Opinion Let Go of Your STEM Superiority Complex

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The ever-present STEM versus Humanities and Liberal Arts debate makes for a less-than-memorable college experience for many. Although both STEM and non-STEM disciplines will prove essential in the workforce, STEM receives an exorbitant amount of funding.

The Biden-Harris administration recently dedicated a budget of $1.38 billion to STEM education in 2023. But considering that STEM made up only 23% of the United States labor force in 2019, disproportionate funding sends an inauspicious message about the perceived value of other occupations.

STEM has also historically excluded marginalized communities. The American Education Research Association observes that “STEM education and occupations were designed to attract White men who were heterosexual, able-bodied, Christian or atheist, and middle-class or above.”

A culture that values STEM above all other educational disciplines and occupations maintains institutional racism, perpetuates misogyny and devalues working-class labor.

Institutional Racism
Despite its reputation as objective, the roots of STEM lie in racism. Discriminatory standards and practices persist as we fight to dismantle the violent ideologies that remain printed in our textbooks. This isn’t to say that non-STEM fields aren’t racist — early philosophers like Aristotle famously supported slavery, saying the enslaved did “not have the intellectual capabilities to rule themselves.”

But these fields criticize and contradict the discriminatory beliefs of their figures. Fields like gender studies can recognize Betty Friedan for her impact on reproductive rights and “The Feminine Mystique,” while still criticizing her racism, homophobia and trans-exclusive radical feminism.

Art and writing serve as tools for racial equity as they praise those who challenge the status quo. Non-STEM fields aren’t given billions by the federal government or targeted for military use.

Holding STEM fields above others creates a culture of exclusion that keeps marginalized workers from accessing high-paying fields. The emphasis on academia and STEM creates a standard known as the Achievement Gap which creates, “an association between students of color and poor achievement, which may feed racist stereotypes about these students and their communities.”

The false implication that survival in STEM is based on intelligence ignores the impact of ethnic and racial discrimination in higher education. Weaponizing meritocracy against those who succeed in STEM, specifically the Model Minority Myth, not only harms the Asian American community but encourages discrimination towards other ethnic and racial minoritized groups. People of color, especially Black students in non-STEM fields, report lower degrees of discrimination, with Black women reporting higher levels of academic satisfaction.

When we place fields that maintain racism on a pedestal, we simultaneously allow the persistence of other forms of discrimination.

Perpetuating Misogyny
In 2019, females received around 62% of degrees awarded in Liberal Arts and Humanities. This data excludes trans experiences, but it establishes that women make up the majority of non-STEM majors.

When women do make it into STEM, they have to fight against misogyny. Still, women make up 34% of STEM occupations in the U.S. despite making up more than 46.7% of the workforce.. They remain undervalued in STEM.

By belittling the importance of non-STEM occupations, we belittle the significance of women’s education and labor. Labor isn’t limited to paid careers, with women carrying out more than two and a half times more unpaid domestic labor than men. The ambitions and labor of women are essential to the function of the U.S. economy and households. We harm ourselves by devaluing non-STEM fields and subsequently, devaluing women.

Devaluing Working-Class Labor
STEM occupations make up less than a fourth of the U.S. labor force while the jobs’ inflated values leave behind the working class. STEM fields provide some of the highest-paying jobs in the U.S. labor force. But working-class jobs, consisting of laborers without college degrees, barely make a living wage. Workers of color make up an increasing sector of the working class, specifically Black and Latine workers.

Devaluing working-class labor undermines the skills of workers and bars them from higher wages and better benefits. Working-class jobs don’t receive the same perks that STEM jobs do. While tech employees get free food and paid parental leave in addition to high salaries, working-class employees struggle against union-busting to access livable wages. And with the cost of college rising, it gets harder for the working class to get the education necessary to obtain STEM jobs and benefits.

My family and I have been working-class our entire lives, and this only recently changed. As someone with a STEM career, liberal arts connections and background in the working class myself, I’ve witnessed the effects of the STEM superiority complex of my tech peers. I urge everyone to recognize the worth of other fields. In order to make real progress, we must stop assuming the superiority of a discipline that actively contributes to systemic oppression.

 

Let Go of Your STEM Superiority Complex​

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STEM is responsible for the high standard of living in the West, Humanities is responsible for the lowest quality of art and culture since before antiquity.
I would say that the superiority complex is deserved.

To be fair though, STEM also has problems with reproducibility too, it is not immune from the rot at universities.
 
So does this mean that people can finally stop bitching about the lack of women in STEM?
 
A culture that values STEM above all other educational disciplines and occupations maintains institutional racism, perpetuates misogyny and devalues working-class labor.
I don't think I've ever heard a more retarded take in my life. I guess the author of this garbage wants us all to live in mud huts and die of easily cursble diseases.
 
