How to educate journalists, part 2

Since we are talking about education, I have to comment on the recent news that Walmart employees can now get college credit for such activities as ringing up purchases, checking inventory and unloading trucks.

Sure they say it’s for such work-related issues as business ethics and “retail inventory management,” but since when did retail work at any store, much less Walmart, equal undergraduate OR even graduate school credit?

Walmart is providing a 15% discount on tuition at American Public University, an online-only school based in Charles Town, West Virginia. You can also play the ponies and slots there. They charge $750 for a three-credit course undergraduate course, more for a graduate course. Offered only online. Heck, even if you paid all the activity and lab fees, one would pay only $435 at the University of Florida this summer.

What could cost APU so much to run an online course? How can you justify allowing worker bees up to 45% of a college education by working at Walmart?

What’s wrong with our current idea of “higher education,” one that opens it doors to anyone with a high school diploma (and we all know that some graduates read at the middle school level or worse) and then offers hundreds of hours of basically free classes and tutoring to get them up to speed? What is it “higher” than?

Truth is higher education has been slipping into mediocrity for years. This is yet another example.

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