FLBear5630 said:
LIB,MR BEARS said:
boognish_bear said:
If the goal is to keep universities afloat, it will certainly help.
If the goal is to make universities affordable, I suspect it will hurt as I'm assuming their tuition will be guaranteed by some org/gov
Yeah, but Americans pay until they die. Se are competing against Nation-States.
We will educate the world in engineering and tech and tell Americans to go be plumbers and welders. We will work for the Indians, Chinese, Japanese and Koreans over time.
Graph showing 11 bars superimposed on a world map with the following countries highlighted. Each bar from left to right enumerates the total number of STEM graduates in that country in 2020: China: 3.57M graduates India: 2.55M U.S.: 820,000 Russia: 520,000 Indonesia: 200,000 Brazil: 238,000 Mexico: 221,000 France: 220,000 Germany: 216,000 Iran: 211,000 Japan: 192,000
Figure 1: Top Countries by Number of STEM Graduates in 2020. (Original graph created by Niall McCarthy at Statista)
I think higher ed is about to go through a huge transformation. Between AI and robotics, it has too.
Be quick to adapt
Be quick to find your niche
Always be forward looking
Other nations seem to do well at finding their niche. The US seems to do well at being forward looking and adapting.
As much as the world changes, people's needs and cultural traits tend to remain the same. Russians will always be rigid. Germans will always over design. Indians will always be low bidders and try to push a problem down the road. China will always copy rather than innovate. Old people will always overcook a good steak-sorry, that's a different rant.