Slashdot Mirror


Disadvantaged Students Stay In College If They're Told Everyone Struggles (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader shares an Ars Technica report: Lower-income and minority college students often have trouble sticking with higher education. But past studies have indicated they would be less likely to drop out of school if they receive appropriate counseling once they start experiencing academic problems. A new study published in PNAS demonstrates that if students receive this kind of intervention prior to college enrollment and during their first year at college, they are more likely to avoid having academic trouble in the first place. And the counseling can be done over the Internet. The counseling involves letting students know that it is common for students to struggle with the transition to college and that this transition will get easier with time. This is known as a "lay theory intervention."

119 of 206 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I thought they needed a safe space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I wish the movie "PCU" were still available on streaming or home video. People really need to go back and watch both that and (oddly enough) "Demolition Man," both of which proved to be oddly prescient.

  2. You're good enough, smart enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    And, gosh darn it, people enjoy your presence on campus!

  3. Re:I thought they needed a safe space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Took the words right out of my mouth. What was once satire is now full blown reality.

    "You got that right. You see, according to Cocteau's plan... I'm the enemy. Because I like to think, I like to read. I'm into freedom of speech, the freedom of choice. I'm the kind of guy who likes to sit in a greasy spoon and wonder - "Gee, should I have the T-bone steak or the jumbo rack of BBQ ribs with the side order of gravy fries?" I want high cholesterol. I wanna eat bacon and butter and BUCKETS of cheese, okay? I wanna smoke a Cuban cigar the size of Cincinnati in the non-smoking section. I wanna run through the streets naked with green Jell-O all over my body reading Playboy magazine. Why? Because I suddenly might feel the need to, okay, pal? I've SEEN the future. Do you know what it is? It's a 47-year-old virgin sitting around in his beige pajamas, drinking a banana-broccoli shake, singing "I'm an Oscar Meyer Wiener." You live up top, you live Cocteau's way: what he wants, when he wants, how he wants. Your other choice: come down here... and maybe starve to death." ... or oddly prescient...

  4. Re:Add the counseling up front by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I took to college like a fish to water myself. It was high school that sucked ass.

    I loved the freedom and the fact that the cro-magnon bullies were, for the most part, gone (redneck idiots and ghetto thugs usually don't make it to college). To me it was like breathing for the first time. I never really learned anything in high school (except which bullies to avoid). But college was a learning paradise! And the parties were much better too. And I didn't have to live at home and listen to my parents anymore!

    Shit, I would have never LEFT college if they had let me stay on after grad school.

  5. Re: When everyone succeeds, no one does by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Bullock's! Leaning to ask you help is part of maturing. Know when you need help is very important. Knowing others feel the same pressure makes asking for help less awkward.

    If you think you did it alone you are the one with the problem.

  6. Re: I thought the needed a safe space by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    I'm getting mixed messages here. I thought the daddy was supposed to be at work. Now you're telling me he's supposed to be where the mother is?

  7. Tell them lies by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Everyone does not struggle. There are reasons you have difficulty--not that you're too stupid for college, or that the next guy has a better brain; it's that you're using the wrong methods, and you're entering an unfamiliar environment.

    The brain, first and foremost, is an energy-hungry organ. To minimize energy usage, it restructures to readily follow the most common set of actions. Overriding this--self-activation or response-inhibition--requires first formulating a plan in the prefrontal cortex, then activating the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex to directly control the midbrain. In short: your brain out of high school is a high school brain, and making it take actions different in *any* way from high school requires using one part of your brain to force the rest of it into compliance. Those parts of your brain all consume energy and, just as doing an endless stream of push-ups will eventually leave your muscles physically-incapable of lifting any more, your brain will run down the ATP supply in involved cells and become fatigued and, eventually, physically-incapable of taking these actions.

    Many people work around this by setting schedules and reframing.

    Setting schedules creates a low-energy activation system: your brain, over an average six weeks of effort, restructures such that keeping to that scheduled set of actions is a lower-energy behavior. Over years and with the experience of repeatedly changing schedules as necessary, your brain even develops the facility to set new schedules and adhere strongly to them in a few weeks as *the* lowest-energy behavior. Lowering the energy expenditure makes it easier to cope with something like a move from high school to college.

    Reframing reduces energy expenditure by connecting one impulse to another. If you can evaluate an activity in terms of how it supports something you are actively interested in, that activity becomes a low-energy pursuit. Think of it like changing your work into a distraction: studying engineering is hard and boring, but you *like* tinkering with engines and building go karts and such; studying engineering will let you build *better* go karts, and that connection draws your brain to react on impulse by studying engineering. When that study converts quickly and recognizably into a greater depth of enjoyment of your hobby, you get positive reinforcement, causing your brain to structure itself around seeking those results by executing those actions.

    Besides all of this, the geniuses among us are only using competent mental techniques. These range from scheduling and reframing as above to structured study techniques (SQW4R, OK4R), casual or systemic mnemonics (simple visualization up through mind palaces and other systems), and even structured note-taking systems (Cornell notes are the best generic; there are better systems for certain specific materials). Developing and exercising the correct skills *vastly* reduces the difficulties faced in college because time spent studying is optimized: less effort and less time produces more complete understanding and better grades.

    Telling people to grin and bear it because college is hard is idiotic. If the effort and cost of college are high enough, it's *not* worth the investment--I dropped out and it was the best decision of my life; this may have been wholly untrue if I had employed more-advanced study techniques (and, in fact, I've gone back and structured my own computer science program to self-teach on the weekends because it's a six-month task if I can find 1 hour per day). Identify *why* they're struggling and fix it.

    1. Re:Tell them lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nice monologue, I even suspect that some of it is correct. However, counterexamples are abundant. I'm sure everyone here knows someone who can recite every bit of sports statistic they have ever heard, but if challenged to watch a game noting the statistics of that match they'd refuse because "math is hard." I was playing a certain dice and imagination based game at a convention recently and many of the veteran players could list off the twelve things affecting their roll, but then fail dramatically at adding them up to get a number.

      Just because someone has a hobby doesn't mean they're any good at it. Also, just because someone has a skill doesn't mean they like it. Reality is more complex, and not everyone is as lucky to be good at what they like. Many people can cover the difference with dedication, and following some of your advice, but there are more factors involved.

    2. Re:Tell them lies by JeffOwl · · Score: 1

      I don't think everyone struggles with academics, though some would argue that if you aren't then you need a bigger load or a more difficult program. But there are many other things that can cause people to struggle. There is your budget; roommates; not punching some asshole who desperately deserves it; whether to spend the weekend with the spelunking club or the skydiving club; do I go out with the blonde or the slightly less attractive redhead (okay, that's not a struggle, it's the redhead), when should I stop drinking in order to avoid getting my face written on with a sharpie (or worse). Everyone struggles with different things.

    3. Re:Tell them lies by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Success in not necessarily about structure - I had less than zero structure studying and I still did fine academically.

      That's not to say it would not help some others, or that it would not have improved my own work somewhat - I'm just saying structure is not required for everyone, and I suspect for some people such structure may be counter-productive.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    4. Re:Tell them lies by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      there are many other things that can cause people to struggle. There is your budget; roommates; not punching some asshole who desperately deserves it; whether to spend the weekend with the spelunking club or the skydiving club; do I go out with the blonde or the slightly less attractive redhead (okay, that's not a struggle, it's the redhead), when should I stop drinking in order to avoid getting my face written on with a sharpie (or worse).

      That's stress. Stress is normal and healthy. Too much and unhealthy stress is often called "strain"; struggling implies failure to thrive.

      You're not struggling just because life is hard; you're struggling because you can't keep up with life. For problems which are not intractable, we can fix the root cause.

      I don't think everyone struggles with academics, though some would argue that if you aren't then you need a bigger load or a more difficult program.

      Don't increase load to failure; increase load to capacity.

    5. Re:Tell them lies by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Some people have superior internal strategies--I'm one of those people; I always did great without structure because my brain internally dissects everything. Of particular note, I don't deal well with inconsistent data: when I have new knowledge, I compare it to all other knowledge I possess, and resolve any inconsistencies. This has lead to reasoning out information I haven't yet been given, or identifying when someone gave me a simplification of a concept which is just plain incorrect. The effect is so striking that, on a few occasions, I've been able to reason out things people don't want anyone knowing simply by spending too much time around them--even things their actions and words don't obviously imply, just based on models of consistency ("a person developing this particular set of behaviors most commonly has experienced..."). It's reflexive for me.

