[QUOTE="theone86"]
[QUOTE="sonicare"]
I dont hate them, but I think there needs to be more emphasis on math and science. With all this talk about unemployment, there are thousands of jobs where employers cant find enough people to hire. Mainly because graduating US seniors dont have the math and science background necessary. If you want to get a job, learn something useful.
sonicare
Who says a bigger emphasis on liberal arts can't improve math and science? You know calculus was invented by a philospopher? Besides, we're talking about college mostly, people typically know by college if they're good at math and science or not. ALso, many fields of liberal arts, such as psychology,study learning and can help devise ways to imrpove math and science scores.
I thought Newton invented calculus to help explain physics. But regardless, there's too many people majoring in things like criminal justice, english, etc. and not enough people going into math and science fields. At least in employment terms, those fields are majorly under utilized.And Newton was somewhat of a philospher himself, a testament to how one-dimensional our thinking about math and science has become. They're not mutally exclusive with the liberal arts, but somehow we've lost sight of that. I was talking about, though, how the invention of calculus was dependent on mathematical discoveries made by René Descartes. As for employment terms, perhaps they are underutuilized, but how much of that is college's fault and how much is grade and high school's? And as I said, a lot of people are studying liberal arts programs in order to go into fields like education and help further the fields of math and science.
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