The Useless College Degree

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My B.A.'s usefulness was limited to getting me over the minimum requirements for getting into a graduate program. My M.S. has definitely been worth actual money in the bank. And I got the company to pay for it. I've been an incredibly fortunate son of a bitch.

El Tomboto, Saturday, 13 August 2016 22:18 (seven years ago) link

Not as fortunate as someone born in europe tbf

poor fiddy-less albion (darraghmac), Saturday, 13 August 2016 22:38 (seven years ago) link

them's fightin words

El Tomboto, Saturday, 13 August 2016 22:43 (seven years ago) link

thats a more localised birthright tbh

poor fiddy-less albion (darraghmac), Saturday, 13 August 2016 23:08 (seven years ago) link

Srsly tho

Didnt get into first choice (law) by a matter of a few points, took a year off for family reasons, did a business degree at the local technical institite to enable me to stay in town, got me into the public sector and took me 8 years to get back to get an IT degree. Cant imagine having managed any of it under a debt system.

poor fiddy-less albion (darraghmac), Saturday, 13 August 2016 23:11 (seven years ago) link

i went to college for free and was paid to work thru grad school (per usual in the states), with a bit of loan debt to make the latter more doable. i don't know what i would have chosen to do if i were paying for college, probably gotten a computer science degree. : /

j., Saturday, 13 August 2016 23:41 (seven years ago) link

xp my memories are not as bad as that makes them sound. but those years do seem kind of arbitrary in hindsight.. i think it wasn't the right time for me to be pursuing higher education. i guess everyone is different but at 18-22 i was quite young and had very little grasp of the world

Treeship, Sunday, 14 August 2016 00:55 (seven years ago) link

i believe in the gap year. and also in pursuing humanistic learning throughout one's life rather than as an undergraduate focus.

Treeship, Sunday, 14 August 2016 00:56 (seven years ago) link

in denmark i remember going to a party at this weird residential school that was like, in between high school and undergrad. at one point all this amazing food appeared but i didn't see any kitchen facilities or staff. they seemed to have dance parties every night at this place.

Treeship, Sunday, 14 August 2016 01:02 (seven years ago) link

looked it up -- it was called a Folkehøjskole. i'm probably explaining it wrong, but i remember they didn't have grades and it was in the middle of the woods basically, deep in the copenhagen suburbs

Treeship, Sunday, 14 August 2016 01:05 (seven years ago) link

or the suburbs of cph rather

Treeship, Sunday, 14 August 2016 01:05 (seven years ago) link

pursuing humanistic learning throughout one's life rather than as an undergraduate focus.

― Treeship

iirc u either get a degree or u gain credit by sharing the correct blogs on message boards

poor fiddy-less albion (darraghmac), Sunday, 14 August 2016 01:14 (seven years ago) link

not blogs, anecdotes

Treeship, Sunday, 14 August 2016 01:23 (seven years ago) link

With 50 year working lives approaching soon, it wont be an issue of either/or (life-learning vs undergrad).

An undergraduate degree, or masters, in your early 20s isn't going to last 40 to 45 years, so you can get to have at least one more go at it, if not two. You might need to choose which student debts you want to pass on to your heirs.

Half-baked profundities. Self-referential smirkiness (Bob Six), Sunday, 14 August 2016 09:26 (seven years ago) link

two weeks pass...

"at George Mason University"

stopped reading there

droit au butt (Euler), Friday, 2 September 2016 14:48 (seven years ago) link

But seriously you should look at GMU's list of the world-changing titans who studied English! I mean, Howard Cosell, Tom Clancy, Emma Watson, Clarence Thomas, AND Mark Knopfler!

Who would not wish to be among such company as they begin their career journey. I mean, the list even includes a former EPA head and numerous prominent librarians.

some people call me Maurice Chevalier (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 2 September 2016 15:39 (seven years ago) link


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