KyleKatarn: I thought some teachers would feel this way. I can understand where you're coming from, but I don't think it's a problem. If some traditional teaching jobs became obsolete, there could still be a demand for private tutors. Lumberjacks feared that the chainsaw would put many of them out of jobs way back in the day because it made the industry more efficient. They're still around without being publicly funded.
I take it you haven't done any tutoring. The pay sucks and if the pay doesn't suck you're charging students a huge amount of money. It's unrealistic to work more than 3 hours a day, which means that in order to cover living expenses and pay the legally required taxes that you're having to charge a really hefty amount of money.
Private tutoring is fine if you're in school trying to come up with some pocket change, but it's not realistic to expect to make a living at it unless you can convince people to pay a huge sum of money for your time.
lukipela: If your ability to teach is invalidated by a student having free access to the book, then you suck at teaching.
I'm not worried about my ability to teach, I'm worried about my ability to feed and clothe myself. I've put a pretty significant amount of time and money into getting my credentials and moves like this don't make it any easier to recoup that cost.
Teaching is teaching, I've taught a lot of people for free over the years, but that doesn't do anything for my ability to pay my bills.
nondeplumage: The only thing worth hearing from colleges right now is: We'll drop the requirement for taking a bunch of bullshit classes so we can suck out as much money from you as possible by saying a degree takes a certain number of credits, regardless of where half those credits comes from.
Make that news. Then I'll be happy. Because except for the homework, this shit's already on Wikipedia anyhow.
I disagree with that strongly the "breadth" requirements that you're bitching about are a significant part of what makes a college graduate worth hiring. Sure they could just have you take the courses which are required to know a particular field, but if you really want that they have that. The term is "Vocational Training" and it dispenses of the breadth requirements for expediency and the level of education suffers as a result.
Now, there's nothing inherently wrong with that, but you should be aware that you're not getting a full degree experience out of it and that you're going to be much less knowledgeable about things outside of your specialty, but it does have its place. In fact some people are even better off going that route both financially as well as personally.