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The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
  2. General Discussion
  3. Mildly interesting

Mildly interesting

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
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  • MikM Away
    MikM Away
    Mik
    wrote last edited by
    #2768

    Computer science was a whole lot simpler in 1965.

    "You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible." — Thomas Sowell

    jon-nycJ 1 Reply Last reply
    • Doctor PhibesD Online
      Doctor PhibesD Online
      Doctor Phibes
      wrote last edited by
      #2769

      Was she the inspiration for the Linux logo?

      I was only joking

      1 Reply Last reply
      • MikM Mik

        Computer science was a whole lot simpler in 1965.

        jon-nycJ Online
        jon-nycJ Online
        jon-nyc
        wrote last edited by
        #2770

        @Mik said in Mildly interesting:

        Computer science was a whole lot simpler in 1965.

        Must have been. She was a cheesehead.

        If you don't take it, it can only good happen.

        1 Reply Last reply
        • jon-nycJ Online
          jon-nycJ Online
          jon-nyc
          wrote last edited by
          #2771

          If you don't take it, it can only good happen.

          1 Reply Last reply
          • jon-nycJ Online
            jon-nycJ Online
            jon-nyc
            wrote last edited by
            #2772

            When you feel them in your own muscles this is exactly what you’d expect they look like.

            If you don't take it, it can only good happen.

            1 Reply Last reply
            • MikM Away
              MikM Away
              Mik
              wrote last edited by
              #2773

              ew

              "You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible." — Thomas Sowell

              1 Reply Last reply
              • jon-nycJ Online
                jon-nycJ Online
                jon-nyc
                wrote last edited by
                #2774

                207th and Broadway in Manhattan.

                IMG_8752.jpeg

                If you don't take it, it can only good happen.

                Doctor PhibesD 1 Reply Last reply
                • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                  207th and Broadway in Manhattan.

                  IMG_8752.jpeg

                  Doctor PhibesD Online
                  Doctor PhibesD Online
                  Doctor Phibes
                  wrote last edited by
                  #2775

                  @jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:

                  207th and Broadway in Manhattan.

                  IMG_8752.jpeg

                  That's pretty much the reverse of all the pictures I see on Facebook for my hometown, which has rather gone downhill of late.

                  I was only joking

                  kluursK 1 Reply Last reply
                  • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

                    @jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:

                    207th and Broadway in Manhattan.

                    IMG_8752.jpeg

                    That's pretty much the reverse of all the pictures I see on Facebook for my hometown, which has rather gone downhill of late.

                    kluursK Offline
                    kluursK Offline
                    kluurs
                    wrote last edited by
                    #2776

                    @Doctor-Phibes said in Mildly interesting:

                    That's pretty much the reverse of all the pictures I see on Facebook for my hometown, which has rather gone downhill of late.

                    Your moving in and the decline - hope you pointed out that correlation does not equate to causation.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • jon-nycJ Online
                      jon-nycJ Online
                      jon-nyc
                      wrote last edited by
                      #2777

                      Im just wrapping my head around the idea that parts of broadway were unpaved when my grandfather arrived.

                      If you don't take it, it can only good happen.

                      MikM 1 Reply Last reply
                      • kluursK Offline
                        kluursK Offline
                        kluurs
                        wrote last edited by
                        #2778

                        image.png

                        MikM jon-nycJ 2 Replies Last reply
                        • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                          Im just wrapping my head around the idea that parts of broadway were unpaved when my grandfather arrived.

                          MikM Away
                          MikM Away
                          Mik
                          wrote last edited by
                          #2779

                          @jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:

                          Im just wrapping my head around the idea that parts of broadway were unpaved when my grandfather arrived.

                          207th st. That’s way out in cow country then.

                          "You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible." — Thomas Sowell

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          • kluursK kluurs

                            image.png

                            MikM Away
                            MikM Away
                            Mik
                            wrote last edited by
                            #2780

                            @kluurs said in Mildly interesting:

                            image.png
                            Gotta prop up that unearned self-esteem.

                            "You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible." — Thomas Sowell

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            • kluursK Offline
                              kluursK Offline
                              kluurs
                              wrote last edited by
                              #2781

                              A lifetime ago, I saw some stats for a state university that indicated that the College of education incoming freshmen had the lowest SAT/ACT scores of any of the university's colleges - and yet amazingly, its graduates had the highest GPAs upon graduation. In Finland, getting into an education college is on par with getting into medical school and only their elite schools have a college of education.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              • HoraceH Online
                                HoraceH Online
                                Horace
                                wrote last edited by
                                #2782

                                Hm. Difficult to imagine that the intellectual elite would invest their abilities into an opportunity to babysit children in a classroom. Maybe the college of education in Finland is geared toward some other profession.

