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College Knowledge Check List
Campus Report ^ | March 23, 2008 | Deborah Lambert

Posted on 03/23/2008 5:31:50 PM PDT by bs9021

College Knowledge Check List

by: Deborah Lambert, March 21, 2008

Longtime radio talk show host Dennis Prager has some advice for aspiring college students and/or their parents.

Before plunking down wads of cash for that life-changing campus experience, you might want to ask a few questions about prospective schools that include the following:

1. “Can one obtain a Bachelor of Arts degree at your college without having to read a single Shakespeare play, one Federalist paper or one book of the Bible?”

2. "Does the college allow military recruiters on its campus?"

3. "What is the ratio of Democrats to Republicans among the professors in the liberal arts departments?”

4. “What are the names of the speakers invited and paid with college funds to speak last year at the college?”

5. "Does the school have same-sex dorms and bathrooms?" This is not your parents’ campus, stressed Prager. Schools no longer function as your family away from home, and their living conditions are worth checking out.

6. "Is Howard Zinn’s A People History of the United States the most widely assigned American history book?" If so, run for the nearest exit, and consider another school.

For more info on this subject...

(Excerpt) Read more at campusreportonline.net ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: children; dorms; highereducation; prager; tips
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1 posted on 03/23/2008 5:31:51 PM PDT by bs9021
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To: bs9021

Doesn’t that cut out about 98% of the choices?


2 posted on 03/23/2008 5:35:19 PM PDT by ScratInTheHat (Don't like my immigration stance? I'm dyslexic. PC keeps sounding like BS to me!)
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To: bs9021

Link to Prager’s site on the link at campus report doesn’t work.


3 posted on 03/23/2008 5:36:08 PM PDT by swmobuffalo ("We didn't seek the approval of Code Pink and MoveOn.org before deciding what to do")
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To: bs9021

Good questions!


4 posted on 03/23/2008 5:36:41 PM PDT by I'm ALL Right! (Dear RNC: Not one Conservative Candidate? Not one "RED" penny)
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To: bs9021

Screw liberal arts degrees and their schools. A total waste of time. Insist that your kids get a real degree in engineering, business or a REAL science. Seek out the best college for these degrees where they can be affordably admitted. Yeah, expect them to ACTUALLY WORK while in college.

And since they will have to take the liberal arts garbage, just prepare them to tread water in those courses. The marxist BS spewed out is not the ticket to a good job. Heck, look at those loser profs...would your kids want to live their lives of bitterness?


5 posted on 03/23/2008 5:50:14 PM PDT by henkster (I'm a typical white guy)
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To: bs9021

If conservatives make up 40% of the households, why wouldn’t the free market fill the demand by having a ton of conservative colleges?


6 posted on 03/23/2008 5:57:59 PM PDT by MattinNJ ("Conservatives" will stay home in November and hand the socialists the election. Unbelievable.)
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To: bs9021

Regarding No. 1. Most of the nation’s prominent lawyers, judges and some of the politicians have graduated from these kinds of schools-—and look what it has gotten us.


7 posted on 03/23/2008 6:05:06 PM PDT by Parmy
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To: ScratInTheHat

I believe that Texas A&M meets all these criteria. That is why I’ve told my son he can go anywhere he wants... but I’ll pay his way to A&M. And also why, if he goes, he will be fifth generation.


8 posted on 03/23/2008 6:14:38 PM PDT by r-q-tek86 (If you're not taking flak, you're not over the target.)
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To: henkster

Screw liberal arts degrees and their schools. A total waste of time.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

I have no degree at all but I don’t believe a true liberal arts education would be a waste of time. Going to school for four years to get a liberal arts degree while learning less than used to be taught in high school is a waste of time. When you have graduates with any sort of degree who cannot even name the three branches of government or give a basic outline description of how this nation came into existence then I would say time and money has been wasted on a phony education.


9 posted on 03/23/2008 6:51:22 PM PDT by RipSawyer (Does anyone still believe this is a free country?)
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To: RipSawyer

.......I don’t believe a true liberal arts education would be a waste of time. .......