      I still don't come anywhere near a number of great people (many of whom are assholes, somehow; please explain how such infantile people as Brad Spengler, Ulrich Drepper, and Theo da Raadt manage to wield great mental abilities while being such narrow-minded children); and I've steadily found my two biggest flaws to be motivational (I spend almost zero time studying anything; my self-activation is shitty, and my response-inhibition is unrivaled by all except firewalkers) and structural (applying enhanced study techniques gives a *huge* return over my baseline intelligence).

      There is a commonality here. The manner in which I think is an extreme form of reflection. Students who practice reflection in a non-extreme way universally learn much faster and better than students who try to cram material bluntly into their tiny little skulls. I've observed the same of memory: instead of mnemonics systems (which would let me memorize facts and figures rapidly), I use basic association, storage, and visualization strategies, which lets me sort and access my memories in a less-efficient but still highly-effective manner, and works *extremely* well for people who think they simply have bad memories. The techniques of basic arithmetic taught in Japanese schools produce students who are unrecognizable as individuals of normal intellect to the rest of the world.

      All of these things are some manner of structure. Reflection is a structured activity: it is a task you perform during and after learning new information. Mnemonic systems are highly-structured; and basic mnemonic behaviors including association and visualization are more structured than simply letting information hit you and hoping it sticks, even if the only step is "stop and think about that for 4 seconds". Basic arithmetic operations are a highly-structured task when using a soroban, and those tasks translate to highly-structured mental operations which produce human calculators.

      It's true that applying structure takes additional energy--as I pointed out: learning to establish and modify schedules requires energy, and carrying out this activity after you've become practiced in it takes less energy. The point is not to "do fine"; the point is to *maximize*, to produce the absolute best strategy. Such strategies are complex and state-based, which is why they're called "strategies" and not "algorithms".

    6. Re:Tell them lies by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      Everyone does not struggle. There are reasons you have difficulty--not that you're too stupid for college, or that the next guy has a better brain; it's that you're using the wrong methods, and you're entering an unfamiliar environment.

      Sometimes. Sometimes it is a lack of structured study skills or inability to manage time efficiently.

      But there are also distinctive other problems that tend to be more common among "disadvantaged students," particularly those who are socioeconomically disadvantaged. Number one is probably the fact that many of these students simply have fewer resources than other college students. They are more likely to have to work part-time (even multiple part-time jobs) while taking classes, just to pay for school. They are more likely to have more complicated family responsibilities at a younger age, which also sucks up a lot of time. They are more likely to live at home and commute rather than living in a dorm on-campus, which may occupy a couple hours or more per day just to get back and forth to classes. Because they're disconnected from campus life, it's often harder for them to make friends, build "study groups" they can use as resources, and the isolation can lead to depression, along with an inability to understand how different the lives of the "on-campus" students are and how they (more successfully) manage their struggles. Etc., etc.

      In other words, sometimes students pick up or take advantage of the study skills of others -- but "disadvantaged" students can find it harder to be a part of that.

      Also, in the name of "diversity," many schools try to bring in students who are "disadvantaged." Yes, in many cases these are also minority students, but many elite schools also like to try to find those unusual students from the crappy public school that have the potential to excel.

      These students sometimes experience a "mismatch" effect -- not only are they more likely to experience a much more sudden increase in level of material than the upper-middle-class kid who went to the elite prep school, but "diversity" measures often also target minority students who may be on the lower end of the curve of admitted students. So, beyond a possible lack of study/time skills, disadvantaged students may also be dealing with a much greater initial learning curve to catch up to the level of college life than others.

      Besides all of this, the geniuses among us are only using competent mental techniques. These range from scheduling and reframing as above to structured study techniques (SQW4R, OK4R), casual or systemic mnemonics (simple visualization up through mind palaces and other systems), and even structured note-taking systems (Cornell notes are the best generic; there are better systems for certain specific materials). Developing and exercising the correct skills *vastly* reduces the difficulties faced in college because time spent studying is optimized: less effort and less time produces more complete understanding and better grades.

      SOME "geniuses among us" use deliberate structured techniques like this. Other people depend on innate abilities that they don't have to think about. (And when I say "innate," I don't necessary mean they were born with it: I also include things that for whatever reason a talented kid may have figured out in processing the world when he/she was very young, and it's become so ingrained in the very way they think and process information that they are completely unaware of how different it is from other people.)

      Obviously these structured techniques can be helpful to some. But I'd really hesitate to say that all smart people are "only using mental techniques" of the kind you mention... certainly not consciously or deliberately.

      Telling people to grin and bear it because college is hard is idiotic.

      To some extent, I agree. But as I noted above, sometime for "disadvantaged" students the problems aren't just a lack

    7. Re:Tell them lies by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Number one is probably the fact that many of these students simply have fewer resources than other college students. They are more likely to have to work part-time (even multiple part-time jobs) while taking classes, just to pay for school. They are more likely to have more complicated family responsibilities at a younger age, which also sucks up a lot of time.

      I *know* I can fix that.

      Other people depend on innate abilities that they don't have to think about. (And when I say "innate," I don't necessary mean they were born with it: I also include things that for whatever reason a talented kid may have figured out in processing the world when he/she was very young, and it's become so ingrained in the very way they think and process information that they are completely unaware of how different it is from other people.)

      I'm one of those people, although I've taken it to an unhealthy extreme in some places. A *very* unhealthy extreme. It doesn't stack up to structured skills, but it does make people think I'm some kind of super-brain.

      Getting my superior mind powers to fall over for the tiniest reason is pretty trivial. By far the most severe is the black box effect: I use an extreme form of analogical thinking which includes defining analogical boundaries (i.e. I specifically determine how the two things I'm associating are *not* similar), and can immediately understand anything as a combination of bits and pieces of attributes of other things; show me something I can't associate to *anything* I already know and I'll spend literally years poking and prodding at it as something I have no capacity to understand without hand-holding.

      So much for super-brain.

      as I noted above, sometime for "disadvantaged" students the problems aren't just a lack of learning/study skills. In many cases they are also dealing with personal struggles FAR greater than students who are more well-off ever could imagine.

      Often, stress is reduced by understanding. Citing out how people are different because their situation is different makes people feel less-bad about themselves because they understand *why* their performance is worse, and can take actions to correct it. The limitations are due to the situation, and they can focus on fixing what they can fix, and understand why they can't fix other things in terms other than "it really looks like my friends are all smarter than me."

      This is wholly relevant when the prevalent mode of thinking is "they can do better if we just cheer them on." Maybe they *can* do better, and maybe you can use something stronger than a pep talk to get them moving along. If their internal deficiencies aren't the problem, then it must be an external problem; and you handle that by pointing it out to them, not by telling them everyone has the same problems when they don't.

      first they needed a shift in attitude, which often came from realizing they weren't alone in their struggles

      I disagree with the method, but not the mechanism. I couldn't very well say anything about the brain's consumption of energy and operation under stress otherwise. I only maintain that positive results give positive reinforcement and reduce stress, and that a person's unique environmental factors should not be portrayed to them as something everyone is experiencing--because that is a flat lie and they will wonder wtf is wrong with them when they see everyone else is handling those struggles far more easily.

    8. Re:Tell them lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Huhr duhhrrrrr!!!! DUHR DUHR DUHRR!!!!! Derp herp derpa derp

      The *purpose* of college is to struggle because challenging your brain makes you smarter.

      If you are coasting through college without struggling or without challenge, then you're throwing away years of your life for a piece of paper. Yes, that paper is financially important for your future, but moreso are 4-8 years of intellectual struggle that will make you all the more brilliant in your intended field. You may have the genius to get good grades without pushing yourself, then why bother? Just cure cancer for the rest of us, because you're so smart you have nothing left to learn!

    9. Re:Tell them lies by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      One would hope that " letting students know that it is common for students to struggle with the transition" does not mean "grin and bear it", but is more along the lines of your advice to find better, smarter, more productive methods more suitable to their new environment and workload.

    10. Re:Tell them lies by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      I hasten to add that "better, smarter, more productive methods" may be COMPLETELY DIFFERENT from person to person. That's part of the verb "find". I have seen different approaches work for different people, and I'm sure there are more.