STEM is responsible for the high standard of living in the West, Humanities is responsible for the lowest quality of art and culture since before antiquity.
I would say that the superiority complex is deserved.
That was my first thought as well. I'd be much more willing to support this idea if academia wasn't actively destroying art and beauty. I've even heard rumors that animators aren't being taught life drawing or anatomy anymore.

To be fair though, STEM also has problems with reproducibility too, it is not immune from the rot at universities.
Very very true. It seems like "STEM = computer programmers" to a lot of people and the guys up top just want more trained labor so we can drive down cost and compete with India.

Probably anything relating to academics at universities which honestly just perpetuates the cycle of rot and decay the higher education system is in.
Academia is a pyramid scheme.

I don't think I've ever heard a more retarded take in my life. I guess the author of this garbage wants us all to live in mud huts and die of easily cursble diseases.
"Let go of your STEM superiority."
"Oh, so you advocate for better recognition of trades and crafts?"
"What? No. I just want engineer pay for my philosophy degree."
 
I don't have a STEM background and I still kneel for my glorious STEM overlords. Maybe the reason you get paid less is you aren't as valuable author of this vomit.
 
STEM is responsible for the high standard of living in the West, Humanities is responsible for the lowest quality of art and culture since before antiquity.
I would say that the superiority complex is deserved.

Humanities has an undeserved reputation of being useful because prior to engineering and technology become subjects that were taught in college, humanities were the sort of subjects taught to the children of aristocrats so they'd have something to talk to each other about at parties so there was some notion in the heads of the common man that these subjects would make a person sophisticated or cultured in some way.

History is overrun with a lot of bullshit artists that do little more than apply their own opinions to the past as opposed to trying to uncover more of it, but it can at least be taught in a useful manner. Philosophy produced some useful ideas (logic, empiricism) that were essentially responsible for STEM, but most philosophers were idiots that didn't realize the value of those and tended to hide behind a lot of flowery language to give an appearance of wit, but most of it is barely above nonsensical religious dogma with no real or rational basis when you manage to figure out what the fuck they're talking about.

The humanities people like to think they're valuable, but I have less respect for them than anyone with a trade degree no matter how simple. An 8 week welding program is more useful than 8 years of humanities. Even the unskilled immigrant laborer who has little formal education is at least producing something of material value. The average humanities degree holder is just an intellectual arsonist who leaves the rest of society the bill for putting out their fires.
 
Philosophy produced some useful ideas (logic, empiricism) that were essentially responsible for STEM, but most philosophers were idiots that didn't realize the value of those and tended to hide behind a lot of flowery language to give an appearance of wit, but most of it is barely above nonsensical religious dogma with no real or rational basis when you manage to figure out what the fuck they're talking about.
well translations are to blame for alot of the BS. english is just not made for complex thinks...
 
Although both STEM and non-STEM disciplines will prove essential in the workforce, STEM receives an exorbitant amount of funding.
Lab equipment and super computers and shit like that isn't cheap. It's not like modern art, where you can just slap some computer pieces in a case and claim it's special and has value, it has to be able to function properly to have value, and it takes a lot of science and engineering to make it safe and functional. If GE paid some Indian laborers $5 an hour to make power supplies or whatever; every office in America would have burned down by now because of shoddy electrical engineering.

The American Education Research Association observes that “STEM education and occupations were designed to attract White men who were heterosexual, able-bodied, Christian or atheist, and middle-class or above.”
White people chase after the future; darkies chase after food and fat asses.

Despite its reputation as objective, the roots of STEM lie in racism. Discriminatory standards and practices persist as we fight to dismantle the violent ideologies that remain printed in our textbooks. This isn’t to say that non-STEM fields aren’t racist — early philosophers like Aristotle famously supported slavery, saying the enslaved did “not have the intellectual capabilities to rule themselves.”
As a fellow stemmy, she knows the reply to this is "prove it," to which she can't. So she has to focus on Aristotle and his words; which are partially right, as many of the slaves back then became slaves due to debts and bad decisions in their lives. Ergo, they couldn't be trusted to rule themselves, and back in those days, starvation was far more prevalent, so as horrible as it sounds, slavery was a way to be fed and kept warm.

The false implication that survival in STEM is based on intelligence ignores the impact of ethnic and racial discrimination in higher education. Weaponizing meritocracy against those who succeed in STEM, specifically the Model Minority Myth, not only harms the Asian American community but encourages discrimination towards other ethnic and racial minoritized groups. People of color, especially Black students in non-STEM fields, report lower degrees of discrimination, with Black women reporting higher levels of academic satisfaction.
Sounds like the darkies cry racism the moment something doesn't go their way; or other students notice someone isn't pulling their weight, so if/when it comes time to team up, they're picked last due to their lack of understanding. Unless you're gonna tell me all blacks are genetically dumber than whites, this isn't racism, it's natural selection.

