Dear Dr. G

It's unfortunate because even as a math and marketing major in college (graduated in 15') none of this has applied to real life. Working in analytics in marketing, so I know first hand. Once you walk out the door of university they teach you what you need to learn/what to do.

As a graduate and now looking back, college is about learning how to interact with others. In this world all you need to know are the basics of math and you'll get by just fine.

Professors with superiority complexes are repulsive ESPECIALLY for a calc 100 level class of all things considered.

Tell me professor, where have you used calc in a day to day situation because I sure as hell haven't and I got A's in calc and helped people cheat to obtain a higher grade (close friends). Know where those people are, full time job workers in NYC. See, the thing here is that those people can work full time in accounting/financial positions.

College = what you need to do before entering the work force/learning who you are as a person. Do grades matter sure they do, but do grades help you with work once you finish college, absolutely not - it's power hungry professors who think their shit don't stink and fail students (both cheaters/non-cheaters). out of college who are the issue in today's education system. Blow 40K on uni, but fail out because of fucking Calc 100.. Are you kidding me...

With this I will say, that I don't know anyone who have any relationship to any RU students and saw this on RU Barstool about a guy who takes his job way to seriously and I wanted to let you know how the real world works from another working professional.

/r/rutgers Thread Parent