Jennifer_Saint wrote:Physics was really tough this year (anyone agrees with me? Please?)
Well physics is my thing Jennifer, and it's always very tough.
They closed down my physics department at the university (used to be one of the best in the world, no less) and that was simply because there weren't enough students choosing the course. Too
hard, you see.
They've never handed out physics qualifications out very easily, and that's because the subject is bloody difficult.
So well done for persevering with it.
It seems to me that academic quality is now second to status these days.
The thing is, a degree has always had status. And the thing about status is that everbody wants it.
Problems arise when rich parents have thick kids who can't get degrees. Then it seems, almost insidiously, courses which had for decades been 'vocational' become 'degrees', because let's face it, we can't be having nice upper-middle class families with children who cannot get into university. Some degrees were even invented for this purpose.
For an example have a look through any modern university prospectus. It is always a good toilet read. A degree in 'Pop Music' is a good one, as is 'Musical Performance'. This is particualrly good; I know of a student who passed this course
and still could not read sheet music.
Let that sink in for a moment - a degree in (ostensibly) music and the graduate leaves without being able to pass a Grade One AB music exam.
This is an insult. I have never had a musical bone in my body and I have the utmost respect for anyone who masters an instrument, qualified or not. And yet a graduate of a degree like the one above can claim that they have a music degree and yet be outperformed by a nine-year-old kid with a recorder.
Pah.
Is the reason people choose these degrees is quite simply status? I saw at a jobs fair that a large high street bank offered places on its 'Graduate Management Scheme'. The entry prerequisites were
"A degree, 2:1 or higher, subject not important" What the F******K?? What happened to academic quality?
When I pressed the representative, she told me that the three years a student spends taking and passing a degree shows a strength of character that is important in Banking.
Good lord help us all.