I'm okay with admitting 80,000 if we set up some sort of freshman cage matches.
quote:quote:Really? You want a med student that didn't learn about the body? You want an engineer that doesn't know E=MC2?quote:This is bull****. "University" is about 2 things. Education and research. "A degree you can use in your career" is what ITT Tech, schools for mechanics, culinary institutes, and clown colleges give out. University is not a trade school and never was designed to be...until now I guess. We're on the cutting edge in that sense I guess.
Way too many people spending money their "careers" can't pay. Does it make you feel smart to graduate with a degree in women's studies or English? If you don't use what you learned in college in your career then you didn't need to go to college.
Spare me the well rounded liberal arts balance makes me a better person garbage.
quote:I've been in the working world longer than you've been on this rock. I'm here to tell you that my A&M engineering degree has opened a few doors for me...but my work ethic and attention to detail (both honed in aggieland) has been the key to finding a comfortable place in life for me and my family.
25 x 25 initiative is sh*t. I can't wait to get into the working world, to find that an A&M engineering degree means nothing.
quote:
A&M has fallen 20 spots in the U.S. News rankings in the last few years. It was in the high 40's and ranked ahead of UT in '98/'99. It's now ranked 68th.
quote:I felt I was taught (most importantly) critical thinking skills along with "hard" skills related to a specific degree, as a result, as I grew older, I 'self-learned' along the road of life and didn't need the "30 year" things taught to me as a 20 year old. That knowledge came as result of self-motivation, knowledge seeking and desire for intellectual self-growth. Critical thinking was the key that opened the library door for life.
Mojave, get back to me in ten more years... And of course the point is metaphorical. I denigrated the value of the liberal arts just as much as any engineer. The point is that I outgrew it and know believe that knowledge needs to be pursued across a vast range.
quote:quote:I know you wrote out your calculations, but its hard to take you seriously if you think 30,000 kids are admitted in a single class.quote:How could you possibly think that makes any logical sense. If somewhere around 30,000 students were admitted, you'd have to be on some dank weed to think that 99% of the people accepted were automatic admissions.
Where did you get this stat from? My son is a freshman at A&M. In his class, according to the admission department, only 300 students who were not automatic admits got into A&M. Texas has a much higher level of non-automatic admits by design. This is why they only accept the top 8%.
Edit: I'll even work out the math for you, since soon enough that piece of paper that says I'm a tamu engineering graduate will be better off used as fire starter: (30,000-300)/30,000 = .99 --> 99%
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Still waiting on anyone who can provide documentation on the number of unqualified kids being admitted this past year or years???
If we are a degree mill then it should be easy to prove that we are admitting lots of unqualified kids. Either SAT scores or employer dissatisfaction with our graduates, something.
quote:I don't think the question is about today with 40 k undergrads, but what will happen when that number is increased to 65-70k in the next 10 years.quote:
Still waiting on someone to answer my question. It seems to be the heart of this debate.
quote:quote:I don't think the question is about today with 40 k undergrads, but what will happen when that number is increased to 65-70k in the next 10 years.quote:
Still waiting on someone to answer my question. It seems to be the heart of this debate.
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I submit myself as exhibit A. As soon as I got accepted I knew that place was going to ****
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UTSA now has stricter admissions than A&M
quote:quote:
I submit myself as exhibit A. As soon as I got accepted I knew that place was going to ****
What year were you admitted? What was you high school rank and sat score? What is your degree?
quote:quote:I don't think the question is about today with 40 k undergrads, but what will happen when that number is increased to 65-70k in the next 10 years.quote:
Still waiting on someone to answer my question. It seems to be the heart of this debate.
quote:quote:quote:
I submit myself as exhibit A. As soon as I got accepted I knew that place was going to ****
What year were you admitted? What was you high school rank and sat score? What is your degree?
2006, not top 20%, 1300, management
College essay was about how ball is life
quote:quote:Intelligent, well thought out response. You'll be sure to get admitted under Sharp's vision of A&M.
Y'all are gay.
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According to the Houston chronicle last year, Texas A&M accepted 67% of their applicants. This was more than schools such as Sam Houston, sfa, Texas tech, tu, Baylor, Dallas baptist and so on. It is now easier to get into TAMU than Sam Houston? To me, that is embarrassing.
quote:
Given the USNR formula their rankings don't matter to me.
quote:quote:
Given the USNR formula their rankings don't matter to me.
Fair enough. However, they do "matter" to just about everyone that matters. Look, the USNWR rankings certainly aren't everything. However, they are not nothing either. Would a ranking of 99 bother you? 125? 250? Last? If they truly "don't matter" to you, then even ranking last wouldn't bother you a bit. It would me.
quote:This. It may not matter to you, because you realize the flaws in the calculations, but it does matter to mom and dad, in the living room, trying to encourage their kid to go to the best school.quote:
Given the USNR formula their rankings don't matter to me.
Fair enough. However, they do "matter" to just about everyone that matters. Look, the USNWR rankings certainly aren't everything. However, they are not nothing either. Would a ranking of 99 bother you? 125? 250? Last? If they truly "don't matter" to you, then even ranking last wouldn't bother you a bit. It would me.
quote:quote:This. It may not matter to you, because you realize the flaws in the calculations, but it does matter to mom and dad, in the living room, trying to encourage their kid to go to the best school.quote:
Given the USNR formula their rankings don't matter to me.
Fair enough. However, they do "matter" to just about everyone that matters. Look, the USNWR rankings certainly aren't everything. However, they are not nothing either. Would a ranking of 99 bother you? 125? 250? Last? If they truly "don't matter" to you, then even ranking last wouldn't bother you a bit. It would me.