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John B Goodrich's avatar

That sounds rational, given what we know of young people in our community. However, there is no excuse to let this focus obscure the collapse of our public school performance (in California....the only one I follow....now at "40th" in the US). Every student graduating from high school needs a reasonable understanding of civics, basic economics and history, good English writing and math skills to prevail in every route through life; and our public schools are not providing that.

Jen Koenig's avatar

There's another issue here that may not be discussed much. I have two girls, both good students but one who is definitely "college material". High 130's IQ, great social skills, honors classes with high grades so should go to college, right? But... she doesn't want a corporate job. She doesn't want a desk job and she doesn't see the appeal of the corner office and she also wants flexibility in her schedule when she has kids, which are as much or more on her list of life goals as her career.

I told her she'd be fine if she opened her own business or went into the trades. Intelligence is not rewarded anymore in corporate, conformity is. Out of the box thinking gets you fired. Connecting with others in a curious and authentic way is the kiss of death in most performative corporate cultures.

Not only is the University degree meaning less due to the watering down of standards, the high-value corporate job it supposedly gets you is also worth less. Smart kids are moving away from this as well. Interesting times.

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