                                Education is extremely important.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                • HoraceH Online
                                  HoraceH Online
                                  Horace
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #2783

                                  chatGPT thinks it's a real thing. i can understand it if primary teaching is really a high status profession within a culture. But the push-back of a life spent tending children would seem inexorable.


                                  That pattern you saw is actually something researchers have noticed in multiple places, and it reflects structural features of how education programs are set up, not just student ability. And yes—Finland is the famous counterexample.

                                  Here’s what’s going on:


                                  🎓 Why Colleges of Education Often Have Lower SAT/ACT Averages

                                  Several well-documented factors contribute:

                                  1. Lower admissions selectivity

                                  At many U.S. public universities:

                                  • Business, engineering, nursing, and STEM majors tend to have higher quantitative thresholds.
                                  • Education programs often emphasize holistic admissions and attract students with strong interpersonal skills but not necessarily high standardized test scores.

                                  This pattern has been stable for decades in the U.S.

                                  2. Self-selection

                                  People who choose teaching are often:

                                  • Those passionate about working with children,
                                  • Motivated by service professions,
                                  • Less drawn to fields where standardized test performance plays a central role.

                                  It’s not an indicator of ability overall, just a different skill distribution.


                                  🎓 Why Education Majors Often Have Higher GPAs

                                  This is the part that surprises many people—but it’s extremely well researched.

                                  1. Grade inflation varies by major

                                  Education, humanities, and arts programs typically have:

                                  • More subjective grading (written work, reflections, project-based coursework),
                                  • A culture of formative feedback and mastery rather than harsh curve-based grading,
                                  • Fewer weed-out courses compared to STEM or pre-med.

                                  Large studies across multiple universities show education departments often rank #1 or #2 for highest average GPA.

                                  2. Course structure emphasizes skill mastery over competition

                                  Teacher-training programs prioritize:

                                  • Practicums,
                                  • Lesson-planning,
                                  • Classroom management projects,
                                  • Portfolio-based evaluations.

                                  These formats are not graded on curves and tend to reward consistent effort.

                                  3. Students are usually very conscientious

                                  Even if incoming standardized test scores are lower, education majors often score higher on:

                                  • Conscientiousness,
                                  • Agreeableness,
                                  • Empathy,
                                  • Collaborative tendencies.

                                  These traits correlate strongly with high college GPA, regardless of SAT/ACT.


                                  🇫🇮 Finland: the opposite model

                                  Finland famously demonstrates what happens when the entire system is flipped:

                                  1. Teacher training is elite

                                  Acceptance rates into primary-teacher programs are often below 10%, on par with medical school.

                                  2. Highly academic preparation

                                  Finnish teacher-training programs require:

                                  • A research-based master’s degree,
                                  • An undergraduate thesis,
                                  • A teaching demonstration exam,
                                  • Deep subject-matter mastery.

                                  3. High prestige

                                  Teachers are treated as high-status professionals:

                                  • Well-paid,
                                  • Autonomous,
                                  • Trusted,
                                  • Highly respected.

                                  Finland’s approach is sometimes summarized as:

                                  “We take the best students and train them longer, then let them teach however they think is best.”


                                  🧭 Why the U.S. and Finland diverge so sharply

                                  U.S.:

                                  • Huge system with massive shortages.
                                  • Teaching is relatively low-paid.
                                  • Low prestige reduces selectivity.
                                  • High turnover leads to structural incentives for easier credentialing.

                                  Finland:

                                  • Teaching is a competitive, prestigious, well-paid, protected profession.
                                  • Cultural trust in teachers is extremely high.
                                  • Small national population makes elite selectivity feasible.

                                  🧠 So the paradox you saw isn’t really a paradox

                                  In the U.S., you often see:

                                  • Lower SAT/ACT in → Higher GPA out
                                    Because GPA is shaped by:
                                  • Variations in grading culture,
                                  • Program structure,
                                  • Student traits unrelated to standardized tests.

                                  Finland represents what the U.S. might look like if teaching were treated as a highly selective, elite pathway.


                                  If you want, I can also break down:

                                  • Why standardized test scores don’t predict teacher effectiveness,
                                  • Why GPA does predict teacher classroom performance (it actually does),
                                  • Or how different countries structure their teacher-training pipelines.

                                  Just say the word.

                                  Education is extremely important.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  • kluursK kluurs

                                    image.png

                                    jon-nycJ Online
                                    jon-nycJ Online
                                    jon-nyc
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #2784

                                    @kluurs said in Mildly interesting:

                                    image.png

                                    If you do the simple arithmetic, 60% As and the rest Bs would give an average GPA of 3.6, not 3.8ish as per the graphs. So that other 40% probably contains a lot of A- and/or B+

                                    If you don't take it, it can only good happen.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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