    11. Re:Tell them lies by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Different approaches work because of different internal translation layers and habitual thinking behaviors. All people learn best the same way; to cope with not being told how the brain functions and how learning works, people find various strategies which produce similar results.

      Tailored approaches can lead to inefficient learning and, as a result, to the observation that some students are just dumber than other, more brilliant students. All students appear to learn best by adjusting the study strategy to fit their learned, habitual behavior; if that behavior is inefficient, an adjusted strategy will produce better results than an unadjusted strategy, and worse results than an adjusted strategy fitting a student who is internally using a different method. Importantly, this produces worse results than adjusting the student's internal strategies toward optimum.

      The crude example is the perception of people as visual, auditory, or kinesthetic learners. All people are primarily visual learners: the brain stores visual information better than anything. Memory is associative, and auditory cues tie directly to visual-spatial memory; while physically performing a task enables spatial analysis, producing large amounts of visual-spatial information. How a person responds to any such data determines how well they learn from it: people who fail to turn visual data into spatial data, who don't reflect on new information, and who don't turn verbal information into visual and then spatial data tend to behave as kinesthetic learners. If you take these same people and teach them to project the other types of information together, they become substantially-similar to learners of other types.

      People will always have a preference for a learning method--they'll want to see it, to read instructions, or to get their hands on it. Teaching them other methods allows them to load their brains using more-effective strategies, and then access all of that information through the comfort of exercising their favorite learning method. Doing something in a way which you most prefer draws upon the least amount of energy and is thus most comfortable and enjoyable; it doesn't necessarily produce the best results, and instead provides a great way to reflect on, reframe, and reprocess information being learned, strengthening learning.

      I've eventually learned to use many strategies for learning, and don't consider myself any particular type of learner. Visual learning provides me with images to work from and of which to project spatial estimations. Auditory learning--really, just "learning by words"--gives me a logical semantic to follow. Kinesthetic learning allows me to store event memory, increase the basis for visual learning, refine spatial data, and otherwise create large amounts of additional information and link existing information together. I leverage everything I can use.

      People all have the same neurological facilities. They're not cats and gerbils and monkeys with varied cerebral anatomy.

  8. Re:So, a little encouragement can go a long way by sycodon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, we are going to write, "Stick to it. Never give up" 100 times...or tell them that 100 times.

    Really, that's called encouragement and leadership. The Armed Forces do it all the time. Coaches do it for their teams.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  9. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by MightyYar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Wow, a Renaissance man, your uncle. He managed to compare apes and blacks and ALSO wedged an absentee father stab in there. Truly admirable. If he could work in something about laziness or stupidity in there he could go on tour with it.

    If he's still around, I think Trump's legal team has an opening.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  10. Re: So, a little encouragement can go a long way by hackwrench · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not that it's encouragement, or else "You're going to do just fine," would suffice. It's specifically, other people struggle, too. The disadvantaged person who would end up bailing otherwise, was probably thinking that the other people make it because it is a breeze for them; it's not a breeze for me, so I'm probably not going to make it, so I might as well quit now.

  11. If you think minorities have it tough... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When I transferred from community college to university in 1994, I applied to the Equal Opportunity Program. Being a poor white boy who was the first person in his family to go to college, I got accepted into the program. The Latino guidance counselor told me not to bother with the tutoring resources, because, you know, I was white, and didn't need that much help, and to come back next year to renew the EO&P contract.

    My first year in the university ended with my girlfriend and I breaking up, leaving me depress and on academic probation. I got called into the EO&P office to explain my situation to a different guidance counselor. She demanded to know why I listened to that "idiot" from the year before and not follow the program as laid out in the contract. I pointed out the contract language that specifically stated that I must do everything that the guidance counselors told me to do. That took the wind out of her sails. Either way, I got kicked out of the program and the university. Ironically, the academic probation policy changed the following year because 10% of the student body was at risk of being kicked out (typically, it's 3%), which was too much money for the university to let walk away, and many of those students stayed.

    I never went back to the university. A decade later, I went back to community college to learn computer programming and made the president's list for maintaining a 4.0GPA in my major. That was the beginning of my technical career.

    1. Re:If you think minorities have it tough... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I'm mixed race but look white. Name gives it away. Anyway, I was put in remedial reading class due to an undiagnosed medical issue. I was reading to the teacher one day and he stopped me, because it was obvious I was bored. He asked me what sort of thing I liked to read at home, and I told him I was half way through Lord of the Rings and could I bring that in. He just stared at me dumbfounded for a bit, and then suggested some other uninteresting kids book. I was maybe 9 or 10 at the time I think.

      That medical condition screwed me all through university. Eventually I ended up with a good job and was able to show my skills though. Shitty things like what happened to us unfortunately happens all the time, but comparing relative suffering doesn't really help anyone.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    2. Re:If you think minorities have it tough... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      He just stared at me dumbfounded for a bit, and then suggested some other uninteresting kids book.

      I had a similar incident with a library summer reading program as a kid. Read ten picture books during the summer. I did — in one day. The librarian called me a liar. She told me to fetch the books and recite each book word-for-word from memory. Most of these books had five words per picture page and 20 pages per book. I recited ~1,000 words perfectly. That made her madder. She held on to my reading certificate until the end of the program I would later graduate from the eighth grade with a college-level reading comprehension.

    3. Re:If you think minorities have it tough... by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      You're a white male looking for help. You ARE a minority in that no programs exist to help you or cater for you. There's no minimum quotas for you, and no companies out there going out of their way to fast track you into their programs.

    4. Re:If you think minorities have it tough... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      People think that community college is just a buffet they can graze at and they're doing good as long as they are taking 12 credit hours.

      Most community colleges have been impacted by budget cuts, too many people demanding classes and too many classes being cancelled. It was bad after the dot com bust, but it was a lot worst after the Great Recession. The four-year degree, with or without community college, is no longer practical.

    5. Re:If you think minorities have it tough... by Quirkz · · Score: 1

      Shame. I spent a whole bunch of recesses actively discussing the Lord of the Rings and other fantasy novels with my sixth grade teacher. We had a never-ending argument about whether Lloyd Alexander's Fair Folk were elves, dwarves, both, or something else. One of the most inspirational teachers I had, up through college.

    6. Re:If you think minorities have it tough... by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      For the majority of my contract jobs, I'm hired over the phone. Skin color doesn't come into play. If it ever did, I have a Mexican uncle as a personal reference. Having a Mexican uncle opens many doors, especially among Latinos.

      You're lucky, twice. This is very real and I've experienced it first hand when I had pressure from upper management to employ a female Chinese girl to the engineering department purely on the basis that she was female, Chinese, and that's what was lacking. They didn't attend the interview, they didn't even read through their whole resume which if they did would have made them aware that she wasn't getting the job anyway, but in their eyes she was perfect for the role.

    7. Re:If you think minorities have it tough... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      You're lucky, twice.

      Luck has nothing to do with it. I grew up in a multicultural environment where I can get along with everyone. I've never been denied or lost a job because of my race. The only time I suffered discrimination was when I worked at Cisco, where 95% of my coworkers were Indians, and, because of that, they only had vegan pizzas at company events. Pizza is not pizza unless it has some kind of meat on it.

      They didn't attend the interview, they didn't even read through their whole resume which if they did would have made them aware that she wasn't getting the job anyway, but in their eyes she was perfect for the role.

      Otherwise known as corporate dysfunction when HR has checkboxes to mark off.

    8. Re:If you think minorities have it tough... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      One of the most inspirational teachers I had, up through college.

      I had an English teacher in college who invited students to come to class on a Saturday morning for extra help. I showed up with three or four others. She put up a sentence and asked why the grammar was correct. I took a risk and told her it felt right, as I didn't know how to explain it otherwise. Grammar Nazis always punished me for not knowing the rules of grammar. She went with my feeling and built upon it. When the semester was over, I knew my grammar rules.

    9. Re:If you think minorities have it tough... by Octorian · · Score: 1

      Spoken like someone who has never taken their own advice. Community Colleges are tarpits with 25% transfer rates to a 4 year institution. The dropout rate is outrageous, and those who do transfer normally take 3-5 years to get there. When you look at the opportunity cost of delayed graduation by 1-3 years, the cost of community college far outweighs the tuition savings.

