Hipster Duck
Senior Member
University students actually learn very little: study
Researchers analyzed transcripts and surveys of more than 3,000 full-time students on 29 campuses, and standardized tests that graded their critical thinking and writing skills.
Here were the main findings, based on a book called Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses: nearly half the students showed no big gains in learning - even after four years, one-third showed no more than marginal progress. They also spent 50 per cent less cracking the books compared to their peers decades ago.
Ironically, that study was done through a university.
I think some of this has to do with the fact that most 18 year-olds, and even many 22 year-olds, are generally not emotionally mature enough to take advantage of the kind of learning and benefits a university education can impart on you. Even when I was in my fourth year, I still thought of university as a career-advancement centre - like a glorified DeVry - more than the kind of place where I could learn to think critically, challenge hardened assumptions about the world and all in a place where I had almost no other responsibilities beyond going to class and keeping up with my studies.
I decided to go back to grad school after working for several years and having started a long-term, committed relationship. Only then was I able to squeeze out the resources of a university education and have a proper experience.
It's like the old line about youth being wasted on the young.