Penguin Classics


10 posted on 03/23/2008 7:00:49 PM PDT by bert (K.E. N.P. +12 . Never say never (there'll be a VP you'll like))
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To: MattinNJ
If conservatives make up 40% of the households, why wouldn’t the free market fill the demand by having a ton of conservative colleges?

Because all the conservatives are working in the real world. Leaving only derelicts to be professors.

Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach.

11 posted on 03/23/2008 7:17:02 PM PDT by mountn man (The pleasure you get from life, is equal to the attitude you put into it.)
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To: r-q-tek86

http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/usnews/edu/college/directory/brief/drlife_10366_brief.php

33% of the dorms are coed, in many schools all dorms are coed, so at least you can get a same sex dorm room, even though they have coed dorms.

We’ve had few problems with liberal profs. Most of the ones you run into are during the first two years when the general ed classes have to be taken. But if you major in an engineering course, or even if you’re a business major, you’re not going to have to deal with the “liberalism” in your final two years of undergrad study (how do you make calc, physics, accounting, database administration, etc. into a “liberal” platform, it usually doesn’t happen because the subject matter doesn’t lend itself to philosophical interpretation.) The really liberal profs seem to be affiliated with the “liberal arts” majors.


12 posted on 03/23/2008 7:22:36 PM PDT by dawn53
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To: r-q-tek86

Gig ‘Em Aggies!!!!!

I’m class of ‘84.

I will say that I didn’t read anything listed in the first bullet.

However, I don’t have a Bachelor of Arts; I have a Bachelor of Science degree.


13 posted on 03/23/2008 8:13:16 PM PDT by luckystarmom
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To: dawn53

When I was at A&M, I took most of my liberal arts classes at the junior college near my parent’s house during the summer.

I think it was a good idea, and they weren’t very liberal.


14 posted on 03/23/2008 8:15:16 PM PDT by luckystarmom
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To: bs9021
This list might help to understand the political orientation of a university.

For most folks I would think cost of education, location, research areas/academic focus, and graduation rates are more important checklist items.

15 posted on 03/23/2008 8:20:26 PM PDT by stainlessbanner
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To: RipSawyer

I am a history professor and one of the major issues in our field is that conservatives have largely abandoned the field of ideas. It is an ideological surrender by the right, not a victory by the left.

It is true that there are still a few of us who try to teach American history as if we were the good guys, but in the history departments of this nation conservatives are vastly outnumbered.

Why is this?

I think many of the posts here will surely illustrate the problem. A sizable portion of people who claim to be “conservative” actually denigrate traditional fields like history and instead urge their children to enter more lucrative fields. For them college is nothing more than a job training program or a very expensive vocational school. They don’t view college as a discussion of great ideas, or a rumination on what Russell Kirk once called “the permanent things”. For the short sighted among us a college course in American History, Philosophy, Literature etc. is a “total waste of time”. If it doesn’t make enough money to buy the big McMansion and new car then it is meaningless.

This leaves entire swaths of the university staffed by foaming at the mouth liberals. So do keep this anti-intellectual current in mind when we complain about how so many the social science professors are raving liberals. We only have ourselves and our so-called conservative allies to blame.


16 posted on 03/23/2008 8:40:30 PM PDT by Will_Zurmacht
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To: Will_Zurmacht

Good post, thanks.


17 posted on 03/23/2008 9:19:42 PM PDT by TChad
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To: henkster

Fully agreed.

In our increasingly technical world, it boggles the mind that anyone would get a four-year liberal arts degree unless they had one of the following planned:

1. Going on to law school or similar advanced education.
2. Going on to graduate school, with the intention of teaching in the liberal arts field (eg, english lit, art history, etc).
3. Planning on marrying someone with a ‘real’ degree in engineering, medicine, science, etc.

Almost any other plan for the future doesn’t need a liberal arts degree and in fact, a liberal arts degree is simply a way of extending one’s childhood.

I graduated from engineering school in the early 80’s. I quite distinctly remember the liberal arts majors at SUNY partying every weekend (and most nights), chasing tail, etc with wild abandon while I was sweating convolution integrals, linear algebra, circuit analysis, fields and wave and similar coursework with zero power to amuse and attract the chicks.

