Jayne, your mouth is talking. You might wanna look to that.

Mal ,'Serenity'


Natter 71: Someone is wrong on the Internet  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


SuziQ - Jul 17, 2013 5:26:25 pm PDT #29518 of 30001
Back tattoos of the mother is that you are absolutely right - Ame

Step away, -t, step away.

I may not be getting a good ROI for my late in life degree, but my quality of life is better. I wouldn't have been able to get my current job which may not pay me fantastically more than what I was earning pre-degree. But moving the Colorado for this job makes the financial pain a bit less painful.


-t - Jul 17, 2013 5:26:46 pm PDT #29519 of 30001
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Man, if i could get a job doing integrals I'd be pretty happy. Though it's really basic algebra and linear algebra that I sometimes do for fun. They sometimes come up in my job by way of abusing Excel, but never for very long.

And I remember some thermo. Well, the ideal gas law, I remember the hell out of that.


Kat - Jul 17, 2013 5:29:37 pm PDT #29520 of 30001
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Among the things I'm interested in is what kind of educational interventions can help students in that socioeconomic bracket. In my view I think good mentoring programs with professionals who originally were in those backgrounds can help students see future employment possibilities in a variety of majors. There are hundreds of careers most people have never heard of, but you don't get exposure to them by accident.

le nubian, I have no idea about what interventions can help. I am not even sure about mentoring (we received a Gear Up grant and those kids had mentors for 7 years and the grad rate/college attendance rate/AP Pass rate was roughly the same as every other year, and dramatically lower than the Non-Gear-Up kids the year before). The one that sounds promising but not scalable is Blue Engine but that requires a buttload of money and a complete overhauling of the pedagogical approach of the classroom teacher.

Even though I'm a mostly useless English teacher, I was not an English major. I should be working in international something, as that was my degree and I passed the written portion of the foreign service exam. But blargh. I don't even have a foreign language under my belt anymore.

Amy, I didn't mean to imply that you should follow your dream and just study basketweaving (though I have done that and its pretty fun). It was more that this topic is one of larger general interest to me since it's a conversation I have with kids a lot. Also, when my former students tell me they are going to be an English major I sort of cringe. Which is wrong. There are plenty of English majors with real jobs. Anyhow, sorry, if I came across as assholey.


-t - Jul 17, 2013 5:30:55 pm PDT #29521 of 30001
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

It's nothing I can do anything about anyway, Suzi, so I am trying to let it go. But gah.

I have long since considered my educational debt as sunk costs rather than investments. Which I learned all about getting my MBA, which is the bulk of my student loan debt. The circle of something.


Kat - Jul 17, 2013 5:32:28 pm PDT #29522 of 30001
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

I have long since considered my educational debt as sunk costs rather than investments.

Absolutely sunk costs!


§ ita § - Jul 17, 2013 5:35:13 pm PDT #29523 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Just as I was about to leave the office my boss sent the intern to find me and tell me he needed me to review some copy. I asked if I could do it from home, and he said he needed it immediately. So I turned the laptop back on and kept hitting refresh--five minutes, he said...

Ten minutes later he comes downstairs and hands me some paper. Whuhuh? I explained I had the app (and if I hadn't, I'd have asked for printscreens--paper is never the right answer in similar scenarious) and marked the paper up.

But what's interesting is that we're doing a usability fix, and I have zero qualifications, but...you gotta explain stuff to people! Give them actions to do in certain scenarios, and use simple words!

For anyone with online banking at BofA, if you went to log in and the picture or passphrase wasn't yours, what would you guess to do next? Did you instantly understand "multifactor" (not just your password, but other information, including registering your computer as allowed to access the account) authentication the first time some site sent you an authorisation code or asked you security questions when you logged in from your work computer instead of home?

I judge by my family, and I know my (pretty intelligent) sister hates it and doesn't know what the benefits are because her bank dumped this "switch now or you explode!" process on her, and it was just trauma from start to finish. She doesn't have breathing room to feel more secure.


§ ita § - Jul 17, 2013 5:39:01 pm PDT #29524 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Sunk costs you can't afford are still as much debt as an investment unreturned on, though. How much can you afford to spend on...whatever, and what are your plans for being able to pay back? I don't know if I'd recommend people not consider this.

Then again, I also crushed my mother's dreams by choosing a cheap university (I thought the idea of loans for education was barbaric...oh so fucking sheltered uni track British high school student...) instead of the fanciest, but I have never regretted a second of that.


-t - Jul 17, 2013 5:46:01 pm PDT #29525 of 30001
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

For anyone with online banking at BofA, if you went to log in and the picture or passphrase wasn't yours, what would you guess to do next?

Back out of there, or close the window, or close the browser, depending on how paranoid I was feeling, I guess. And then panic because I wouldn't know what to do after that but clearly I can't trust the internet and that shuts an awful lot of doors.

Did you instantly understand "multifactor" (not just your password, but other information, including registering your computer as allowed to access the account) authentication the first time some site sent you an authorisation code or asked you security questions when you logged in from your work computer instead of home?

My bank that does that doesn't use the word "multifactor" to explain what's happening, it says something like it doesn't recognize the computer so here's some additional security hoops to jump through and should it remember this computer for later or not? Not in exactly those words, but along those lines.


Connie Neil - Jul 17, 2013 5:53:49 pm PDT #29526 of 30001
brillig

People ask me how I got into tech support, if I have computer degrees or something. I tell them that most of my jobs came from a really good business typing course in high school, when typing was still mostly something women who were going to be secretaries needed to learn. (I dreaded shorthand, thank god that went away.) The computer bit came most from poking around the various screens I had access to, asking questions, and having a very linear brain that could appreciate a computer's desire to go from point A to Point D only by going through B and C first, no matter how much you cursed at it and thumped the buttons that made sense to you. My only formal training in computers was from a college freshman course in BASIC programming back in 1979.


-t - Jul 17, 2013 5:55:19 pm PDT #29527 of 30001
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Sunk costs you can't afford are still as much debt as an investment unreturned on, though. How much can you afford to spend on...whatever, and what are your plans for being able to pay back? I don't know if I'd recommend people not consider this.

Yeah, the concept of sunk costs doesn't really work for future spending, only what you've already spent. Unless you embrace determinism thoroughly, I suppose.

I don't think I was all that rational about it when I was deciding to go back to school, and I certainly wasn't as an undergrad (or the first, uh, two tries at graduate school). I was all about some idealized ivory tower pure learning experience. Well, not for the MBA, but that was kind of a move of desperate hope more than anything else.

I don't recommend anyone follow my example.