ChasonBaller
on Pastner Polo watch
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Another recruiting tool!
Dude, it's an elective, not a major. There have always been some gimme electives. Why not make a few appealing?You've got to be kidding me. As a recent engineering graduate (May '16) this flies in the face of everything Georgia Tech has meant to me. Like other posters have said, I want Tech to have great players and win a lot of games, but I want to do it with Tech-Men, not with skating through gimmie classes with no educational value whatsoever. We are not UNCheat or Ugag. Don't get me wrong, I love hearing about the great recruits we can attract, but I'm hoping to attract more Jaytlin Askew's (enrolling in robotic engineering/ME) than guys that ought to be somewhere like UNC or ThugU.
So taking this class makes you a thug? Interesting.You've got to be kidding me. As a recent engineering graduate (May '16) this flies in the face of everything Georgia Tech has meant to me. Like other posters have said, I want Tech to have great players and win a lot of games, but I want to do it with Tech-Men, not with skating through gimmie classes with no educational value whatsoever. We are not UNCheat or Ugag. Don't get me wrong, I love hearing about the great recruits we can attract, but I'm hoping to attract more Jaytlin Askew's (enrolling in robotic engineering/ME) than guys that ought to be somewhere like UNC or ThugU.
May be a recent grad but truly at heartYou've got to be kidding me. As a recent engineering graduate (May '16) this flies in the face of everything Georgia Tech has meant to me. Like other posters have said, I want Tech to have great players and win a lot of games, but I want to do it with Tech-Men, not with skating through gimmie classes with no educational value whatsoever. We are not UNCheat or Ugag. Don't get me wrong, I love hearing about the great recruits we can attract, but I'm hoping to attract more Jaytlin Askew's (enrolling in robotic engineering/ME) than guys that ought to be somewhere like UNC or ThugU.
You've got to be kidding me. As a recent engineering graduate (May '16) this flies in the face of everything Georgia Tech has meant to me. Like other posters have said, I want Tech to have great players and win a lot of games, but I want to do it with Tech-Men, not with skating through gimmie classes with no educational value whatsoever. We are not UNCheat or Ugag. Don't get me wrong, I love hearing about the great recruits we can attract, but I'm hoping to attract more Jaytlin Askew's (enrolling in robotic engineering/ME) than guys that ought to be somewhere like UNC or ThugU.
I got out in '11. I got to take "Science Fiction" and "Gender Studies in Technology" my senior year to fill out electives. Demeaning literary arts is arrogant and contradictory to an institute's purpose of sculpting well rounded individuals.You've got to be kidding me. As a recent engineering graduate (May '16) this flies in the face of everything Georgia Tech has meant to me. Like other posters have said, I want Tech to have great players and win a lot of games, but I want to do it with Tech-Men, not with skating through gimmie classes with no educational value whatsoever. We are not UNCheat or Ugag. Don't get me wrong, I love hearing about the great recruits we can attract, but I'm hoping to attract more Jaytlin Askew's (enrolling in robotic engineering/ME) than guys that ought to be somewhere like UNC or ThugU.
Before you criticize a class or program, learn a little bit more about it.You've got to be kidding me. As a recent engineering graduate (May '16) this flies in the face of everything Georgia Tech has meant to me. Like other posters have said, I want Tech to have great players and win a lot of games, but I want to do it with Tech-Men, not with skating through gimmie classes with no educational value whatsoever. We are not UNCheat or Ugag. Don't get me wrong, I love hearing about the great recruits we can attract, but I'm hoping to attract more Jaytlin Askew's (enrolling in robotic engineering/ME) than guys that ought to be somewhere like UNC or ThugU.
Message #8 sent at 12:08 is not your best one.You've got to be kidding me. As a recent engineering graduate (May '16) this flies in the face of everything Georgia Tech has meant to me. Like other posters have said, I want Tech to have great players and win a lot of games, but I want to do it with Tech-Men, not with skating through gimmie classes with no educational value whatsoever. We are not UNCheat or Ugag. Don't get me wrong, I love hearing about the great recruits we can attract, but I'm hoping to attract more Jaytlin Askew's (enrolling in robotic engineering/ME) than guys that ought to be somewhere like UNC or ThugU.
I took an English elective - science fiction literature - while I was at Tech in the early 1970s. The class met at Manuel's Tavern in downtown Atlanta, we drank a lot of beer and we talked about the books we read. It was a great class!
Omg.
Tech opening up its borders to the world has changed the school more than a damn elective.
Back before clough tech stood for a school intent on training and developing the south in engineering capacity with a heavy focus on Georgia students. Now. Forget it. Try to get in. We think we are mit and we are not.
The gt landscape has totally morphed in the last 20 years. Clough spent a ton of time butt sniffing the elite academics; hence one reason he landed his role after tech and he pushed the mission of the school to game the us news rankings.
It was never like this its first 80 years of existence. Gt wasnt hard to stay in. Hard to get in too. But now its like impossible to get in. And judging from recent retention easier to stay in.
The school has changed. What made it cool for me was you knew it was so hard to stay in, that if u finished almost regardless of gpa you were worthy.
I cant speak for today. Maybe its still the same. But retention is way higher (us news baby. Gimme retention. Gimme endowment. Gimme research)
What's wrong with opening up borders to the world? We want to attract the best minds from all over and they're definitely not all located in the Southern US. Some of my favorite experiences were spending time with my international friends. I learned a lot about the world when I was often one of the only US born students in a group. People from India, Korea, Chad, Saudi Arabia, etc. All really fun students who were open to learning American customs. I went mostly to parties hosted by my Indian friends because those were more fun than the ones I went to at frats. In the classroom, international students were always really bright and very hard working considering if they failed out, they couldn't just drive back home to Marietta and cry on mom's couch. They had to do well.
I also think it's great we're raising the standard for entry. It's the only way to be competitive for those best minds, otherwise they're going to MIT, CalTech, Duke, etc. I see a lot of current high school students who still hold GT as a backup because our prestige isn't on that level. Yet. As for retention, I think the improvement in technology and on campus resources have allowed for GT to become easier to stay in. Being able to share various documents and textbooks and open chat rooms for study groups and questions has done a lot for making GT easier to stay in. But I wouldn't say the content is any easier. It's just easier to communicate those ideas. The only way it could return to the reputation it had when you thought it was cool is if they decided to remove all of the infrastructure they put in place to help students.