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Alun Palmer wrote in message . ..
I beleive in free choice. If someone wants to study a broad programme they can, but I don't beleive in forcing people to study things they don't want to, at least not beyond the age of 16, and even then only to avoid illiteracy and innumeracy. My own interests are not atall narrow, but they are eclectic. They include poetry, archaeology and languages, for example. If, however, a poetry class were to be compulsory in an EE curriculum, I feel strongly that it would be wrong. You can't force people to become well-rounded. Force feeding is a poor sort of education. I do not beleive that it is necessary to make people study unwanted classes to qualify as an institution of higher learning, more that it disqualifies the college. I'll believe that when the U.K approach to technical professional education programs is better that the U.S. approaches when U.K. technological leadership comes even close to the U.S. on a per capita or on any other basis. w3rv |