Come last semester tho... heh heh. Suddenly women figured out who was going to be employed after the four year vacation, and it wasn’t the cool poet with the dreamy, far-away look. It was the nerdy engineer who not only had a job offer, he had multiple job offers! And not for chump wages, but pretty darn good money. Back in ‘84, starting salaries for EE’s was in the high 20’s.

The best job offers for liberal arts types I heard was about $19K.

Revenge was.... sweet.

Best senior-year pickup line I heard from an engineer at a party:

“Hey baby... how would you like to be able to eat every day after graduation?”


18 posted on 03/24/2008 12:09:20 AM PDT by NVDave
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To: Will_Zurmacht

OK, let’s discuss this a bit.

Let’s break down the choices here:

I love history. Study history on my own, for my own edification. No one has ever had to “make” me study history. I’ve always loved history and how knowing something about it helps explain what is occurring today. Teaching history doesn’t require a student be pursuing liberal arts degree.

But let’s think about the choice you’re laying out here:

I got a BS in engineering, and I retired by the time I was 40.

You’re telling me that I should have gotten a liberal arts BA, then gotten on the PhD track, piling up more student debt, then having to put up with the tenure BS in a university (while being a conservative - boy I’m really liking my chances here), to hold down a job where I might have been in a non-stop conflict with the lunatic liberals in a university.

Let’s think about where I’d be at age 40 in your plan: A job where I’m going to be miserable, ostracized by my co-workers (and likely the administration) and get paid rather poorly for putting up with this.

Oh yea, sign me *right* up for that.

Here’s a little nugget for you: In Silicon Valley, we called stock options “F... You” money. Because after you reached a certain amount, and some idiot was telling you what to do, you realized that you didn’t need to put up with their crap any more. You told them what to do, in graphic detail, you packed your desk, and you walked out, a free man.

Today, I’m a free man. No one tells me what to do. That’s what is lucrative, not the money.

And part of what I do with my time is pursue “the permanent things,” to the great consternation of liberals who have confounded indoctrination with education in the American academy. If nothing else, it leaves them gob-smacked and wondering just what they taught in my engineering school.


19 posted on 03/24/2008 12:24:30 AM PDT by NVDave
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To: NVDave

First, I wouldn’t presume to tell you what to do with your life, I’m merely suggesting that attitudes like yours, which view “engineering, science and medicine” as the only “real” degrees available at a university are at the root of the problem of the liberal domination of the university, especially the social sciences.

If conservatives constantly tell their children that the only “real” degrees are in engineering, science and medicine, then how can we be surprised when the liberals take over every other department on campus?

A hypothetical for discussion: a bright young man is struggling.
His head tells him to go into engineering, makes some money. His heart is pulling him into the ministry, serve the community and spread the message of Jesus Christ.
Torn between getting a “real” degree in a “real” subject like Engineering or getting a degree in Religious Studies, this young fellow has some serious choices to make.
If the young man follows his heart he will study religion and work in the ministry, earning next to nothing. He will be poor and in your analysis “a loser”.
If he follows his head he will get a degree in Electrical Engineering, become a real bigshot and make more money than anyone posting on Freerepublic.

In a purely financial calculation the Engineering degree is an obvious choice. But as you have discovered by now, there is more to life than money. Money is important, but it is not the sole determiner of happiness and fulfillment. People are motivated by many things other than money, and that is why the streets are not teeming with prostitutes. Many folks do a given job because they love it and they would continue to do that job even if they could afford to retire at 40. They don’t view their work as a misery to be endured until they can cash in stock options and tell people “f*** you”.

So should conservatives tell young men and women in university that they are idiots if they study “nonsense” like religion, history, literature, etc?

If we do that as conservatives, we surrender the university to the left.
And then your children will have to sit through another four years of mindless left-wing propaganda in two thirds of their courses while they pursue a “real” degree.

And the beat goes on.


20 posted on 03/24/2008 1:42:31 AM PDT by Will_Zurmacht
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