College Degree?

Page 3 - Seeking answers? Join the AnandTech community: where nearly half-a-million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.

?

  • Have one / getting one

  • I do not have one


Results are only viewable after voting.

Fritzo

Lifer
Jan 3, 2001
41,920
2,161
126
Just to put things in perspective- I have a 4 year degree, and a colleage of mine recently went back to school to get a masters degree for a management position at our company. He's now salaried (gets no overtime), works 50+ hours a week, spent $25K on school, and makes a hair under $10K/year more than I do.

Good investment there ;)
 

spacejamz

Lifer
Mar 31, 2003
10,972
1,683
126
Graduated high school in 87 and entered corporate america...Started community college classes in 88. Got Associates in 2002. Got BA in 2005. Started MBA 2008 and should finish next year (Tuition reimbursement at work is capped at $5250/year and my MBA classes are $2K a pop).
 

Dirigible

Diamond Member
Apr 26, 2006
5,961
32
91
I dont need no stinkin' college degree! D:

While a lot of us have met dummies with and without degrees, which camp do you fall in?

Degree or no degree?



So you are a dummy without a degree, FelixDeKat? I've long suspected as much. :p



Also: Holy crap! People are making serious responses in a FDK thread. What's the world coming to?
 

KGB

Diamond Member
May 11, 2000
3,042
0
0
So you are a dummy without a degree, FelixDeKat? I've long suspected as much. :p



Also: Holy crap! People are making serious responses in a FDK thread. What's the world coming to?

At least he wears pants... :p
 

bas1c

Senior member
Nov 3, 2009
325
1
71
Multiple degrees.

Shows that one has the desire to push through adversity to accomplish something.

Or shows they know how to do just enough to get by. Not necessarily disagreeing with you, but I've seen no correlation between degrees and the performance of an employee.
 

Schadenfroh

Elite Member
Mar 8, 2003
38,416
4
0
BS in CS from an SACS / ABET Accredited state university, nothing fancy.
About 8 months from an MS in CS from a better state university, still nothing fancy.
 

Imp

Lifer
Feb 8, 2000
18,828
184
106
Efficient test taking is useful when you have 15 minutes to answer a 50 question reading comprehension portion of the SAT, but I've never had a test in college where I thought the testing style was limiting me. If I ever stayed until the end of a test period and submitted a test that wasn't entirely complete, it's because I didn't understand everything and tried to BS instead. Granted, I go to a mediocre school so maybe at MIT they test all of their students with really tricky 100-problem multiple-choice exams to ensure that they graduate only the perfect.

That's mostly true for every engineering exam I've ever taken. If time is a constraint, it's because you didn't know what to do and had to bullshit your way through. Engineering requires quite a bit of bullshitting though to get part marks if you don't study as hard as you should, so more time is usually appreciated.


Have a B.A.Sc., working towards an M.Eng. right now. I took the bachelor because my parents said I had to go to university, I'm taking my masters because I have too much free time. The masters is only $3k a year, so that's not too bad.

Considering an MBA in the future from a non-Ivy league school. I'm not looking for a quick and easy way to a corporate, high level job, and to be able to kiss ass with the best, so don't want to pay $50k for a program.
 

Ns1

No Lifer
Jun 17, 2001
55,420
1,600
126
I have one but I don't think it's a life requirement.

I think it's a good first choice but definitely not right for everyone.
 

highland145

Lifer
Oct 12, 2009
43,973
6,338
136
more workers than jobs means management/hr has the say
True today. But in years past when the employees could job hop for more $$, the degree was still the trump over none with proven experience. Stupid.

I'm opposite of that. CE degree isn't required to be a loan shark. Could have saved big $$ if I had a crystal ball. Oh well, *makes bed/lies down*
 
May 13, 2009
12,333
612
126
High school dropout with a GED. Good thing I kept a copy of
my GED cause I had to show my former parole officer proof I had one. :thumbsup: :coolstorybro:
 

jupiter57

Diamond Member
Nov 18, 2001
4,600
3
71
BS, but it has nothing to do with my current job.

In my experience, it usually doesn't matter.
I have seen far too many Agricultural Science, etc. degree holders with little or no experience hired for Tech jobs, Supervisory & Management positions, etc. over non degreed folks with 10-20 years experience in their fields!
And typically, 99% of these "paper holders" do not work out.

Oh, BTW: BS in Construction Technology here.