Search This Blog

Monday, May 11, 2015

End of year?

Well another year has come and gone.  It was eventful in many ways and accomplished nothing in many others.  We have a new president and a new contract.  The former we hope will be helpful and the latter is good.  I do have an issue that looms on the horizon.  And, it is rather important. The State of Ohio is going to start reimbursing universities based on graduation rates.  Once again people who know nothing about education are looking for a silver bullet to try to solve societal issues.  I am sure there must be an old mimeograph machine somewhere on campus so we can start printing diplomas immediately.  There will be enormous pressure placed on faculty to pass students who have no business passing.  This is a university education to which we are supposedly subjecting these students.  While it may supply the state with a few more graduates, it will not make for a more intelligent workforce.  Employers will figure this out.  Students will come to understand two things:  first they will get a pass on many general education classes; and two, their diplomas for which they have spent significant amounts of money will be worthless.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

The UT-ProMedica partnership is a fabulous, mutually beneficial partnership that will benefit not only UT and ProMedica, but the entire region.

This would never have happened under the old guard. No one in the region wanted to partner with Jacobs.

Anonymous said...

"new contract"? what new contract? There was a vote... and nothing, at least I have not heard of anything since the vote, not even if voters approved or not. And as far as graduation goes, the issue is UT's open enrollment policy. Open enrollment combined with state money for graduating is a curse for UT. And by the way, isn't this "worthless diploma" mantra getting a little old? Check your records and you fill find that mantra being uttered on this blog 3 years ago ad nauseum. We have record numbers of international students paying outrageous money to study at UT to receive a worthless degree - either that, or all our grads need to take their degrees to China where they are still worth something.

Anonymous said...

New Faculty Contract

http://www.toledoblade.com/Education/2015/05/12/Contract-with-UT-faculty-union-OK-d.html

Anonymous said...

So if you don't like the outcomes-based method of state funding, what do you propose? Being paid by the amount (cubic feet) of hot air released per minute by lecturing faculty?

Anonymous said...

The ProMedica deal won't help UT Medical Center if clinical faculty are pressured to admit their patients to Toledo Hospital. Tough to be a partner with your competitor.

Anonymous said...

Anon 3:06, don't be so short sighted. $50 million a year goes a long way. The partnership will also help recruitment. Perhaps mostly importantly it will allow for far more research and clinical studies for both partners. Everyone wins: UT, ProMedica, and the community. Lunacy over a parking garage notwithstanding, ProMedica has a long tradition of being an outstanding corporate citizen.

Anonymous said...

ProMedica deal is with UT College of Medicine and not UTMC, impacts training and potential placement of doctors and other training medical students, has no impact on clinical faculty and where their patients receive treatment.

Anonymous said...

UT students that have university health insurance will be required to receive all hospital-related treatment at Toledo Hospital.

Anonymous said...

Anon 2:15

Do you just make up stuff to fulfill your paranoid delusions?

Cite your source(s).

Anonymous said...

Channel 11 news, 11PM, 5-14-15

Anonymous said...

Since the Blade also go the facts incorrect with their original story I doubt NBC news did either and I see nothing on the partnership website materials that will require all UT students on health insurance through the university to be required to only use Toledo Hospital,

Anonymous said...

Also with the ACA in place the University is considering dropping requirement that all students have health care insurance or buy into UT student policy. Thus they would have no means to control where students seek health care.

Anonymous said...

It's CBS news.

Anonymous said...

Someone needs to understand the difference between local news and network news.

Anonymous said...

Now Scarborough's son defending him:

http://www.ohio.com/news/break-news/son-comes-to-university-of-akron-president-s-defense-on-twitter-1.592937

Anonymous said...

Does it really mater which station and whether national or local when the key issue is that there is no requirement in the agreement that binds UT students to Toledo Hospital.