      This reminds me of something I used to observe all the time, when I was living around people doing CC and/or the local state university...
      They'd take 3+ years to finish that 2-year degree, then transfer, and it would still take them another 4 years to finish that university degree. What exactly did they save, over just doing the university degree from the start? Seemed like I'd almost never run into anyone who actually did the 2-year + 2 more at university, as such things are generally advertised.

  12. Just major in EE by rfengr · · Score: 1

    Just major in EE, where you get your ass kicked, and 2/3 of the students really do flunk out after 2 years. Then they won't feel so bad.

    1. Re:Just major in EE by Kierthos · · Score: 2

      I won't say you're wrong... because you're not. In the Engineering program at the university I went to, EE 221 was required for _ALL_ Engineering majors.

      At the main campus (this was a university with 'satellite' campuses), it was taught in a huge lecture hall, 200+ students in there per class session, and if you fell behind, you were left behind. Roughly 15% of the class dropped it by the final drop/add day (either to take it next semester, or they would outright change majors), and roughly another 15% failed the class.

      I got lucky enough to take it at one of the satellite campuses, with (at the time) the only Engineering professor at this university system who wasn't at the main campus. (Not kidding. If you were taking an Engineering class at any of the satellite campuses, it was a remote learning/professor on tape/whatever class.)

      Instead of 200+ students in a lecture hall, we had 30 or so students. A third of the class got A's, and we were using the harder version of the textbook.

      --
      Mr. Hu is not a ninja.
    2. Re:Just major in EE by deKernel · · Score: 1

      Holy crap, were you my instructor for the Into to E.E. class I had to take in '87? He told everyone to look to the left and right and say good-bye to them because they wouldn't be there at graduation. Low and behold, he was right. We started out with 120 and graduated 30.

    3. Re:Just major in EE by sconeu · · Score: 1

      When I was at WUSTL (early '80s), EE 280 (?) was the washout class for engineers. Everyone who was an engineer had to take it.

      For science majors, Organic Chemistry was often the washout class...

      Can't remember the others...

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    4. Re:Just major in EE by Jaime2 · · Score: 1

      You were part of one of the more selective programs. I got an ME degree in 1993. Every year there was a weed-out class that nearly half of the students failed. Typical freshman class is 6000 and the university typically graduates 600 per year. Our idea of a big lecture hall was 500+ students. 200+ was typical for second year classes. By the third year, nearly everything was taught in 30 person or smaller rooms due to fewer students and those students branching out into specialties.

    5. Re:Just major in EE by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      Hahahaha. In my freshman year engineering programming class, there were fewer than fifty students out of a class of 300. The teacher was very good, but the majority of students were not prepared to put in the amount of effort required and he was replaced. Then most students passed, but eventually dropped out over the years. And then there was freshman physics class where 30% was an 'A' when graded on the curve.

    6. Re:Just major in EE by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      My upper division math classes (real analysis, topology, differential geometry, calculus of variations) regularly had about a dozen students. And a quarter of those where grad students.

  13. Re:Perhaps they don't belong in college by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    Maybe these lower class and minorities would do better in an apprenticeship role,

    so that they can be replaced by a robot within the next twenty years.

    The easiest jobs to automate are not necessarily those requiring less education. In fact, knowledge intensive jobs may fall first. Medical radiologists are already being replaced with computer image analysis and/or doctors in India. Robots help with surgery. A lot of legal work is being automated (or offshored). Medical diagnosis may be easier to automate than repairing a leaky faucet.

  14. Re:When everyone succeeds, no one does by NotDrWho · · Score: 1, Troll

    Agreed. Most of the people who I knew in college who needed any sort of extra counseling or hand-holding were people who probably shouldn't have been in college to begin with. Of course, that was back in a time when it was okay to NOT go to college, and kids were actually honestly told that not everyone belonged in college. These days, every kid, no matter how stupid or ill-equipped for college, has to be told that he's a special snowflake who can do anything and everything.

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  15. Re:So, a little encouragement can go a long way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Not so useful for the compsci kids though:

    for i in range (0, 101):
          print("Yay, me!")

  16. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by Opportunist · · Score: 2

    I know it's hard to believe, and for the longest time I actually thought this to have become outlawed, but there are allegedly still students in college trying to learn something rather than expecting something to be handed to them for crying "oppression".

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  17. A few words go a long way by decipher_saint · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm visually impaired, when I went into the Computer Systems Technology program at NAIT they hadn't really dealt with a visually impaired person before. The committee running the program at the time recommended I take semesters in halves so I wouldn't get overloaded. I took this advice and started during the summer intake. That first half semester was a bitch, they didn't have materials to help me along and the 13" monitors they had were brutal for my vision. Anyway, I got OK grades in most classes, but nothing great, in the introduction to programming I passed with a 65% (bare minimum pass) but I felt like it just wasn't for me. The instructor there at the time took me aside during one of the last days before the semester closed and told me that I had a lot of potential and that I should give it another try.

    The next half-semester I re-took the introduction to programming, by now the program had purchased 17" monitors and my grade shot up 30%. Maybe it was finally having the equipment I needed, maybe it was taking the course for the second time but I know it was the words of encouragement that made me do labs as soon as I got them, try to work harder in other courses too, connecting the dots between them.

    After that second half-semester I decided to go to normal semesters like everyone else and excelled. Turned out I was naturally gifted for problem solving and all sorts of other things that I didn't really think I was capable of.

    Anyway I graduated in 1999 with a love of programming and a lot of confidence. Sometimes I wonder where I would have been now if I hadn't been given that little boost of encouragement from a person I respected, it's not easy to want to achieve things when you are a "minority" particularly when you have a disability because the deck is stacked against you, but then somebody tells you it doesn't matter and maybe the first time in my life I really believed it.

    --
    crazy dynamite monkey
  18. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ooh, I love a good game of Pretend!

    Is this the part where we all pretend that absentee fathers aren't actually a very serious problem in the black community, and are just some stereotype that evil white racists invented?

    Guess we can forget about that honest dialogue about race, huh?

  19. Re:high school mentality by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Informative

    'scuse me, but calling a US college an "ocean with nothing but sharks", don't ever dare studying in Europe. Over here, nobody holds your hand. Nobody is dependent on your money, so they don't give half a shit about whether you drop out. Actually, you dropping out means less work with pesky students and more time to dedicate to research, so the sooner you drop out the better.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  20. Published in PNAS. by GungaDan · · Score: 1

    Isn't that a hate crime? Or I guess maybe just a microaggression (depending upon the size of the journal)?

    --
    Eloi are stupid, throw morlocks at them!
  21. Re:Everyone gets a gold star! by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

    Everyone at school got an award on Award Day 1983 — except for me. My sixth-grade teacher told me that I miss too many classes from being sick and truant to deserve anything special. Besides, I won that Japanese culture textbook (Japanese culture viewed from the white man's perspective in the 1950's) in a drawing earlier that year and didn't deserve to win that. No wonder I hated grade school.

  22. Re:When everyone succeeds, no one does by Opportunist · · Score: 2

    What do you expect from a society that rewards attendance as if it was some kind of achievement to drag your body somewhere? We can't subject those fragile child souls to the experience of failure, can we? So let's reward them even if they suck and blow at the same time. Hurray, everyone's a winner!

    And then we wonder why this creates entitled assholes who think the world owes them anything.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  23. Re:I do remember... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    So you read the clickbait before it was cool.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  24. Re:So, a little encouragement can go a long way by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Indeed, and in this case it's extra effective because the rest of the time they are getting lots of little subtle cues telling them that they are going to fail. Being followed around shops by the security staff, the look of mild surprise when someone finds out they are in college, the lack of interest from former teachers who seem to have decided they were going to fail anyway.

    When they start to struggle it's easy to think, somewhat subconsciously, that the signs where there all along and they aren't cut out for this. Just pointing out that most people are in the same boat, that they are actually pretty normal, goes a long way.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  25. The trouble I see with poor kids by rsilvergun · · Score: 2, Informative

    Is that it's hard to put your life on hold for 4 more years. You need a lot of money to do that. The kids work hard and that's the trouble. They get part time jobs that turn into full time and before long they're falling behind in their studies. Then they get blamed for being lazy... It doesn't help that a good percentage of the population is activity trying to keep birth control away from then either.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:The trouble I see with poor kids by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      Same thing happens with kids who have money. Three friends from high school worked in the same job for years and had been promoted to high enough paying management positions while still in college that they decided that getting a degree wasn't worth it. I thought it was kind of sad because they were in no way what I would consider great job. Also same thing happened with a lot of interns I worked with. $45,000 a year is a lot of money when most of your peers are making 1/4 of that.

