“A country that wants to maintain the dream of social mobility requires real colleges and universities that encourage everyone to find what [John] Dewey called ‘large and human significance’ in their lives and work. This requires the opposite of a nano-degree: not just code context, critique, and cooperation. It requires real colleges and universities—institutions that equip students to reshape themselves and the world around them by learning to think for themselves and continually reinvent what they do.” Read more…
Why ‘Nano-Degrees’ Can Never Replace Liberal Arts Colleges | The Atlantic
- Renee Vary
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