<p>
[quote]
When did I say that making it easy to get a good GPA necessarily means that you are providing a good education? Please point to the quote where I said that. Can't do it, can you?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Sakky, either you completely missed your own logic train, or you brought up a non-sequitor. I assumed you were arguing as follows:</p>
<p>I stated this:</p>
<p>
[quote]
And the argument that it is easy to get a better GPA at Yale, for example, than at Berkeley, is nonsense. That doesn't make either school better than the other.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>That says "there is no correlation between quality of education and GPA". You responded with this:</p>
<p>
[quote]
It may make no difference to YOU. But, trust me, it makes a huge difference to some students, especially the prelaws and the premeds. They are incented to get the highest grades they can. So, at least for them, going to Yale would be the far better choice, because it helps them achieve their goals.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I kind of assumed you had a point. If you in fact didn't, that's fine. I figured your train of logic was something like this: easy to get high GPAs attracts bright students who want an easy way to get into law/med school, therefore your peers are better, therefore education is better. It looks like you were just saying something completely irrelevant to the discussion, though, which IMO looks much more ridiculous.</p>
<p>
[quote]
The point is, why would you even want to take the risk of being berated if you have the choice to go elsewhere for engineering, i.e. Stanford?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>What? You mean a Stanford professor won't tell you to do better if you're getting a D in his/her class? Really? Wow, because that professor must be completely useless as a result. If a professor doesn't honestly tell a student that s/he needs to improve his/her grades, that professor isn't doing his/her job as an advisor. Likewise, if a professor excessively insults a student, s/he also isn't doing his/her job. You've also shown no reason for me to believe that Berkeley professors berate their students more often than Stanford professors, except "I've heard someone say so".</p>
<p>
[quote]
Uh huh, and what happens if they refuse to give it to you unless you meet with them? It's happened to a number of former students I know.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Okay, fine, your advisor insists on trying to help you. So go to your advisor and ask for your advisor code. If you show them your class schedule, they're required to give you your code. They are also required to meet with you and shouldn't give you your code without you at least talking to them. You think you'll be a significantly worse student because you, once a semester, have to see your advisor for 10 minutes? Please.</p>
<p>
[quote]
Huh? How's that? Perhaps you'd like to talk to somebody who couldn't get into the major he wanted and now he has to choose something he doesn't like, and how that's a good thing. Prepare to get punched in the mouth after you say it.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Look, there are a couple options here.</p>
<h1>1: School allows everyone into the major they want by dramatically increasing class and discussion sizes. Quality of education goes down. This is the "community college" solution.</h1>
<h1>2: School allows everyone into the major they want by never allowing students that couldn't make the cut attend Berkeley in the first place. The quality of the education of those kids goes down. This is the "more selective" solution.</h1>
<h1>3: School takes in as many as it can without degrading education with current student numbers. Quality of education remains on par, while students that couldn't get in at least had a shot at competing, and now may move on to a different major or transfer.</h1>
<p>It's the best for everybody. Once again, you confuse "what I prefer" with "what's best". Look at this nonsense:</p>
<p>
[quote]
I invite you to talk to students who tried to get into impacted majors and were denied, and try convincing them as to why that is a good thing.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Try convincing a 2-year old that the shot he's about to get is good for him. That even though it'll sting and he'll cry, that it's a good thing. Try explaining to the poor people of America that competition is a good thing, that it results in the best coming forth for the lowest prices, even if that means some people, meaning THEM, had to fail. It's a sign the system works, not that it doesn't.</p>
<p>
[quote]
'Bad' is in the eyes of the beholder. What you are saying is 'not that bad', others can (and have) called 'very bad'.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Sorry, I'm kind of jumping around here. I agree with this, but we can certainly agree on some common ground as to what the purpose of an advisor is. It is to meet with a student approximately once a semester to guide that student toward his/her goal, which is typically a degree. That means an advisor should inform the student what are good classes to take to keep him/her on track, and should let the student know if his/her performance is sufficient for graduation. That's all a good advisor has to do. You haven't shown how Berkeley's advisors are bad by any standard, and especially not this pretty reasonable one.</p>
<p>
[quote]
My point is, you can't complain about USNews all of the time, because the fact is, sometimes USNews is right. Not all of the time, but sometimes it is right.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>No argument there. But I can complain about US News the times it's not right, which is a lot of the time. In fact, I should. Otherwise, people will continue to treat it as gospel truth.</p>
<p>
[quote]
Again, the issue is, why put up with problems like this if you don't have to? And how is Berkeley going to attract students who have other options if Berkeley students continue to have problems like this if students at other schools don't?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I don't know, but people do, and there are a lot of extremely smart people here (that compete with HYPSM people). The reason is because the problem is insignificant. And for good students, it's irrelevant. If you're an exceptional student, guess what? You don't care that you need a 3.0GPA to transfer into whatever major. Because you have a 3.7. Otherwise, you aren't an exceptional student, and you wouldn't have been exceptional at HYPSM either.</p>
<p>
[quote]
So what, zhigui? Just because your friend jumps off a bridge, does that mean that you also have to jump off a bridge? Just because other universities do things that are bad, does that mean that Berkeley also has to do the same bad things? Put another way, if Berkeley fixes its problems, and other schools don't, then Berkeley will be better than those other schools.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>This isn't necessarily true, at least not in this context. If it were clear that all universities had a problem and Berkeley fixed it, it would be better than those others. The fact is, the grade inflation isn't necessarily a problem. It doesn't hurt education (to a point, at least). It only makes it more difficult for employers and graduate schools to gauge the value of a GPA. It would be best for all schools to refactor the system to elimate grade inflation. That won't happen. Hence, it would be best for all schools to meet a common standard, even if that is grade inflated. I don't like it, and I know you don't like it, but that's the best option.</p>
<p>
[quote]
Furthermore, I doubt it's true that every university has easy majors. Name the easy majors at Caltech. Name the easy majors at MIT. Even the easy majors at those schools are still pretty darn hard.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I don't go to MIT or Caltech, so I can't say. Do you go to either? I can't say there are or aren't hard majors there, but you imply there aren't. How do you know? And, really, hard is in the eye of the beholder, isn't it? We always have to ask, hard relative to what?</p>