  26. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by decipher_saint · · Score: 2

    The first thing they told me about attendance when I went to college was literally "you paid to be here if you don't show up to classes we don't care, we have your money"

    That sobered up a lot of people...

    --
    crazy dynamite monkey
  27. Re:Perhaps they don't belong in college by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Being replaced with a robot is something that is a more likely fate for a lawyer or a manager than a plumber.

    Ok, it won't be a robot but rather a small script, but still.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  28. Re:high school mentality by RogueyWon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's particularly hard at the elite universities. Newly arriving students will have been accustomed to being in the top 1-2% of their peer group. They will have been used to being recognised as outstanding by their teachers. They will have been used to sailing through tests that their classmates struggle with and being only moderately challenged by meetings that their classmates find night-impossible. Depending on their school and its culture, they may have been used to being given particular perks or privileges.

    And now, their peer group consists of people who have gone through exactly the same experiences. The people teaching them are going to assume "brilliance" as a default and anything short of that as a failure. Only a tiny handful of them - and generally those who are prepared to forgo almost all of the other pleasures of college life - will manage to rise back to that "academic elite" status. For the rest, they will, for probably the first time in their lives, need to get accustomed to being in the middle, or even near the bottom of their peer group. That is a major, and difficult, self-image adjustment.

    I remember going through it myself. It wasn't until my third year at university that I contented myself with the fact that I wasn't going to be among the top tier of my year-group and, more to the point, that I didn't actually need to be in order to have a perfectly good career after graduation. Ironically, the very top-tier were generally those aiming to enter academia themselves, which was definitely not on my agenda.

    Compared to some of my contemporaries, I adjusted fairly well. I got to see a few spectacular self-destructions.

  29. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Stupid shit like that is what gives reasonable measures like this a bad name. You can help people out without babying them, and you can do it based on evidence instead of emotional knee-jerk reactions.

  30. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Generation Snowflake earning their name.

    --
    Wanna buy a shirt?
    https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
  31. Can't fix economic advantages by swb · · Score: 4, Informative

    The only advantage I remember from college was the economic advantages some kids had.

    It doesn't make more economically advantaged kids smarter, and many of them squander this advantage partying, but they also don't face the soul-sucking grind of a job or the soul-sucking money problems that come with it. And the job of course takes hours away, sometimes leaving you amotivated to study or flat-out with less hours to study.

    None of this means it can be done, but it does make it harder. Harder still for those occasional emotional crises that arise in college -- a couple of bad grades, social problems, etc.

    1. Re:Can't fix economic advantages by quantaman · · Score: 1

      It's not wealthy vs not wealthy, it's the typical middle class up vs poor minorities from communities that don't typically attend university.

      Motivation and hard work comes from a belief that you can succeed. I was atrocious at the start of my first year programming course, but fortunately I was an intelligent middle class white guy, it was really obvious I could succeed with sustained effort because I could see a lot of intelligent middle class white guys with the same upbringing who had succeeded.

      If I was a poor minority I'm not sure that would have been the case, I might have very reasonably assumed those other students had been taught something in high school, or something by their parents, that made that stuff easy. Faced with that I would have been much less motivated to keep trying to understand the material and may have dropped the course.

      I can fully understand why telling a poor minority student that they're no different than a typical student would help that poor minority student succeed.

      --
      I stole this Sig
    2. Re:Can't fix economic advantages by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, assuming you don't have to worry about money is a big advantage in university. You can eat the right foods to help your body function properly. You don't have to work so you can devote more time to your studies.If you have extra money you can even pay for tutoring and other kinds of extra help to make sure your marks are good. You can live closer to campus so you have less travel time, which means that you can sleep or study more. Having a computer with a decent internet connection can also help things. You can buy extra materials like other books to further your understanding of the subject. Even something like having a good dependable calculator or pens that work properly can all add up to making things easier.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    3. Re:Can't fix economic advantages by avandesande · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You have it completely backwards- middle class folks aren't usually eligible for aid and there is no way in heck they can divert 1/3 of their household income to tuition.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    4. Re:Can't fix economic advantages by avandesande · · Score: 1

      That may be so, but the idea that middle class has it on easy street for college tuition is bunk.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
  32. Way better than what my high school did by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

    Which is tell us that nobody's going to be there for us every step of the way at college like at high school, that we have to prepare and take initiative as much as possible, that we have to think ahead of what we want to accomplish and pick the right courses, and that This Is Real Life so we'd better take it seriously and not slack off or fuck it up because nobody will be there to pick up the pieces. Well, to someone with anxiety issues and a mother who was saying at 18 I better be ready to move out, I did not know what the fuck I was doing, who I could talk to for some understanding and sympathy (which I needed re anxiety) as well as support (I was aimless and did not know how to achieve a career I would be happy with or realize that I could try for other jobs even if I didn't have a degree specifically for that job and I could always go back to school).

  33. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    What? Are you nuts? The more of those "female studies" students, the better my job security!

    The more students come out of colleges with degrees that are only useful when sitting on the can and the TP is gone, the higher my chances of not being replaced by a younger person, simply because my degree is known at HR to have some meaning while theirs ... well, not so much.

    Sorry, my sympathy for the younger generation is gone. And my solidarity. Sucks to be you if you're under 25, for your degree ain't worth shit.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  34. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    One can be honest about problems in the black community and also make funny jokes. It's not the stereotypes that offend me, it's the utterly banal humor.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  35. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

    I don't know about anybody else, but I thought college was MUCH easier than high school.

  36. Re:high school mentality by b0bby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Newly arriving students will have been accustomed to being in the top 1-2% of their peer group. They will have been used to being recognised as outstanding by their teachers. They will have been used to sailing through tests that their classmates struggle with and being only moderately challenged by meetings that their classmates find night-impossible. Depending on their school and its culture, they may have been used to being given particular perks or privileges.

    I think a lot of times the problem for disadvantaged students is that while they were in the top 5% of their class or whatever, when they get to university they discover that the top 5% of their class was performing like the 75th percentile compared with a lot of their new peers. The shock isn't so much that there are a lot of other high performing kids there (though that's going to happen too); the shock for the disadvantaged kids is that what they thought was high performing is actually closer to just barely average.

  37. managing expectations by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    If you tell college freshmen you're going to apply a "lay theory intervention" to them, you might find them a little disappointed with the result when you just talk.

    --
    -Styopa
  38. Re:Perhaps they don't belong in college by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    what won't be replaced by a robot in 20 years?

    maybe if apprenticeships for robotics were common we would have jobs replaced in 15 years instead.

    I doubt you'll see robots in mechanics and auto garages or the the trades (which is where most apprenticeships apply their focus where I'm from) anytime soon. Robots may be good at making shit but they ain't too great at fixing them (yet)

    --
    Wanna buy a shirt?
    https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
  39. Re:When everyone succeeds, no one does by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    What do you expect from a society that actively works to tear down the bottom-most members while trying to keep them from rebelling?

    Be less schizophrenic and maybe the world could start to make sense.

  40. Re:high school mentality by Immerman · · Score: 1

    >Ironically, the very top-tier were generally those aiming to enter academia themselves

    How is that ironic? It's certainly exactly what I would expect - with a severely limited spread of aptitudes, the academic top tier is naturally going to belong to those most dedicated to academia.

    --
    --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  41. Re:high school mentality by RogueyWon · · Score: 1

    Ironic in that, in the UK at least, the elite of the elite are largely headed towards a career path that will pay them less and confer less job security than enjoyed by their middle-of-the-pack elite contemporaries.

    Though I gather the picture can be rosier elsewhere in the world.

  42. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

    I don't know about anybody else, but I thought college was MUCH easier than high school.

    If that's true, you may have chosen poorly for college. (Either that, or you went to one of the most elite high schools with super high standards.)

    Well, actually, I'm not going to say you chose poorly -- it's up to everyone to choose their own path. For me, in life I've found that I enjoy challenging myself more than just taking easy routes, particularly academically. If I showed up at a college and it was easier than my high school, I would have concluded that it wasn't worthwhile and would try to transfer to somewhere better.

