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Tom Metcalf's avatar

One thing that struck me about your earlier data post on faculty hiring was that there were roughly twice as many physics faculty, total, at Ph.D. granting institutions than at Bachelor's institutions. Because the system where a tenured professor creates 10 new Ph.D.s is OK if 9 of them go on to get jobs like, well, yours. (Or mine, for that matter.) Although really not so much the prestigious SLACs, but the large Directional States, because isn't that the most common type of institution for undergrads, as in don't-forget-most-people-don't-go-to-SLACs.

It's also interesting to see your suggestion that the job:new PhD ratio is such that we need to train fewer Ph.Ds alongside the recent articles in Science, and elsewhere, about how important the diversification of physics is. If successful, isn't there a risk of these efforts turning into a large bait-and-switch?

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Razib Khan's avatar

obv the university in some form will continue. but the post ww2 system is probably not sustainable as it depended on certain demographics, and its roots are from an earlier period when less than 5% of the population got a college degree

eg we need more technical universities since marketability/skills is really a big deal, and the community college system needs to be emphasized probably more than the R2 system imo. the bottom

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