ViviTheMage
Lifer
Not always. My uncle is a CTO of a major telecommunications company and never graduated.
Yeah, this was the norm 15-30 years ago ... not very common now a days if you ask me.
Not always. My uncle is a CTO of a major telecommunications company and never graduated.
He's also not just entering the job market. There's always exceptions the the rules or the normNot always. My uncle is a CTO of a major telecommunications company and never graduated.
Oh I forgot the pharmacist reads the warning label to the patient.That's what a tech does. But thanks for playing.
Not always. My uncle is a CTO of a major telecommunications company and never graduated.
Necessary? Yes. Useful? No.
It's all supply and demand and scarcity. 25 years ago, no one had college degrees, so if you went to college you really stood out in the crowd. Nowadays you are nothing special for just having a college degree. Which is really sad, because you can be passed over on a job application only because of a piece of paper. It has little to do with your skills BECAUSE of the degree. It has to do with no one ELSE having a degree.
The problem is that this country does not place any value on trade schools, apprenticeships, or craftsman. You can work for 10 years in say, a machine shop, learning how to use every machine, learning the best ways of doing things, learning how to manage multiple projects, learning the technology, but guess what? Your company is probably not going to let you rise through the ranks and give you a job as project manager or financial manager because you didn't go to 4 years of drinking school. Instead they'll hire some ivy league grad because of his "connections."
I learned absolutely nothing in college. Though I may still go and get my masters. It's just a way to make more money.
Fixed.
They are only necessary as a way to pass the HR filter. They aren't really that useful, other than that fact about passing the HR filter.
I learned absolutely nothing in college. Though I may still go and get my masters. It's just a way to make more money.
Oh I forgot the pharmacist reads the warning label to the patient.![]()
Do I think they're necessary to do most jobs? No. Do I think they're necessary to land most jobs? Yes.
Then you did it wrong. I've never learned more than during my 4 years in college. My "engineering position", by comparison, bores the shit out of me.
So it wasn't useful to you therefore it's not useful to anyone else?
I found my degree exceptionally useful. I'm doing another one because the first was so useful, when my boss hires someone he looks at if they have a degree in the subject if they do then he bumps their CV to the top of the pile. Useful.
"it's just a way to make more money"... And that's not useful?!
How did I do it wrong? By teaching myself everything that college would have taught before I got there? By paying attention in high school and taking honors/AP classes which for the school I went to was quite good and actually harder than most college classes that I've taken.
There just was not any new information taught in college that I didn't already know.
How did I do it wrong? By teaching myself everything that college would have taught before I got there? By paying attention in high school and taking honors/AP classes which for the school I went to was quite good and actually harder than most college classes that I've taken.
There just was not any new information taught in college that I didn't already know.
Beyond being a filter for HR and making more money, it isn't useful. MAYBE the masters will actually teach me something that I don't already know, but I'd be pretty surprised.
You believe that all the information in the contemporary college curriculum is contained within honors level high school classes and AP exams?
I would disagree, totally. I went to a "fairly good" high school, as well. My freshman courses blew the shit out of whatever APs were available. Many courses, even just at the sophomore level, I had not even heard of in high school.
There wasn't anything really new in college. Same old shit that I had done the previous four years. Waste of time, other than to get the stupid piece of paper.
Not learning anything doesn't mean it isn't useful, it proves to employers what you know. That piece of paper is useful.
There wasn't anything really new in college. Same old shit that I had done the previous four years. Waste of time, other than to get the stupid piece of paper.