ol'Porkbelly said:
Yall keep voting for these idiots. Welcome to FAFO. I'm curious how much research money A&M has lost due to Elon/Doge and their cuts to NIH, USAID, NSF.
However much it was cut is not enough
ol'Porkbelly said:
Yall keep voting for these idiots. Welcome to FAFO. I'm curious how much research money A&M has lost due to Elon/Doge and their cuts to NIH, USAID, NSF.
Companies are incentivized to do this. Forcing it has been an absolute disaster. Industry is dropping the quotas left and right all over the country because people much smarter than you have seen actual results.AggieFrog said:
Mix of different backgrounds (socioeconomic and ethnic). It's a good thing because it tends to lead to exposure to different ideas which challenges biases, reduces groupthink, and leads to better performing teams. It also better prepares students for the world they'll be living and working in.
Not enough. Until we pay off our massive debt, federal government should pay zero.ol'Porkbelly said:
Yall keep voting for these idiots. Welcome to FAFO. I'm curious how much research money A&M has lost due to Elon/Doge and their cuts to NIH, USAID, NSF.
Well, by MY definition, the most qualified is the person you can get better work done.TA-OP said:
Legit question. I'm currently interviewing candidates for an open position at A&M. Is merit the end all be all? I'm trying to find a qualified candidate that also 1) I'm convinced I can do productive work with and 2) has aspirations to improve themselves. If I think, as a supervisor, that I can get better work done with a candidate that isn't the most qualified, then I'm tempted to lean that direction. Is that an incorrect way to view things?
AggieFrog said:We do, absolutely. And we have, which is why A&M is substantially harder to get into today than it was 30 years ago when I applied. It's also substantially more diverse than it was 30 years ago. Both are very good things for A&M and the state.Quote:
We don't want our best talent to have the best education and stay in state? That's not what would benefit the state the most?
Being college educated means you had the brains and hard work to get you thru school. Almost everyone that graduates college learns way more in the first 6 months on the job.Quote:
In my field, I don't even care if you have a college degree because there are only a small handful of programs in the nation that can teach you more than you would learn in 6 months in the job.
FTAG 2000 said:AggieFrog said:We do, absolutely. And we have, which is why A&M is substantially harder to get into today than it was 30 years ago when I applied. It's also substantially more diverse than it was 30 years ago. Both are very good things for A&M and the state.Quote:
We don't want our best talent to have the best education and stay in state? That's not what would benefit the state the most?
Know how I know you're a flaming leftist?
Everything DEI touches DIEs.
Their leadership has been to the right of ours in responding to the prohibitions on DEI in state law.djmeen95 said:
If this has to do with being left or right, the sips should be getting $0.
AggieFrog said:Both have work, A&M is much better today than it was 25 years ago.GAC06 said:
Also, you never answered my question. Which university is best representing the state?
DEI is using racism to fight made up racismKatyAg01 said:DEI is not a solution to racism at all. It's yet another example of the soft bigotry of lowered expectations.Average Joe said:Cyprian said:Average Joe said:Tom Fox said:There was never a need for DEI. hth.Average Joe said:
Having DEI is dumb.
Having to need something like DEI is worse.
Yup. Prejudice and racism are a hoax.
Thats's a false dichotomy. Prejudice and racism can be real things, but pretending DEI is the only solution that recognizes that is obviously and clearly false.
I never said it was the only solution.
It does not mean educated though, it means you have some knowledge about a field. Being classically educated is different, also being "college educated" does not mean you have wisdom.Science Denier said:Being college educated means you had the brains and hard work to get you thru school. Almost everyone that graduates college learns way more in the first 6 months on the job.Quote:
In my field, I don't even care if you have a college degree because there are only a small handful of programs in the nation that can teach you more than you would learn in 6 months in the job.
I don't know what your "field" is, but if it requires smart, intelligent people and you exclude college grads, you are doing your company a disservice.
TA-OP said:
Texas A&M University passed a state DEI audit with flying colors. So what's Dan Patrick's next excuse for with-holding funds?
https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/education/article/texas-a-m-university-receives-clean-dei-audit-20194073.php