Just another idea I had from reading some of these posts. There seems to be a general tendency to value technically oriented degrees a great deal more than degrees that focus on humanities.
I started out as an electrical engineering student. I spent 3 years in engineering before switching to psychology, so I have a good amount of experience with the education involved in both fields. As an engineering student I used to laugh at liberal arts/psychology type students because I thought their education was pointless. I also felt that they didn't actually need to do work. Once I switched majors, I saw that this is not the case. While the work that engineers do is hard, the work that psychology students do is not easy. It's simply different, it requires a different set of skills and abilities.
Since graduating I've applied to some IT oriented positions. What is most striking is that these positions do not always want someone with a highly technical degree, such as engineering or programming. The reason is simply, engineers speak a different language. If any of you have ever worked on a car, or hell, with a difficult and confusing software application, you can see where the engineers lack a certain appreciation for human limitations. Psychology in particular can be a very useful field for translating geek speak into something us humans can understand
I disagree that a college degree in a non-technical field is pointless. Simply completing a college degree demonstrates to a company your ability to complete a long and arduous project. Every degree requires you to learn important communication, teamwork, time management, and critical thinking skills. These skills are all valuable in the job market. There are also many lessons learned in college outside of the classroom that improve your marketability to an employer, such as demonstrating an ability to work with a diverse group of individuals who come from vastly different backgrounds. Just because you do not end up in a field where you degree is "for" does not make it an economic waste. Such a view strikes me as an overly callous and cynical view of education.
My one question to you whipper would be, did you attend college yourself? I don't mean this as an elitist remark, but I think it may be relevant to the discussion.
I started out as an electrical engineering student. I spent 3 years in engineering before switching to psychology, so I have a good amount of experience with the education involved in both fields. As an engineering student I used to laugh at liberal arts/psychology type students because I thought their education was pointless. I also felt that they didn't actually need to do work. Once I switched majors, I saw that this is not the case. While the work that engineers do is hard, the work that psychology students do is not easy. It's simply different, it requires a different set of skills and abilities.
Since graduating I've applied to some IT oriented positions. What is most striking is that these positions do not always want someone with a highly technical degree, such as engineering or programming. The reason is simply, engineers speak a different language. If any of you have ever worked on a car, or hell, with a difficult and confusing software application, you can see where the engineers lack a certain appreciation for human limitations. Psychology in particular can be a very useful field for translating geek speak into something us humans can understand
I disagree that a college degree in a non-technical field is pointless. Simply completing a college degree demonstrates to a company your ability to complete a long and arduous project. Every degree requires you to learn important communication, teamwork, time management, and critical thinking skills. These skills are all valuable in the job market. There are also many lessons learned in college outside of the classroom that improve your marketability to an employer, such as demonstrating an ability to work with a diverse group of individuals who come from vastly different backgrounds. Just because you do not end up in a field where you degree is "for" does not make it an economic waste. Such a view strikes me as an overly callous and cynical view of education.
My one question to you whipper would be, did you attend college yourself? I don't mean this as an elitist remark, but I think it may be relevant to the discussion.