Originally posted by: Descartes
Originally posted by: Fritzo
Originally posted by: Descartes
Originally posted by: Fritzo
Originally posted by: Staples
I met some people yesterday. We were at some restaurant. If you met me in person, I'd appear no different than any other smart professional person. Anyway, the conversation came to the topic of, what is your degree in? I told them I don't have one. I stopped going to college after a few years. Now the tone has change and I am somehow lesser and even dumber than them because they have degrees and I don't.
Some guy told me he worked with people who have never gone to college and that you can tell who went and who did because there was a big gap in the intellegence and work ethics. I told him that idiots are idiots, it isn't because they skipped college. They just are not interested in learning anything and that is why they are dumb. He still believed that college is the only way to get "smart" and if you have not gone, then you must be a dumb ass.
People that get degrees have a certain work method that is generally sought after and is difficult to learn. In a way, your friend is right, but you can't blanket statement everyone like that because everyone is different.
Huh? Can you elaborate on this "work method" please?
For instance, in college you learn how to approach a problem correctly, how to organize, and if you're in a skilled field how to perform the task in the standard way.
IMO, that's entirely false.
1) There is never any single way to approach a problem. By suggesting this you're supporting the suggestion from others that college limits creativity. College isn't about creating a bunch of problem-solving automaton.
2) There aren't many fields that have tasks you can perform in a "standard way." Industry is often far, far different from academia, and most of what you learn isn't directly practical. What you should have learned is a foundation of principles and basic understanding that you can use as a platform for creativity.
If you do not have this experience under your belt, you'll go about these tasks in your own random ways that most likely won't be compatible with the way everyone else is working. Some people invent ways of doing things that are superior, but these are few and far between.
I'm assuming you're either still in high school or still in college, yes? You sound heavily coached, and you again seem to espouse this notion of working drones as though they simply apply a script to their daily working lives that was regurgitated by one of their professors. Even manufacturing environments are more high-novelty than you seem to be suggesting.
In addition, you're supporting some of the opinions in this thread that academia limits creativity. Your "Some people invent ways of doing things that are superior" suggests that the only option is to think in the box, but that level of thinking won't get you very far.
Be a little more creative and apply principles, not rules.