  43. Re:high school mentality by nerdonamotorcycle · · Score: 1

    The parents of those kids, who got accustomed to their kids' "academic elite" status through twelve years of schooling, will also have to adjust to the fact that their children are no better than average in their new environment. Lay off the kid FFS, stop treating a "B" like it's an "F", and realize that they'll do OK in life if they manage to graduate.

    Kids also need to be taught how to cope with parents who still act like a "B" is equivalent to an "F".

  44. Re:I thought they needed a safe space by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    I think I got my copy from the Walmart bargain bin back in the day. Had no idea it would end up on the other side of the supply-demand curve. Although that happens more often than you might think.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  45. Re:high school mentality by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 2

    Ironic in that, in the UK at least, the elite of the elite are largely headed towards a career path that will pay them less and confer less job security than enjoyed by their middle-of-the-pack elite contemporaries.

    I know this is probably obvious, but for some people, money isn't everything. Also, until recent decades, going to college wasn't about maximizing lifelong profits either. (This is a big misperception of correlation vs. causation: a century or more ago, aristocrats who already had wealth sent their kids to college because that's what rich people did; at some point people made the incorrect assumption that college made people rich, rather than the reality which is that most college students were rich before they attended and likely would have stayed rich anyway.)

    I remember seeing some plot of IQ vs. adult income years ago, where the highest income peaked at maybe a couple standard deviations above mean. For IQ above that, the average income descended quite a bit.

    As someone who hangs out with a lot of academics, it's well worth it to most of them to be in community of like-minded people doing what they love. It also takes a certain intellectual openness to get to that point, to realize that the modern quest for more money and more "stuff" at all costs is ultimately a bit pointless.

    I'm not at all criticizing people who choose other paths -- if that big salary, giant house, fancy car, boat, etc. are valuable to you, enough to do what many do (work long hours, never see their kids, never take vacations, never have time for significant hobbies or time to learn something new outside of work, etc.)... well, that's a choice. It's your life, and everyone can find their own way to maximize their own happiness.

    But I don't find it ironic at all that people who demonstrate greater intellectual aptitude might value a life of intellectual activity higher than maximizing monetary gain.

  46. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    Well yeah. There's not a good black variant for the term "white trash". If you criticize any black person you will probably have the race card thrown at you. Meanwhile, the black middle class is vibrant and thriving despite of the current racist narrative coming from "progressives".

    The fact that they use a track & field competition for their narrative is hilarious...

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  47. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    He also might not have pushed himself terribly hard in college. At my school there were 3 colleges with CIS programs and they varied dramatically in terms of difficulty and bullsh*t level. That's just one major out of in a continuum including Library Science and Electrical Engineering.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  48. You know what works better? by MitchDev · · Score: 1

    NOT coddling them.
    Not doing this stupid "Everyone gets a trophy!"
    Not trying to boost self-esteem with no effort required on the part of the kid ("Aw, you failed to say the alphabet, you're still smart, here's a prize for failing!")

    1. Re:You know what works better? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How did you make the leap from telling them it's ok to struggle during college to giving them an award for failing? Sounds like you have an axe to grind with GenY.

      All they seem to be saying is that if you prepare people for college better they are more likely to succeed.

  49. Re:Crappy liberal/socialism ideas are to blame by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    Yeah. I can relate to that. My AP teacher filled my head full of nonsense my senior year in HS. That lead to a horrible shock once I got to college. Although this is really about first generation students. They have no frame of reference and can't get it from their family. If they are lucky, their families aren't committing active sabotage.

    Real life is brutal and unfair.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  50. Re:When everyone succeeds, no one does by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Especially if you phrase it in such a convoluted way. What the hell are you trying to say?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  51. Re: I thought the needed a safe space by Type44Q · · Score: 1

    Did someone once tell you that you have a way with words?! If so... they lied.

  52. Re:high school mentality by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    At my university the majority of students drop out at one time. Usually within the first 2-4 semesters, simply because they're used to school spoon feeding them not only information but where they are supposed to be, when they are supposed to be there, what material they should bring along,... university is vastly different.

    First challenge: Find out what courses you have at all, where they are and what the fuck is going on.
    Second challenge: Get one of the 30 spots that roughly 100 people vie for
    Hint: Only if you solve the first challenge reasonably fast, you have a chance at the second. Going there at the first day of lectures is WAY too late.

    The first thing you learn at our universities is planning ahead. Anyone not able to do that needs not apply. Nobody is going to help you, and everyone around you is competing with you for the rare resources available. IF you are lucky you can befriend someone who is a few years your senior who isn't your direct competitor and friendly enough to aid you. Students ain't monsters, and very willing to help you, at least if it isn't against their own interests.

    The lectures are pretty anonymous. You sit there or you don't. Nobody cares whether you do. If you don't, well, good luck understanding anything. By the way, here is your assignment, here is when it's due. Good luck. No, I don't give a shit how you should find out what to do and how to do it, one of the things you're supposed to learn here is how to find information and how to work on your own. Gimme a call, or rather my secretary, when you're done with it and within a week or two, if I'm so inclined, I'll take a look at it, tell you it's all wrong and send you back guessing what the hell is wrong with it.

    Anyone still thinking US colleges are "hard"?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  53. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by Kjella · · Score: 1

    Here in Norway it's only slightly over 100 years ago (1913) we decided women were competent enough to vote, today they outnumber and outperform us in higher education. Did genetics change like crazy in 3-4 generations? No. It's an attitude/culture problem, not a racial/genetic problem. Adopted kids from far away don't seem to be significantly different when raised by local parents in the local culture, I'm not sure it's 0% nature, 100% nurture but when it comes to things like this it's very close. Kids that never had a father, who don't know how to be a father surrounded by other absentee fathers who back each other up. I still remember the crazy debates when we first reserved time for paternity leave in 1993, use it or lose it. Turns out both dads and kids survive dad changing diapers just fine.

    There's actually been a lot of research into this and even when you try to correct for formal differences deadbeat parents often have deadbeat kids and deadbeat districts make kids underperform. It's in the whole attitude you get from the community, if you got nobody with a good work ethic who'll drive you and support you then you end up slacking with the other slackers. And it's very much in the attitude about who's cool and not or what jobs are respected or not. Maybe it's odd but I never had anyone at my later schools who were thinking of becoming a pro sports person, they usually went to dedicated institutions there was nothing like "college football" at least not other than a team which happened to consist of college students who weren't looking to become pros.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  54. Re:So, a little encouragement can go a long way by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

    99% of Undergrad is college professors telling you that you are going to fail in the hope that you will drop out and lower their work load. This usually doesn't stop until your senior year when they have actually put enough time into your education that they stop trying to get you to quit.

  55. Re:The need to self-identify as 'disadvantaged' .. by chipschap · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... is the very same need in telling oneself "I am weak, I can't stand on my own"

    Maybe not. Maybe it means, "I need a little help getting started."

    When I was an MIT undergrad way back in the late 60s, MIT was just beginning to try to identify high-potential students from "disadvantaged" backgrounds. They would be offered a preparatory summer session to prepare them for the rigors of freshman year. While there were some flaws in the initial execution, the program had some real successes.

    There were a number of black kids brought in under this program, and they soon formed their own affinity group, the Black Students Union (BSU). (There were other similar groups for Chinese students, etc.) A year or so later, the BSU did something that has me respecting them to this very day.

    MIT was offering four years of full scholarship for the disadvantaged students--- very generous indeed. The BSU went to the administration and said that one year is fine, to help students get started, but more than that is sending a message to the student that you're incapable of making it on your own. So here we have a minority group offered something for nothing, turning it down because they were wise enough to realize that it could be harmful in the long run. Hats off to them.

  56. Re: So, a little encouragement can go a long way by rahvin112 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The poor and disadvantaged don't have relatives that have made it through college. They don't know anyone to encourage them generally because the people they know have no experience with university. Many won't even realize the kids they think are doing great are struggling as hard as they are. Study groups can help this if they join them and most don't but it's better to be told by someone that's done it that it was hard for everyone, not just them.

  57. People feel better when they think life is fair by Trachman · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Some people just feel better when they learn that someone else is also doing badly. Studies have been made and it has been proven again and again.This new study, again, supports it.

