Gylden_Drage said:
When I voiced these concerns in public spaces, I was met with strong resistance from Full Sail supporters, which felt unusually defensive and almost cult-like. Given these issues, I struggle to see the value of a degree from Full Sail if students who don’t meet the minimum standards are still passing. …. how much blueprint scripting should a student in month 17 of a 22 month bachelors program understand? (assuming it's game design and they use unreal engine for their class curriculum)
Like all schools, what you get out of education is almost entirely about what you put into it.
From my perspective with a couple decades industry experience, grad school, and have worked as adjunct university CS-department faculty, Full Sail is one of the better video-game specific schools, however, it is sub-par relative to traditional degrees.
I've worked with several fresh graduates from the school and while each had a decent enough understanding of game related topics, there was always a lack of broader topical knowledge that showed up as complete blind spots. I've worked closely with two who wanted to get into grad school in Computer Science only to learn the school has had difficulty with FS graduates and doesn't consider FS students fully qualified, they were required to take an additional entrance exam in addition to the regular GRE and CS GRE expressly covering topics like computer theory, compiler theory, signal processing, and math. Neither of the two I knew were able to pass, while FS covered game-specific stuff in depth, it simply didn't teach the theory background needed for more advanced studies. In both of those cases we talked in depth about the problems they struggled with, and they really didn't understand the theoretical side of computing, they were only taught enough for the “what can I use right now today”.
Which gets to your amended question: “How much blueprint scripting should a student in a bachelors program understand?” Realistically, in a CS degree, the answer is zero. It has nothing to do with the core science elements.
Full Sail is a trade school. While it is an accredited university, it is focused on the trade of video games, not the science of computer science.
Gylden_Drage said:
I can't help but think this school is largely a fraud if they are passing people arbitrarily.
It is a for-profit school, which always gains a lot of criticism. I tend to agree it is largely justified criticism, but there are families who are loaded with funds and are more than happy to further enrich other people in addition to paying for education. Generally for-profit universities are a bad fit for the 99%, but 1%'ers and anyone with an awful lot of throw-away money can do what they want. Generally the costs to attend are much higher than non-profit schools, and generally the education is more in depth elsewhere.
Gylden_Drage said:
I'm asking, how much blueprint scripting should a 17 month of 22 month bachelors game design program understand? If they are in fact just giving away degrees to people who have money, what does that say about those that do put in the work there? Why does everyone seem to get so defensive and triggered by this?
I don't feel threatened by it, instead I see the person asking doesn't understand what they're saying.
It is an uninformed question to ask. The supposition doesn't match. The two are only tangentially related, a successful graduate could have been taught nothing about them and still succeed, an unsuccessful graduate could have studied it in depth and failed, it is mostly irrelevant.
If you asked different questions specific to Unreal Engine then it would match.
Gylden_Drage said:
Perhaps I am looking for validation, because I can't be the only one that thinks this institution is a fraud.
From what I've read in your posts, yes, it seems to me you're looking for validation and behaving as a victim. Mostly “poor me” as opposed to looking forward and growing. No, you're not the only one who feels victimized by a for-profit school nor the only one who thinks they're a fraud. Lots of people who drop out of their programs feel the same way. Lots of people who can't afford the for-profit school feel it too.
As far as trade schools go, they are a relatively top performer, and graduates generally have the trade skills they need for the industry, and the ability to learn the pieces they don't. I don't think they are fraudulent, but I also think they historically have taken advantage of people's naiveté about the field and are overpriced for the services offered, but not to the level of fraud. They are straightforward about what they offer, what they don't, and the costs involved.