Art and writing serve as tools for racial equity as they praise those who challenge the status quo.
And what do we have to show for it; a dude mumbling about how cool he is over a beat and how his dick brings all the girls to the yard, or vapid plastic hos talking about how hot their pussy and ass is for "music." And a bunch of retards smearing period blood on paper and drawings even my autistic ass could surpass in 4th grade for "art." Wow, what a fucking achievement.

Holding STEM fields above others creates a culture of exclusion that keeps marginalized workers from accessing high-paying fields.
All the darkies in Hollywood, the Music Industry, and Professional sports make more money in a year than any white lab-coat wearing PhD egg-head. The only difference between Hollywood/Music and the other two, is that Hollywood/Music requires you to be fake, the other two actually require work and effort.

By belittling the importance of non-STEM occupations, we belittle the significance of women’s education and labor. Labor isn’t limited to paid careers, with women carrying out more than two and a half times more unpaid domestic labor than men. The ambitions and labor of women are essential to the function of the U.S. economy and households. We harm ourselves by devaluing non-STEM fields and subsequently, devaluing women.
Every time I see this, I know the person writing it never had to pick up after themselves. Housework is something both sides do; the difference is guys are less bothered by sloppy conditions and are more likely to worry about things like shit actually breaking, where women are less likely to allow things to get messy. Everyone does housework, except people who write shit like this. Also housework is labor by name only, if you don't get paid for it, it's not a value to anyone, and you shouldn't be using it in your calculations, Miss "computer science" major.

While tech employees get free food and paid parental leave in addition to high salaries, working-class employees struggle against union-busting to access livable wages. And with the cost of college rising, it gets harder for the working class to get the education necessary to obtain STEM jobs and benefits.
This bitch has never worked a day in her fucking life to think everyone gets "free food" and parental leave. There are very few companies out there that offer "free" food, and parental leave is a worker right. I'd expect anyone whose spent a year or so in any sort of job field to fucking know this. As for the rising costs of college, don't worry, daddy government and the colleges have a number of financial opportunities to take advantage of. You like free shit, go get your bag sis.

My family and I have been working-class our entire lives, and this only recently changed. As someone with a STEM career, liberal arts connections and background in the working class myself, I’ve witnessed the effects of the STEM superiority complex of my tech peers. I urge everyone to recognize the worth of other fields. In order to make real progress, we must stop assuming the superiority of a discipline that actively contributes to systemic oppression.
You're lying again, your family (parents and older) may have been working-class, but you are not, you're a spoiled little ho... and you look exactly how I thought you would.
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Is this the reason why China boasts of having more young people in the country receiving STEM degrees on a yearly basis, while Americans are floundering in student debt taking majors that do not pay well?
 
STEM and non-STEM academic disciplines are equally contaminated by intersectionality, so this is more culture war kayfabe.
 
The article writer should tell me how "gender studies" can help the economy. Go ahead, I'll wait.
We need to pay those Diversity and Inclusion consultants six figure salaries to work with fortune 500 companies and government organizations? If the academics can keep on churning out the papers and keep the outrage lit, then the grift can continue indefinitely.

Despite its reputation as objective, the roots of STEM lie in racism. Discriminatory standards and practices persist as we fight to dismantle the violent ideologies that remain printed in our textbooks.
I had a linear algebra prof who used make casual conversations with students before the start of lectures and sometimes jokingly take the piss out of non-STEM programmes. He once talked about the irony of being made to attend some kind of cultural sensitivity training seminar for professors in STEM, where the materials and videos were produced by those in the humanities departments. He said something to the effect of: "We were lectured about the lack diversity in STEM. Ironic, because I challenge you to look into any classroom in this field and you will see young men and women from every corner of the world. Mathematics allows us to understand one another despite our differences in language and culture (except, hol up, that's racist because something something decolonize maths, 2+2=5). If you were to were to take a peek into an English class or a sociology class, you'll see that the makeup is very different: mostly White students."

STEM occupations make up less than a fourth of the U.S. labor force while the jobs’ inflated values leave behind the working class. STEM fields provide some of the highest-paying jobs in the U.S. labor force. But working-class jobs, consisting of laborers without college degrees, barely make a living wage.
If we are talking about high demand and salaries, then the author may want to shave off the S and maybe even the M. A BSc degree in Biochem won't on its own open the doors to a fat salary and cushy benefits upon graduation. Unless you are a masochist, who lives and breaths the subject and are aiming for an academic position after getting that PhD, I would not recommend going to uni for most S fields because they are only marginally more valuable in the eyes of the labour market than your standard BA.

EDIT: My shitty English. I guess that I should have gone for an English degree instead *sigh*
 
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