Salukimadness86 wrote:Kyle_Saluki_17 wrote:
Eh, he’s not entirely wrong. Also not entirely right. I hold a Mechanical Engineering degree from SIU and I felt like there were less than 3 classes that I had that were actually relevant. I absolutely LOVE college basketball and my Salukis, but there are plenty of reasons I don’t give a crap about these schools as “institutions.” Sports are about the only good thing that comes out of them in my opinion.
If you ask people who attended other universities, I'd bet they'd say the same about classes being relevant or not. It's not just an SIU issue. The whole college thing is a business. Fill out the application, take a test, pay the fee and your in. I was a Career and Technical Education major at SIU and enjoyed a 34 year teaching career. Had some great professors and took some good classes, Some not so much. My best experience was my 1 1\2 year internship, and my semester of student teaching. Hands on approach to learning was best for me, as well as the thousands of students I worked with. When I was younger, I couldn't give to the university because I was raising a family, paying for their activities, bills, a mortgage, and later college expenses. Now I have the resources to give back. Just curious; who do you reference when you speak of good people of Southern Illinois who say SIU is a joke? The people I spoke with in St. Louis and other events realize how much good the university does for the region, not how little. I assume you're using your engineering degree to repair cooking utensils when they break down. LOL!
Haha. Well in general, it was a shot at “The business of college” rather than SIU. Like I said, we are actually a school that can put together a good crowd. Who knows what the people around Springfield, MO think of their local university. And other areas for that matter. Nothing that I said is exclusive to SIU and southern Illinois. Private schools may have a different tune. I honestly have no idea.
The people I reference is just normal people in the region. Some educated with engineering degrees, teaching degrees, some without higher education at all, and others. As a whole, I’d say the majority of people in Southern Illinois not living in Carbondale.
And yes, I no longer work as an engineer as I now run my own business. Turns out it pays more than double an engineering salary to sell egg rolls and crab rangoon. Lol