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Utah women lag behind nation in higher education
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You can thank our former RHINO governor Huntsman for appointing guys like Seederburg who come from outside the local culture and get their kicks off of stiring up the pot with usleless studies such os this. Give it a few more years and women will be in the majority in Utah also.
Like Joe Moe said the REAL story here is why men are failing to go to college.
As someone who works in higher education I always want more information about the student population I serve. It isn't just about the women who aren't going to school...a study like this will help shed some light on the issues that women deal with while attending. As a man I could benefit from some more perspective, and Susan Madsen is a respected scholar.
Not even the student with the most degrees coming out of Utah schools are really getting an education. This is very evident in many of the so called professional careers that have shocked me with the amount of knowledge they don't have. Even basic skills elude them, like being able to read, write, and do simple math.
How they get these degrees and diplomas is a real mystery, it must have something to do with getting tax money by the numbers from Utah tax payers. The more students enrolled, whether they get educated or not, means more tax dollars for the school.
Higher education is overwhelmed with students that don't belong there because they are incapable of learning and applying what higher eduction can offer. At one time you had to qualify to get in to college and a degree had meaning, now all it takes is education welfare.
Women don't seem to want much more than to be pregnant and married. Why would they need to go to college unless they can't find a man? Let's be honest. If they still encouraged them to marry at sixteen, we'd be having a high drop out rate in High School.
If we want to improve numbers, women need to be taught young to put off marriage until they are at least twenty. They also need to be taught about birth control and family planning. Without those three things, women will continue to be second class citizens.
I have read in other articles that more Utah's attend university than the nation as a whole.
So Utah is actually better off no matter how one looks at it. This article had to spin hard to make it appear differently.
University education is a big plus, I have a 4 year degree myself in electrical engineering, (yes I am male).
However the world needs people with a wide variety of skills. Plumbers, electricitians, mechanics etc are also needed in our society.
Lets not just focus on university education. People shouldn't feel pressured to attend any particular type of institution. The education one chooses does and should depend on ones interests.
This doesn't need to waste money for a study for.
I graduated from college - twice. Even so, I don't consider those without a college degree to be "uneducated."
Please be careful with your word choice.
Note to Prof. Madsen: When you live in a state dominated by one religion, and when leaders from said religion tell their women that the highest and most noble role of women is to stay home and sqeeze out babies, then you have to ask yourself: "Why go to school." Undoubtedly, I'm going to get a number of responses on this thread quoting from church leaders telling LDS women to get an education. But when you look at the culture from which these women emerge it is starkly anti-education: stay home, raise kids, and only get an education if it's convenient. That's the message LDS leaders send, and that's why we have a great imbalance between men and women in Utah universities.
I agree with Joe, why are there fewer men getting higher degrees?
I also think many are correct that we are close to the national average. The bigger question in Utah is with how many women obtain their degree/s and then choose to stay home. This is where we distance ourselves from the national average.
Another idea would be of the women who have degree/s, how many become involved in volunteer efforts or with their child's schools? For example, a someone with an accounting degree could help with the PTA finances, etc. This would be an interesting study.
It is sad to see some of these women in utah that are barely over 25 or so and already dragging 4 screaming kids through walmart while she is pregnant with another. I mean come on if you didnt have all those kids you would have the time and money to go to college and make something of yourself besides living off your husband who has to over work himself to support you and the kids because you just want to stay home, pop kids out and play the good little mom role and spend money that your husband earns.
I mean it wont kill you women to take some birth control then wait till after you have finished all your schooling to start popping kids out like a baby factory with no shut off switch.
A deep study like this will hopefully reveal a lot about all students in higher education. I have noticed that some of my students do demonstrably better once they get married, perhaps because they spend less time looking for Mr. Right.
I think the dominant culture does have something to do with the lack of female students, but I doubt it is the only reason.
How is this desire to know more seen as "leftist platitudes"?
Certainly the "culture" in Utah affects how many women get degrees, but I am here to testify that I have seen woman after woman CHOOSE to not get a degree,whether married or not, because they're afraid men will look at them in just the judgemental way you all have communicated. In fact, I (as someone working toward a PhD) have basically been treated like I CHOSE to stay single (which is a complete and utter lie) just because I actually had ambition! As a MARRIED friend of mine said recently "What is it in UT? Does being a woman give you a "get out of ambition free" card?"
Research for YEARS has shown that better educated woman produce MORE successful children and families. You want PEACE, educate a woman. You want successful marriages and families, educate a woman. Let alone the economic REALITY that MOST families can no longer be 1 breadwinner families!!! Pull your heads out of the "culture" Utah!!!!
