Happy Teacher's Appreciation Week to All the CS Teachers
I have tremendous admiration for all teachers, especially computer science teachers who (presumably) could make more money working as engineers in the industry, but instead choose to educate others and help them chase their dreams. You are an inspiration and thank you!
I hope that people recognize the importance of education and, especially in the United States, start to value education more. I worry that most education in the U.S. will become privatized because budgets continue to be cut and good teachers decide to leave for other opportunities.
Thoughts?
16 comments
[ 4.6 ms ] story [ 46.1 ms ] threadAnd now we all have personalized tutors in LLMs.
Equality of opportunity is also an impossible thing to achieve.
It's turned into absolute trash. Utter, absolute disaster. Everything privatized by the Tories has been a complete civic disaster.
Massive sewage discharges, foreign shareholders stripping assets with zero investment for the future, late trains, bad rolling stock.
A complete disaster. Like American healthcare.
Don't wish this shit on your worst enemies.
Anyone arguing otherwise is either a rich grifter trying to sponge from the public purse or a poor moron who's been convinced by the rich grifters to vote against their own best interest.
Capitalism does not work on utilities like schooling, healthcare, energy, water, public transportation, etc. at all. It's used as a way to strip public funds by corruption and bribery. Just like we know communist governments don't work, we also know privatising public services don't work.
Nice post – I'd like to echo those words. The (Assistant/Associate) Professors, lecturers and researchers @ research institutes I have seen could easily move to the industry and make plenty of money (whilst facing less politics and get more funding/time for their research), yet their love for teaching and inspiring students is admirably greater.
Not sure why people say these things. Just like public schools, private schools have a variety of achievement levels and opportunity.
My worry is that schooling will become more and more expensive.
I recently was musing about this myself and wrote a small essay about it: "Beyond GDP: Measuring the True Worth of a Civilization's People" [1]
[1]: https://journal.hexmos.com/beyond-gdp/
do they know that after that effort teaching kids CS in high school and college, and when their kids worked really hard to pass with flying colours, these kids have to endlessly grind leetcode and other bullshit timed coding tests to stay relevant and make a living?