    Most famous empirical, yet cruel real life exercise took place in Soviet Russia in 1920-1930. They were building socialism, and anybody who was successful (irrespective of whether individual was loyal or not - that did not matter) was under the risk to be reported as a bourgeois government hater. Millions and millions people were pushed to the soviet class warfare mincer by their neighbors.

    The rich and powerful started doing everything to look like they are normal people. No efforts are spared to be "accepted". That is why rich and powerful are polite in public, hate scandals, despise scandals of other rich people and try behaving like most of us mortals: Hillary riding subway, Warren Buffet living in his $600K house, IKEA owner driving a beater car, governor attending baseball game and so on and on. However, that does not change reality and to quote cynic George Carlin: There is a club and you ain't in it.

    The study is merely a repetition of the experiment about monkeys, cucumbers and grapes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    Except that it was done on humans, who were made to believe that everyone else is getting cucumbers. This is a well known phenomena, because positive attitude, (or, as experiment demonstrates, ignorance of the true state of affairs) combined with a good word, encouragement can do wonders for the inherently capable people.

  58. Re: I thought the needed a safe space by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    Pot, kettle, whatever, nevermind...
    Well, obviously, when he's not at work he's at home, resting up to go back to work. And obviously there's more than one of these women... It's not like it's the same woman you're looking at all the time, so of course with another woman there's another man at work. The rest of the time, they're both at home together.

  59. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

    I don't know about anybody else, but I thought college was MUCH easier than high school.

    I hated grade school. Never went to high school. Spent four years in community college (two years for remedial, two years for associate degree). College was easier because I wanted to be there.

  60. Anything that prevents first year dropouts is good by ErichTheRed · · Score: 2

    Look at this from a macroeconomic point of view. Especially in mid-tier large state universities (like the one I went to a million years ago,) it is super-common to have students fail out after their first year for a number of reasons. Some weren't meant to be there but get pushed in by the "everyone must go to college" rhetoric. Some fall prey to the Greek life or other constant party atmosphere and just neglect doing any work. Some aren't emotionally ready to handle the huge shot of independence they get. Whatever the reason, many (most?) of these students are paying for their education at least partially with loans that must be paid back regardless of the outcome. Going to college and not getting the degree is way worse than not going -- you get no benefits career-wise and are stuck with lifelong debt. Wouldn't it make sense to provide some help and encouragement, especially to a population that really is at a disadvantage?

    The state university system I graduated from has something like this - extra help, remedial classes, etc. for truly disadvantaged students to try to give them a leg up, and keep them there once they've made it in. And they need it; going where I went, as a freshman you really are an anonymous number. It's a whole lot like dealing with a state agency in terms of personal attention and "customer service." It wasn't until I got into the end of sophomore year in a relatively small department that I started to lose that sense of anonymity. Going from a 4,000 student random freshman class to about 300 focused chemistry students with good faculty support was a big change. If I had been in the engineering school (~8,000 students) or business (10,000+) that would've been way different. Point being, Joe Random Freshman in a 300-person lecture class might be having a hard time, but have very little in the way of avenues to get help. I do feel that part of the value I got out of my degree was learning to do things for myself, deal with crappy bureaucracies without throwing up my hands, etc. It's allowed me to work for big companies with stupid rules and advance pretty far in my career compared to people who just whine and complain when things won't bend to their will.

    Elite universities may have a different problem, in that you have people in the top 5% of their high school classes merging into a population where _everyone_ graduated at the top of their class. That said, elite universities have plenty of support in place...they just don't let you fall out of the club once you've made it in. Having that Harvard, Princeton, Oxford, whatever degree qualifies you for the rarified worlds of investment banking, management consulting and other professions that only hire Ivy League/elite university grads as part of their culture. After that, Easy Street for life, If you're smart, and work really hard in high school, the tuition you pay at any of those places is a worthwhile investment. If you're driven but not rich or super brilliant, going through the state system is still a very valid way to go.

  61. When the hole is too deep... by Bartles · · Score: 1

    ...just keep digging. Lie to yourself that eventually you'll get yourself out and everything will be ok.

    1. Re:When the hole is too deep... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      I never listen to people like you. I was out of work for two years (2009-10), underemployed for six months (working 20 hours per month), and filed for Chapter Seven bankruptcy. For over two years, hiring managers told me I was overqualified for minimum wage jobs and recruiters told me I was uneamployable for anything else. I never listened to them. It took me five years to dig my way out of that hole.

    2. Re: When the hole is too deep... by Bartles · · Score: 1

      Totally different situation. You did exactly what you're supposed to. Not everyone is capable of completing college. To lie to them and tell them everyone has the same trouble that they do is not the correct solution. Those people will just just out a year later even worse off financially and mentally then they would have had they not been lied to.

    3. Re: When the hole is too deep... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      Not everyone is capable of completing college.

      I was the first person in my family to go to college. My parents did everything but kick me out of the house to prevent me from going to college, especially since I never went to high school. To them, I was a failure. I spent my first year collecting bottles and cans around campus to pay for books and classes. During my second year, I got a job at the college bookstore that I stayed at for three years. My parents didn't accept the fact that I was a "success" until I graduated from community college.

      Those people will just just out a year later even worse off financially and mentally then they would have had they not been lied to.

      If this was a for-profit school, I would agree. I would never discourage anyone from trying to better themselves. Sometimes mistakes are made, money gets squandered and time is lost. That's the nature of life.

  62. Re:Everyone gets a gold star! by narcc · · Score: 1

    It's okay. That was over 30 years ago. Let it go, man. Just let it go.

  63. Re:Everyone gets a gold star! by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

    It's okay. That was over 30 years ago. Let it go, man. Just let it go.

    But I don't want to be a special snowflake! ;)

  64. Re: So, a little encouragement can go a long way by sycodon · · Score: 2

    Don't forget the profs telling them that the system rigged against them and that some mystery "they" are racist out to oppress them.

    When the message you are getting every day is that your efforts are in vain, anyone would become discouraged.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  65. Re:high school mentality by Drethon · · Score: 1

    My engineering class started with 300 students and I graduated with 30. Only about half finished the degree in 4 years. This is a US university.

  66. Re:Anything that prevents first year dropouts is g by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

    I have had thoughts along those lines when I hear about STEM education outreach at work: "but if more people go into STEM I am worth less than I was before!"

  67. Meh, that is what university is for... by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    To educate, culture, and generally grow up.

    I went though it, but so do most people. As smart as you might think you are, it is a big world out there. I was always near the top of my class in high school, however one thing that probably helped me, was that I had a sister that consistently did even better, so I always had that sort of competition.

    I also saw some crash and burn, particularly in year one.

    As much as people think University is for smart people, it really isn't. Sure you can't be a dummy, and need some solid educational foundations, but more than that you need to be willing to put in the work and have some determination and perseverance. As much as a degree is anything to an employer (and I'm not saying that is what it is ultimately for), it is more of an indication of certain basic foundations, and a recognition of work ethic and persistence. The harder or more elite the school really doesn't mean you actually know more or are smarter than someone else, it really just shows character more than anything else.

    I know my personal challenges were more due to foundational curriculum as where I went to high school calculus wasn't even offered, and where I went to university (it was a requirement for CS) the introduction course expected high school calculus. So you can probably imagine how well that went for me without any prior experience. In the end (after dropping it once) I managed to postpone it until my final year of university. I was the oldest guy in class, struggled my way though it with the help of an enthusiastic young professor, who in the end probably knew it was my last requirement to graduate, appreciated my hard work, generally felt sorry for me, and let me squeak past... :)

    Then again I also dropped a CS class twice (changing majors once), before passing it... but then on the other side I was one of six who managed to pass another CS class where 90% dropped out. There are other examples, but anyone who has gone though it probably has a list of their own experiences. Ability is great, but without drive it isn't a guarantee of success.

  68. colleges are loaded with fuff and filler clases by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    colleges are loaded with fluff and filler classes that we can do without and some of them are in a way a joke for some.

    big lecture classes where it can all be about cramming for the test.

    classes that are not part of the Major but are forced where people cheat.

    I heard about this art class where some turned in papers saying art is cool art is grate but for the finale they turned in a plagiarized paper.

