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Arnold Kling's avatar

I wish to see the day when colleges are led by people like you. You are the opposite of the spineless types that seem to have risen to the top at most institutions of higher education.

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Kelly Harbeson's avatar

I was, in a sense luckier than you or Bret. The attractions of academe left me fairly early before I had invested so much time, energy and finances in the system. I dropped out of HS to attend the local community college, which I was at for two quarters before I realized that my interest in marine biology equipped me for nothing but a teaching career. As the child of an academic I was quite aware of the limitations of such a career path. Diversity of origin has nothing on diversity of experience. It never ceases to amaze me how experience in one field can inform other areas of endeavor. I have been a landscaper, a commercial fisherman, a boat builder, a motorcycle mechanic, a welder, a computer operator, an electronics technician and made service calls on a lot of devices before retiring as a Building Automation technician for the local El-High school system. I just shake my head at the thought of being "trapped" in a job that was once interesting but had ceased to be long before I reached retirement age. I come from a family of MD's. I got to learn first-hand what a person with all the education in the world in a narrow discipline could damage by thinking he or she knows a lot (or anything) about things outside that field. Too happy for words to describe how happy I am to be a jack-of-all-trades. I can't do it all at my age, but I know enough to recognize good vs poor workmanship. That is what educational institutions should be doing instead of credentialing a crop of mediocre "yes-persons".

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