• Flying Squid
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    9
    edit-2
    7 months ago

    It wasn’t a criticism, it was a description. Evergreen is basically what happens when hippies find a way to give people a good college education.

    I have a friend who went there.

    Edit: Wikipedia should elucidate:

    Evergreen is unique[46] in that undergraduate students select one 16-credit program for the entire quarter rather than multiple courses. Full-time programs will encompass a quarter’s worth of work in everything related to that program concentration, by up to three professors. There are no majors; students have the freedom to choose what program to enroll in each quarter for the entire duration of their undergraduate education, and are not required to follow a specific set of programs. Evergreen is on the “quarter” system, with programs lasting one, two, or three quarters. Three-quarter programs are generally September through June.

    At the end of the program, the professor writes a one-page report (“Evaluation”) about the student’s activity in the class rather than awarding a letter grade, and has an end-of-program evaluation conference with each student. The professor also determines how many credits should be awarded to the student, and students can lose credit.

    That honestly seems like a pretty decent way to do college and better than my alma mater of Indiana University.

    • FuglyDuck
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      English
      47 months ago

      It does sound like an amazing way to do college. it also sounds like the kind of college I could actually enjoy going to.

      • Flying Squid
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        47 months ago

        It sure worked out for my friend. She’s had a series of well-paying federal government jobs because of it.

        Also, Matt Groening went there, so that’s quite the endorsement.