Kolek planning to go pro
You heard I posted about something and came running, got it. sweeeeeeeeeatyyyyyyyy
I find it funny that we have a multi-page discussion of who earned the title doctor. For the record, I never insist on anyone referring to me as Dr., and almost never use the title for any purpose, even professional purposes. Frankly, the only place the title should be used is at a medical workplace where the title differentiates staff and roles in medicine.For me as a PhD, in any professional environment, I'm already well known by everyone, so the title serves no benefit, my name is a better indicator of my accomplishments. When young people in my field see my name, they immediately know what I've done, there is no need for a title of authority.But just because I find this area fascinating I'll chime in a bit.Love the "real doctors" reference. The origin of the word doctor is from latin, it means to teach. It was originally used to refer to the eminent scholars of a field, who were well suited to teach. It later was used to refer to teachers at Universities. The first formal doctorate degrees were actually in divinity, so neither PhD's or MDs can claim the original "real doctor" title.Physicians, or medical professionals, thinking an MD is a "real doctor" are narcissists with superiority complexes. A good MD, like a good PhD don't care about titles.There is an exception. Typically women MD's and PhD's are more likely to insist on the title, that is often because, despite being in charge they are often dismissed by peers and outside individuals as "assistants" or "nurses" or somehow not their peers' equivalent, simply because they are a woman. That is not narcissism...it is demanding equal respect.When you suddenly attack a woman for insisting on the use of the title they earned, it is a very bad look.You'd be wrong though. The completion rate for humanities PhD's is around 50%. The completion rate of medical school is 96%. That means 96% of the people who enroll in medical school get their degree, by far the highest rate of completion amongst all Doctorate granting degrees. The difference between the person at the top of the medical class, and bottom of the class is massive...but they all earned the title doctor. Same for every PhD or EdD, not all dissertations are equal, but all have earned the title of doctor. A lay person having an issue with someone using the title they earned reeks of an inferiority complex.
Yes. A lot of them as a matter of fact. His handling of nursing homes was an abject failure and he should be held accountable for that. His being championed as a covid leader was a disgrace and a lesson no one will heed
Thank you for your comments. But I'd be interested to know the specifics of completion of phd rates per humanities in all disciplines. Is the 50% those who enter PhD programs and don't finish for whatever reason or are all grad students pursuing Master's including in this number because some choose to continue? There also could be financial reasons as to why some don't complete their PHD. Lastly, I would not group the humanities with a broad brush. Some fields are far more challenging imao. Getting a PHD in Classics for example doesn't sound like a walk in the park. No one disputes a Classics prof is a scholar among many other disciplines. Education profs?? I'm curious what the honest take is there and I'm not attacking anyone.
The 50% is those who apply and enroll as PhD students, who fail to complete their degree in 8-years. Often they fail to complete it, simply because researching, writing, and defending a dissertation is immensely hard. For the humanities, the highest completion rates are in Theatre and performance studies (55.6%), and the lowest in Languages, Societies, and Cuutres (33.3%)...at least for one study. https://www.amacad.org/humanities-indicators/higher-education/attrition-humanities-doctorate-programsNow there are two Doctorate level degrees in education, a PhD in education, and an EdD, the former is for those interested in staying in academia, the latter is a professional degree just like medicine, law, dentistry, etc. It is designed essentially for those who want to stay in educational leadership. Beyond that, it is not for me to judge the relative merits of each. Fact of the matter is we need educators, and education, and the PhD in education and EdD train these individuals at the highest level. I'll let their own respective communities police the merits of those granting the degrees, and respect those who have completed the requirements.
Is Cuomo responsible for any COVID deaths in NYC.
Sorry, I read the board and responded. That's kinda how it works.And the kids don't say "sweaty" anymore, but nice try on being hip.
Would you agree that there are certain humanities degrees that are more scholarly than anything studied in Education classes? Like say you are Phil PHD with an expertise in Nietzsche? Am I being an ass by saying these people are more scholarly? I can't understand his stuff at all.
Of course.And like DeSantis, Cuomo tried to cover up the way he mishandled COVID-19 in his state. And actually worse than DeSantis, he tried to pass himself off as the Great Covid Mastermind.But again, DeSantis and Abbott have blood on their hands for actively, aggressively trying (and succeeding) to undermine COVID-19 vaccination efforts and mask-wearing.
How about we just call people who complete doctorate programs, Doctors. Like the rest of society. We can argue the merits, but if we haven't completed the requisites MAYBE we should sit this one out.
That's fine but I think we should exclude Jill Biden.
I've never understood this obsession state to state about how the Governors are handling COVID. There have been times when Blue states have done better statistically and vice versa. Both before and after vaccinations. But if you look at the 10 most populated states right now the numbers per capita are not drastically different.Also, there have been Weatern European countries that have been far more rigid than the USA, especially with mask mandates, and they have gotten resurgences and pretty heavy numbers. We're dealing with a virus that's endemic and unlike say Taiwan and Singapore we responded much later and were unprepared. Maybe it's me but Democrat Gov's, competing with Republican Gov's, over death rates and hospitalizations, seems incredibly divisive and stupid.
How about we just call people who complete doctorate programs, Doctors.
I have a JD. You can refer to me as Dr. if you wish. Or not.
Jill Biden has the same degree as Bill Cosby. Both of them have referred to themselves as "Dr.", even though the degree was not directly related to their current profession. If you are going to call one of them "Doctor", you should refer to the other one by the same.FTR, I think that anyone who insists on being called Doctor in non-professional situations is a pompous ass. That includes MDs and Dentists.
I think people who get bent out of shape over what titles people want to use are annoying.
I don't get bent out of shape. I just roll my eyes when it happens.
Coming from a self proclaimed Sultan I’m not particularly surprised.
outdated response, now he's a self proclaimed Fluffy Blue Monster.
I've heard he isn't even fluffy or blue and is simply claiming untrue titles.