What a self-righteous statement... and LDS members wonder why they get such a bad rap for being arrogant...
I agree with whatever. LDS women are taught to be selfless. Sometimes to a fault. They end up unsatisfied and uneducated for the greater good, but in fact this hurts children in the long run. Their mothers NEED to be educated. We need mothers who are happy to be stay at home moms. My mom never was. She sacrificed EVERYTHING for her husband and for her kids. And it was never fulfilling for her. Not that she complained, but we all knew she wanted to have a degree and travel and do some good outside the home. But she CHOSE to stay home. Now, with all her kids out of the house she has a degree and is doing things she's always wanted to do. But now she's lonely because she's got no kids depending on her... It's more complicated to be a woman than men think.
As for the education thing, I'm one who went part time while working full time for several years. Never borrowed a dime for it, but didn't finish either. Now I wish I had. Not because I'm divorced or widowed or my husband is lazy, but because we have gone through periods of unemployment due to stupid mismanagement at his companies, resulting in needing to lay people off. And in Utah, without a degree you can't get any kind of job worth having unless the economy is hot. I don't regret a bit staying home with our children - two have special needs and it was far better for them, but with no degree and no current experience, I can't make decent money.
"So we have parity here in Utah (49% is as close as you'll ever get). Why are we worried about this?
"The real study should be why only 43% of college attenders nation-wide are men."
******
The article doesn't indicate the percentages of Utahns currently attending college as compared to the national average, but, with the number of graduates in Utah being close to the national average, I would venture a guess that that number too is likely close to the national average. That would mean that Utah is bucking the national trend, which has seen the percentage of men attending college to be dropping precipitously in recent years. Lifting the number of men in college in Utah, reaching something close to parity, would appear to be, for the most part, a heartening trend.
I have two brothers-in law, both college educated with business degrees from BYU, and they cannot for the life of them find a job? But they have a college education don't they? Sure they do, but they don't have any skills. They are pretty smart and sharp but they have nothing of value to offer to a company. They didn't work at all during their four years of college (I worked all throughout my college, exercising my skills) They would both be far better off if they never went to college and spent that time learning a trade and working up experience.
College proves nothing more than you know how to jump through the hoops.
I've heard this attack on Bill Sederburg to the point of making me sick. I hate to generalize but the people of Utah county have to be the most narrow minded group of people in the USA. Sorry but not being a Mormon cheerleader does not make Sederburg an ANTI-Mormon. The man has a lot to offer and if you'd dry your eyes and listen to him you might actually improve your thinking.
The sad truth is that anything can happen. Our husbands may not always be there to care for us.
I'm not sure about the merits of spending this kind of money on a study that is going to most likely confirm what all of us already know, but hopefully it will bring some additional light to problems concerning child care/resources for mothers who are working or going to school. Due to the "mothers should stay home" mindset, these areas are lacking in our state.
Attacking women for making choices they want to make.
Making uniformed judgements regarding the LDS church and it's priorities.
Criticizing many good people because they've chosen
family over a certain form of education?
Shame on you all who come on here daily and criticize and attack just because it makes you feel good/smart/better/etc/etc.
Or if they appear to be poor, they must not have a degree.
Anyone care to guess how many college grads are out of work right now?
Just be careful how you look at people.
And just because someone has 3 or 4 kids, you can't even assume she's LDS, which really takes some of the fun out of your ignorant insults and generalizing.
p.s.
My grandmother thought that I was not very bright.
The article mentions that the data needs further study. I agree the raw data probably does not tell the whole story.
When you go in the job-force, there are so many policies that you can't even measure up to them all. So, if someone wants to fire you for any personal reason, they will come up with some policy that you broke.
I think getting an education is extremely easy (and you don't have to go to college to be educated), maintaining good relationships with co-workers is all about politics, in my opinion.
It's actually pretty admirable the level of education Utahns seems to garner, given the cultural norm to earlier marriages and starting of families. It would seem to indicate your state is doing quite well in terms of educational and family growth.
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"Nationwide, 57 percent of college students are women. Across Utah's public higher education system, that number is about 49 percent, according to the latest 2009 fall enrollment numbers."
So we have parity here in Utah (49% is as close as you'll ever get). Why are we worried about this?
The real study should be why only 43% of college attenders nation-wide are men.
Are men not at least as likely to need to support a family? Do men need education less than women? Where are the cries for equality?
THE REAL STUDY SHOULD BE: how and why are boys getting shortchanged in our "post-modern" educational system, to the point where they can't/won't go on to succeed in college.