Posts Tagged ‘political correctness’

The manual life

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

When I applied for a surgery residency, only one professor asked me questions about my manual dexterity. He asked if I played a musical instrument (I had but not well) and whether I worked with tools. I had been working with tools since I was a child. One of my earliest memories was smashing my thumb with a hammer. When I was a medical student, we had real labs. In Physiology and Pharmacology we would inject rabbits with drugs and measure the effect. Sometimes we constructed preparations with a frog’s leg and its nerve. Sometimes it was a heart beating in a dish of nutrient solution.

In recent years, some students have begun to complain about the use of animals in research and in biology labs. The lab benches have disappeared from medical schools. Students don’t even use microscopes anymore. I wonder if an applicant to a surgery program is asked about manual dexterity now.

This essay discusses the disappearance of shop class in high school (my Catholic high school didn’t have shop) and the decline of the manual arts as vocational choices. A Mercedes mechanic can earn $150,000 a year in a dealership position but college graduates earning 14 dollars an hour will look upon him as a “blue-collar worker.” The essay points out that many of the people described in the book, “The Millionaire Next Door” are in fact the products of such technical trades.

It has been said that India was for many years held back in its development because the British educational system had left a tradition of contempt for such manual trades. India had plenty of doctors but few auto mechanics. I wonder if we are headed the same way?

The value of a college education II

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Several months ago, I posted on the value of a college education. We now have a new standard for useless college educations, and it is from Dartmouth. I have a degree from Dartmouth and know that it is a highly sought college admission. I am also aware that there is a struggle going on between alumni, who wish to maintain the high standards that go back to colonial times, and new left wing activists who are attempting to wrest control of this ancient institution away from the alumni and from traditional standards.

A previous attempt in 2006 failed and so the college administration has changed the rules, packed the trustee committee and has another ballot being voted on right now. For Dartmouth, the stakes could not be higher and those students threatened with a lawsuit because of their evaluations know it. The Dartmouth Review has   the story.

More on Canada’s troubles

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

A few weeks ago, I commented on the assault on free speech in Canada. Now, an Australian journalist has put it better than I ever could. There seems to be a mild death wish on the part of Western Civilization. I worry about it.