(05-07-2020, 05:45 AM)rachel83az Wrote: Being able to "defend" something that you've learned in school doesn't necessarily mean that you learned it any better or any worse than someone whose degree didn't include that component. They are different skillsets and having the "debate" skillset checked off doesn't mean that you got a better education by default. It just means that you learned how to debate.Yes, find me 5 successful politicians who got their bachelors online though? Atleast they are in a position that they have to debate something. [ I'm checking Rand Paul real quick, this is the criteria at a minimum, attended Baylor then went on to Duke, Ocasio went in person to Boston U, yeah this people don't do online]
I'm not saying debating isn't a valuable skill to have - it is. But debating doesn't mean that you know a subject better than someone else. One needs only to look at politics to see this. There are tons of lawmakers who have no idea about what they're debating (the lawmaker who said the internet was made of tubes and the lawmaker who thought Guam was going to tip over from overpopulation come to mind) but their skills in debating are such that they are often able to BS their way into getting their way regardless of this fact. One needn't go to school to learn how to debate, either.
Also, if you go to a prestigious (and expensive) school then you are more likely to come from a family that has money in the first place. Money makes money. Sure, there may be plenty of millionaires who graduated from Stanford, but how many of them came from families that had absolutely no money in the first place? Not many, I'm sure.
I'm not sure if you want to get into this type of argument right now and go after the good ol brick and mortar vs online school argument. There's a reason they are rebelling, as of 2020 successful and ambitious people do not get their bachelors online if they are in their early twenties to mid twenties.
Arguing against this is just seeing things from a bias perspective. Online bachelors are for people like me and most of this website. In their 30s and up trying to check in the box to move up in the workforce pyramid or get that point covered.
If i was attending Stanford at 21 years old and they moved my classes to an online only environment, I would complain too. Seeing it in any other way but what it is, is just covering up the truth. It's not the same. Even the professors themselves will tell you that.