  69. Re:Anything that prevents first year dropouts is g by ErichTheRed · · Score: 1

    I think that's just the side effects of offshoring, outsourcing and the drive for companies to squeeze every penny out of every person they can. The problem that people are experiencing is that the number of jobs being affected by these trends is increasing quickly. There was a time, and I was around when this was true, that graduating from any college with any degree in any field was a guarantee that you would be able to start some sort of career with an entry level position. Now, the supply of college-educated people is up, the supply of jobs that reasonably-qualified-or-trainable people can fill is down, and companies are no longer willing to pay someone a salary reflective of their experience throughout their career.

    This is why you're seeing little private liberal arts colleges, even ones with lots of history and endowment money, closing up shop. Companies refuse to take educated people and train them, when they can call Tata or Infosys and get a drop-in replacement flown in next week. Therefore, there's less demand for a liberal arts degree, because students don't see them as having an immediate return on investment. Way in the past, the rich sent their kids to small private liberal arts colleges to give them growing-up time until the family business was handed over to them. In the recent past, the fact that any degree from anywhere equaled employment meant students could study what they wanted. Now, it's a vocational program that's valued most.

  70. Re:The need to self-identify as 'disadvantaged' .. by DutchUncle · · Score: 2

    MIT was offering four years of full scholarship for the disadvantaged students-.... The BSU went to the administration and said that one year is fine, to help students get started, but more than that is sending a message to the student that you're incapable of making it on your own.

    There is another strategic angle to this approach: spreading the risk, and hopefully multiplying the reward. (4x) students get that opportunity to "get started" for the same money instead of just (x) students getting all four years. There will be more winners, all around.

  71. Re:high school mentality by chihowa · · Score: 3, Interesting

    the shock for the disadvantaged kids is that what they thought was high performing is actually closer to just barely average

    That's what he is saying and every single person there is experiencing the same thing. Every person present was extremely highly performing in their high school class and are now distributed around the new (much higher) average. The level of performance didn't really change much, but the average is now based on the subset of very high performers. The only difference is their ranking relative to their peers.

    In fact, if the disadvantaged students are finding themselves at the 75th percentile of all highly performing students, then their "disadvantage" was really more of an advantage. They're significantly outperforming most of their "advantaged" peers.

    --
    If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
  72. Re:high school mentality by DutchUncle · · Score: 2

    Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Freshman Orientation, the Mean Dean said: "Over 90% of you were in the top 10% of your class at high school. Exactly 50% of you will be in the BOTTOM half of your class here . . . if you survive." I was in classes with multiple valedictorians from county high schools; OTOH their entire graduating class was less than 1/10th of my graduating class from a New York City specialized (magnet) school, so their competition pool had been a bit narrow.

  73. Eliminate skin color preferences. by galabar · · Score: 1

    The elimination of skin color preferences in admission would be a much more effective way of helping underrepresented minorities excel in college (a college where they are on equal footing with everyone else).

    1. Re:Eliminate skin color preferences. by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      It may not work that well. People from disadvantaged groups are likely to be better than their test scores say. Race-norming is an unpleasant idea, and it has its injustices, but it may increase overall fairness.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  74. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by OakDragon · · Score: 1

    It's hilarious that this comment gets a "Flamebait" moderation! :)

  75. Re: So, a little encouragement can go a long way by luis_a_espinal · · Score: 1

    The poor and disadvantaged don't have relatives that have made it through college. They don't know anyone to encourage them generally because the people they know have no experience with university. Many won't even realize the kids they think are doing great are struggling as hard as they are. Study groups can help this if they join them and most don't but it's better to be told by someone that's done it that it was hard for everyone, not just them.

    Exactly! Finally someone who gets it.

  76. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    Actually the issues that most students including minorities have is the increase freedom that college provides.
    From Kindergarten - High School your academic life is tightly controlled. If you are missing from class then they send the police to bring you to class. If your grade dip from not doing homework teachers will put you in detention after school to get you to do your work.

    College if you don't show up, the professor normally won't care, however you will not learn the material and fail the test then your grades will suffer. A lot of the homework assignments that is given in college is not checked, but you don't get the practice from doing it, so you end up failing the tests.

    A lot of decent smart students fail out of college because they couldn't get a handle of the freedom. Without a direct punishment for an action they get themselves into big trouble by where it is too late.

    Minority students unfortunately have been conditioned that they will be in trouble for doing things, so when you get into a college environment where you get the increase freedom without getting in immediate trouble, sometimes leads to disaster.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  77. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by dpidcoe · · Score: 1

    If that's true, you may have chosen poorly for college. (Either that, or you went to one of the most elite high schools with super high standards.)

    You honestly can't think of any other reasons besides those?

  78. Re:Anything that prevents first year dropouts is g by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

    Well in the end it does not really matter. The number of people who drop out, must drop out. It is not like these universities are running at 50% capacity. Sure, there are ways to improve your chances individually, but if that method ever kicked off and was used by everyone, the same number of people would still need to be kicked out or drop out. Academia worked off of bell curves, and requires the bottom x% of the current stock to be culled ever semester.

    --
    Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
  79. Blah, everyone should struggle in college by bored · · Score: 1

    If your not, then the school isn't doing their duty. Its probably pretty easy to determine if this is the case, simply take the grades of all the students and see if they resemble any kind of standard distribution.

    Opps, did I say something wrong?

    I remember being in school, and I graduated probably because of sheer stubbornness (although my GPA actually was pretty decent when compared with my peers, now days its probably considered bad). There were 5-6 classes that were absolute killers, mostly because the professors teaching them had high standards. A couple were the get a "B" with a 25% type of classes, a couple were personal issues, and there were a couple that I actually retook with another professor and did fine in (aka mismatch between the professors teaching methodology and my ability to learn it like that/by myself from the book).

  80. Re:I thought the needed a safe space by lgw · · Score: 1

    That's PopeRatzo for you. He, Rei, and AmiJoJo have their collective heads so far up their own asses it makes the guy that made the movie "Human Centipede" pause to wonder if he should sue them for copyright infringement

    Wait, what? I've never seen SJW BS from Rei. The other two of course are dependable trolls on every SJW story.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  81. Re:high school mentality by goose-incarnated · · Score: 1

    I'm not at all criticizing people who choose other paths --

    Yes, you are. You are presenting the paths as a dichotomy, as follows:

    if that big salary, giant house, fancy car, boat, etc. are valuable to you, enough to do what many do (work long hours, never see their kids, never take vacations, never have time for significant hobbies or time to learn something new outside of work, etc.)... well, that's a choice.

    Actually, I get all of that without working more than 40 hours/week. I see my kids, I get the big house (700sqm indoor floor space), have a variety of hobbies (guitar, art, etc) and learn things new outside work all the time... all while earning the good money.

    You present one path as the "nice" path, and *all* *other* *paths* as negative ones with only money as a positive. You clearly made a few wrong life decisions yourself.

    But I don't find it ironic at all that people who demonstrate greater intellectual aptitude might value a life of intellectual activity higher than maximizing monetary gain.

    Once again you are presenting something as fact that isn't at all so. There are multiple professions for people who demonstrate greater intellectual aptitude other than academic teaching/research. In fact, just yesterday an exec at my company (a qualified engineer) pointed out that in every graduating class, the only ones who remain behind to do postgrad are those who didn't get any job offers. It repeats after postgrad - the only postdocs who remain didn't get any offers.

    Almost by definition, companies take the cream of the crop and leave the rest behind, who then try to do the best they can at their university.

    The ones languishing in academia aren't "valuing a life of intellectual activity", it's just that no one made them any offers.

    --
    I'm a minority race. Save your vitriol for white people.
  82. Imposter Syndrome by LabRatty · · Score: 1

    When you come from a lower income you are quite possibly the first and only person from your family to go to University, or maybe even finish high school. Even after doing well in High School you have no clue what to expect, and no reference points. The idea that even as a graduate you may be paid more than your parents combined is hard to get your head around for doing something you enjoy studying.
    Having to do part time work to cover the costs your parent cannot doesn't help, but more than anything else there is the nagging doubt that you shouldn't be there and should go do manual labour and retail like your family was raised to do. You wonder when you will get caught and told to go back where you came from, so you tend to keep your head down and not make best use of the support systems the Uni already has in place for everybody.

    You just got to be a stubborn bastard and keep at it, but any encouragement does go a long way since you just don't know how the system works.

  83. Re: I thought the needed a safe space by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    Personally, while college was more hard work and a whole lot more educational, it was easier in a very real sense. It's a lot easier for me to do work that I feel responsibility for than work that I'm compelled to do.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes