LazyBoy
Member
exactly what im doing asquithian.
There are clubs and societies ... but university is what you make it. If you dont want to be in clubs and societies, then theres nothing stopping you. At the same time, if you want to be in clubs, then by all means theres nothing stopping you. Plus its slightly hard to organise gatherings over 6 campuses and over 15,000 students.LazyBoy said:Do you care to comment on the UWS side of this, I spoke to a friend who changed from UWS to USYD and she said that UWS had no societies or clubs or whatever and really didnt encourage social gatherings as much as she found USYD does. Care to clarify or correct?
That right, I'm only going to uni for the accreditation, not nessacerily the knowledge, some of it I probably already possess, other I could pick up easily and quickly on any job. However, this doesn't mean alot to employers, so I'm simply here to get a degree with my name on it. Not to expand personal knowledge as such and not to expand my horizons.Asquithian said:Uni isnt an education thesedays either. It's just so you can get a job. If you wanted to do a degree that was liberal rather than vocational you would be doing B Jurisprudance or a BA in Philosophy and English.
We get this group of students that are just (Say like com law or com or whatever) that are simply robots.
You can go to uni and graduate and still know nothing about the world you live in. Sad. Thats why in the US you have to do liberal arts first.
How is it hearsay when i got it from someone who went to UWS. by that rule, everything YOU say is just heresay and why should i beleive you. lol. But just to clear it up, i never said i fully beleive them, which is why i asked you because i wasnt sure about it. Which i beleive isnt the problem your tlaking about.natstar said:IMO its a waste of time and money going to uni just for the accrediation. I for one am not only going there to get a job, but for the knowledge in an area I am interested in.
Lazyboy-you shouldent belive hearsay, thats the problem. UWS has heaps of clubs and societies, and fucken does encourage social gatherings. Which is think is why its a more "down to earth" university.
http://www.uwssa.org.au/ If ur so interested
natstar said:IMO its a waste of time and money going to uni just for the accrediation
*cough* [comment]comment[/comment]natstar said:Jess im not against uni for getting a job.
i'm curious. what is liberal arts exactly? just like what you do in B arts? (philosophy, history, etc).Asquithian said:You can go to uni and graduate and still know nothing about the world you live in. Sad. Thats why in the US you have to do liberal arts first.
LazyBoy said:Chookyn, we live in a mulicultural society. What about clashing cultures? such as lebonese culture brought to australia? should we be tollerant of cultures that support stoneing of women? should we be tollerant of cultures that go against tradition western values? There has to be a line in tollerance, where is it drawn. Do we tollerate cultures who impose female circumcision? do we tollerate cultures where bribary is an expected business practice? do we tolerate those who dont speak english?
Yes, admittedly it seems there is no easy answer. You've both raised some valid questions and points there, though. Thanks for giving us some food-for-thoughtXayma said:But who should choose what morals to follow. Many christians would think I'm an immoral person, however, I see nothing wrong with my morals, and in fact view some of what they are doing as immoral (the continual preaching to others in the case of mormons etc). I should not be taught Christian morals, and some of my morals should not be taught to others because they will most likely disagree with them.
Personal morality should not necessairly be given emphasis, that just encourages people to speak out against what they view as immoral, polygamy, homosexuality, gambling etc, even if it does not affect them. The law is a good enough distinguishing factor and it is always changing to keep in line with the changing values of society.
Liberal Studies in Australia, although based on the US model degree is not completely the same. In the US, their Lib Arts degree requires compulsory study in basically eveything including things like a language (at least one), mathematics, English, history, social sciences, "lab" sciences etc. B Arts is limited to the subjects in the Arts faculty therefore, it isnt AS Liberal lolCyan_phoeniX said:i'm curious. what is liberal arts exactly? just like what you do in B arts? (philosophy, history, etc).
Wow! Did you notice that your statement is recursive? Or at least self referential!LazyBoy said:not true. there are alot of people on here who are open to people with different types of opinion and lifes. they just dismiss everything they say as lies and ignorance when its neither.
i wasn't trying to argue against their point of view, i was just making a comment. no need to get all agro about it! have you tried anger management?Cyan_phoeniX said:get out of the thread stupid. if there is one thing i hate it is some little git trying to argue against a persons point of view by highlighting a typo. Flee scum, and do not return.