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I, by the way, do have a 4 year degree, so I'm speaking from experience. I had to take so many lame courses. And I wasn't really prepared for the field I went into. I've learned almost everything on the fly!
Online, or Bible college? What was your major? Taking 4 years to get an A.A. doesn't count.
College is for the experience as much or more than for getting a job. And great jobs can be obtained via hard work instead of study. My brother-in-law never went past high school but is super geeked by tech. His parents were broke and abusive. He now has a wonderful family and makes more than $250,000/year. But, he is the exception. I know plenty of people who have doctorates and make $80K and a few that make many times that. A lot has to do with priorities and ones willingness to work like a whore doing stuff they don't enjoy. One of my best friends hates his job as a very successful financial advisor but has kids and is happy to go through shit to support his family. He is hoping to have enough to retire by 55, but that's going to be difficult as long as he keeps living according to his means.The problem is though, the way society is set up now, you do need that "piece of paper". You could self-educate yourself in many of these things, and come out being much more skilled/knowledgable than someone who got the $80,000 piece of paper, but companies won't hire you unless you have experience. Kids should be getting their "general studies" done in HS. College should be about focusing on your skill and doing appreticeships.
I have all sorts of interests, geography, physics, history...and I can learn about them whenever I want to by buying a used text book for $15 bucks and watching documentaries or lectures posted online. If you want to learn about something it's easy to do, it doesn't need to be through a university.
If you want to learn about something it's easy to do, it doesn't need to be through a university
A degree is like a driver's license. You don't have to get one but if you have one, you'll compete in the job market against folks who can't drive and if that fails, you can put together a string of 24 week syllabus programs and shop around for a teaching position. Easier to teach when you're 50 than to frame houses.The problem is though, the way society is set up now, you do need that "piece of paper". You could self-educate yourself in many of these things, and come out being much more skilled/knowledgable than someone who got the $80,000 piece of paper, but companies won't hire you unless you have experience. Kids should be getting their "general studies" done in HS. College should be about focusing on your skill and doing appreticeships.
I have all sorts of interests, geography, physics, history...and I can learn about them whenever I want to by buying a used text book for $15 bucks and watching documentaries or lectures posted online. If you want to learn about something it's easy to do, it doesn't need to be through a university.
Easier to teach when you're 50 than to frame houses.
I'm going on 62 and still learn all the time. Proud holder of a library card. My parents grew up in the great depression.. Dad became a successful businessman and dairy farmer with an 8th grade education. He accumulated more knowledge in his life than I probably ever will. Whatever gives you joy in life, that's the path. I taught English to the president of a bank overseas for awhile and he hated his life...all he ever wanted to do was be a chef. Now he owns a restaurantI, by the way, do have a 4 year degree, so I'm speaking from experience. I had to take so many lame courses. And I wasn't really prepared for the field I went into. I've learned almost everything on the fly!
I love building stuff but at my age, sure have slowed down..my endless deck and porch project is taking years to complete but when it's all done, I did it all myself...legacy for children and theirs as well. When I retire in a few years completely I'd like to build instruments..bench work.They you go again! I always get this stuff backward! Before I was 50, I hired my houses framed. Didn't do my first one on my own until I was well over 50.
Geez! How long does it take to get it right?
I have two degrees
I love building stuff but at my age, sure have slowed down..my endless deck and porch project is taking years to complete but when it's all done, I did it all myself...legacy for children and theirs as well. When I retire in a few years completely I'd like to build instruments..bench work.
crackaz
You crackaz aren't allowed to comment anymore. :MARIS61:
The problem is though, the way society is set up now, you do need that "piece of paper". You could self-educate yourself in many of these things, and come out being much more skilled/knowledgable than someone who got the $80,000 piece of paper, but companies won't hire you unless you have experience. Kids should be getting their "general studies" done in HS. College should be about focusing on your skill and doing appreticeships.
I have all sorts of interests, geography, physics, history...and I can learn about them whenever I want to by buying a used text book for $15 bucks and watching documentaries or lectures posted online. If you want to learn about something it's easy to do, it doesn't need to be through a university.
It makes no sense sometimes. At one point i sent out about 40 resumes with almost no interest. Then left for a few weeks of vacation around Christmas. When I returned I sent out a dozen more resumes and got offered interviews for all the positions and ended up with multiple job offers. Same resume, same cover letter. Who knows if it was timing, random, or what.I have a MS in Computer Architecture from MIT. It was awarded to me at the end of a joint project we did in the 60s. Before anyone ever heard of a Computer Science degree.
As sort of a lark one day, I applied for a job here in Coos County that was listed as requiring a CS degree. They asked me with a cocked eye, do you have a Computer Science degree?
Well anyway they rejected mine, it was the only time I ever tried to use it, didn't get to show it (actually can't even find it). I secretly think they wanted someone younger.
A lot of my family are educators and I keep suggesting to them that we should have an apprenticeship/internship program for high schoolers today. That even if teenagers don't want to go to college (and let's face it, why would they) Get employers on board and get these kids some hard skills they can fall back on. Carpentry, welding, roofing, hell I don't know. And do it while they are still in high school. But my educator relatives say that there is no way the government or potential employers would EVER go for that. You know, my own lack of upward mobility doesn't bother me. Sh-t. At least my generation had some options. But I see my friends' kids and they've got no hope. They've been lied too and left hanging in a system that offers no real solutions for a future. That breaks my heart.It makes no sense sometimes. At one point i sent out about 40 resumes with almost no interest. Then left for a few weeks of vacation around Christmas. When I returned I sent out a dozen more resumes and got offered interviews for all the positions and ended up with multiple job offers. Same resume, same cover letter. Who knows if it was timing, random, or what.
As far as degrees go, up until recently all my jobs in the past decade required a minimum of my degree to get be hired. Now I'm back in school for a career where nobody gives a shit about degrees. I think i must be an idiot.
