just bring some balance back.

    1. Re:Way too many humanities majors by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ... using this STEM market glut as a prime example.

      People with STEM degrees have lower unemployment, and higher salaries. To say there is a "glut" relative to humanities is silly.

      the ability to deal with people, to write well, to communicate, to create, these are also important job skills.

      They are indeed important skills. But they are not "humanities". Sitting through a lecture on philosophy or sociology does not make one a better communicator, or better able to deal with people.

    2. Re:Way too many humanities majors by ganv · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Here is a quote from the Zakaria article to think about: 'Critical thinking is, in the end, the only way to protect American jobs.' His implication is that the humanities are a bastion of critical thinking. But when an introductory student is asked to do actual critical thinking where they might be wrong (i.e. introductory engineering, science, and math courses) they often conclude that they would rather go to the arts or humanities where the requirements of critical thinking are not as high.

      The fundamental idea is right...that it is understanding of the human condition that will be the biggest growth area in the next few decades. But he is wrong that this is an argument for training more students in current curriculum in anthropology or classics. The future belongs to people who can take the serious critical thinking characteristic of math, science, and engineering curricula and apply it in complex situations where technical details and human behavior are both important.

    3. Re:Way too many humanities majors by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, those people did have a point, even if they didn't understand why at a direct level. Essentially, you need job skills/education/etc. You can't get by as a low or no skilled laborer, and companies are generally not willing to train you. You can't do the classic "start in the mail room and work your way up" anymore, especially not if you're straight out of high school.

      The reason for the focus on "get a degree, any degree" is that for some time, that was necessary not for the specific training it provided, but because it showed "I am educated, I can function on this level, I can learn what you need me to learn" to employers. These days, it's not enough, because everyone wants you to already have experience or training.

      This is why the focus is shifting to STEM - because that's what businesses are clamoring for more of. But at the same time, a laser-like focus on STEM degrees, or even just specific non-college vocational training programs, are going to leave people worse off. There's a reason universities mandate a core curriculum, because they're supposed to be turning out well-rounded graduates (even if most people just view the mandatory classes as something to be suffered through, not a place to learn something). I see people all the time in my IT sector job that don't have that background, either because they never went to college, or they mostly ignored those classes, and never learned to write in the organized manner that Bezos refers to.

      Myself, I earned my BA in History. I then promptly went to work for the one US employer that still takes people based solely on aptitude, and offers to train them (even at great expense) - the US Military. That's certainly not a path for everyone though, or for every field, but I find that it's one that's done very well for me.

  2. Balance is the key by grimmjeeper · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Like everything else in this country, people seem to have this pathological need to take things to extremes. The neglecting of STEM subjects in schools was a problem that needed to be fixed. In the past, we have given far too much credence to the notion that you can just study focused subject to the exclusion of all else and you'll be a success. Trouble is, we have too many people who studied nothing but transgender religious environmental studies and now they wonder why they can't get a job.

    So naturally, the knee jerk reaction is to swing the pendulum all the way to STEM at the expense of a broad education. And that's just as bad.

    Yes, we do need to increase the amount of STEM training we provide to our students. But only insofar as we eliminate the neglect those topics have suffered. And we cannot justify neglecting the other subjects. Having students understand the basic concepts in STEM fields is just as important as understanding the significance of the major events in history and understanding the basic classical themes in literature, not to mention the need to know how to communicate effectively in speech as well as in writing. They are all pieces in a greater whole. Neglecting any of the pieces reduces the whole.

  3. Re:Oh the humanity! by garyisabusyguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All I know is that I tested out of all of my humanities credits when working towards a degree

    My daughter is going to college to become an English teacher.
    I think that it is to spite me, but I bet that she'll be working as a tech trainer before long

    To be honest, the sheer mass of the US student body pretty much guarantees that even the hardest push towards STEM education will only result in a small percentage of students really moving in that direction.

    I only wish that most of the HR and Sales types that I gather requirements from had some baseline exposure to logic :/

    --
    Wherever You Go, There You Are
  4. Re:I find author's "facts" dubious by jeffmeden · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From the linked piece...

    And yet over these past five decades, that same laggard country has dominated the world of science, technology, research and innovation.

    When I travel especially in Asia, (read China, South Korea, Singapore etc), I find better employment of technology than in USA right from the airport! This technology isn't necessarily American at all!

    What I find we Americans have, is the view that we are at the epitome of the best. You can't compare the subway system in NY to that in Shanghai in terms of deployed tech for example! NY is in the dark ages. I know because engineers from NY go to Shanghai to "learn" how things are done on such scale.

    The Koreans have come to dominate ship building not using western tech, but their home grown solutions to enormous problems.

    What I find is that we in America are really one confident lot, right from school kids. We also have a spirit of "self congratulation." But trust me, those Asian folks beat us in many ways.

    "I find author's facts dubious" sums up your comment rather nicely. Other (asian) nations might appear to be technological leaders because their airports are new and shiny (at least, the one airport at the capitol that you visited) and that's all well and good but as soon as you get away from the metropolis you see where the actual differences lie: in the US you have technology accessible to nearly 100% of the population, in terms of cost and functionality. That shit ain't easy. In developing countries, the upper half (maybe) can afford it, but the lower half live without even reliable electricity, much less a computer to grant them access to rich information/education/entertainment/etc.

  5. Re:Liberal Arts education is valuable. by swan5566 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think the root cause in a lot of this comes from the fact that the govt. funding and solicitation of college students for colleges/universities as their income streams heavily shapes the "ivory tower" mentalities found there, which hardly maps at all to how money is made outside of there. What you are taught in the ivory tower is what works well inside the ivory tower.

    --
    In debates about Christianity, there are two groups: those looking for answers, and those looking to just ask questions.