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Aside from making the degree holder a little more marketable, is it something people want to get because other people have them and it is another thing they can say they have, which could imply they are smart?

2007-01-17 16:05:44 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

8 answers

I couldn't imagine not having graduated from college. Maybe 30 years ago it was a big deal, but today it is practically the minimum education level expected. Don't blame the people who go to college for that. Blame the government's lack of standards for those graduating from high school. A high school degree doesn't mean much, if anything, today.

2007-01-17 16:26:35 · answer #1 · answered by MDHarp 4 · 1 1

I'm not sure of what you're asking so I will cover it from an couple of angles.
First, among other professions I have been a manager and have had to hire and fire people, these are some of the things to look at for a person with or without a "degree".

The person took the time and had the where-with-all to stick with it long enough to make it through college. This may demonstrate determination and a will to succeed. Good

The person now has a college degree and, if little experience in the work force, they will have to un-learn a ton of misconceptions about the workplace. If they can't un-learn or their boss never acquired the true idea of business then the environment will be much like that stupid show "The Office", where nobody does anything constructive. Bad

If the job requires some basic knowledge, say electrical engineering would require a BSEE just to get in the door. Good

If the job doesn't require basic knowledge I don't want some ladder climber, I just want somebody that will do his or her job. Bad

Get the idea. I have a BSEE, MBA, BAF, ASES, ASLO....you get the idea, I'm 54 and have been going to school all my life. I've been unemployed for 2 years mainly because I've managed so people won't hire me back into the ranks, I'm 54 (over the hill) and I don't speak Mexican well enough to be a manager anymore.

Learn how to sweep floors, change tires and say, "super size that ma'am" in Chinese. Forget college, you'll be better off.

2007-01-17 16:30:24 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Crossbred... seams an apt call thinking... a level in Astronomy isn't a fail. maximum of those on my route had no target of turning into an astronomer after the degree. the challenge is extraordinarily prized by employers for the reason others have highlighted. do not imagine for one 2d you'd be 'searching' by a telescope besides the undeniable fact that... There are literally not many roles in the sphere for study astronomers... upon getting the talents, there is no longer some thing preventing you from growing your own jobs. The marketplace is booming with the upward thrust in public activity etc, as with some thing, it takes an ingenious technique of become responsive to unique methods of capitalising on your education. I left college after interpreting a level in Observational Astronomy in 2013. i'm now self employed and performance the freedom to go back and bypass as I please, as for income, I do properly adequate to purchase issues maximum others cant... very last month I dealt with myself to improve one in all my handbook telescopes for £1500 , this month i purchased myself a clean 24mm f1.4L Canon lens, yet another £1200 (i ask your self if Crossbred spanks over a grand each month on stuff he needs at the same time with his income) one ingredient i'd say is that Astronomy takes dedication, dedication and the flexibility to 'study'...

2016-11-25 00:40:27 · answer #3 · answered by crossland 4 · 0 0

it doesn't make them a little more marketable, it makes them infinitely more marketable than someone who only has a high school diploma. 99% chance you won't get a meaningful job without a college degree. a college degree tells employers that the holder actually knows what they are doing in their field because they have had the proper training (if you were a boss and had two potential employees, would you choose the one who worked for 4+ years training for it so that you wouldn't have to spend years properly training them, or the high school graduate who has no training whatsoever in your field?) over their lifetime, college graduates earn about $800,000 to $1,000,000 MORE over their lifetime than someone with just a high school diploma.
yes, some people use it as an accessory, but its a good accessory to have. it will be unimaginably difficult to find a meaningful career that will take you somewhere without a college degree.
so if you think you're too smart for college, you aren't.

2007-01-17 16:19:25 · answer #4 · answered by bigwoodenhead 3 · 0 1

I guess...it's more proper to consider it another laurel and not just an accessory...because getting a college degree needs a lot of patience , perseverance, time, effort, finances, physical, intellectual, emotional, and whatever aspects in our lives. It's not something that can be purchased by just a wink in the eye...it's something hard-earned that we must be proud of...something that upgrade your social status inches higher than others...and it's something that will gear you up towards the fulfillment of your dreams in this material world. BUT...as the saying goes...there's always an exemption to every rule...for others who just take everything for granted...those who have silver spoon in their mouth...those who are degree holder but did not use their degrees to find and earn a living...those whose training stagnates because it's not being applied...and because they don't care to apply it...and just study for the sake of earning a degree...then maybe for them it's a luxurious accessory to brag with.

2007-01-17 16:32:01 · answer #5 · answered by dimma59 3 · 0 0

It doesn't just imply you are smart, it means you really are. If a person gets a degree then it means they learned more. Everyone HAS to get a high school degree but no one is required to get a college degree. So if you educate yourself it means you know more than you did before you started.

2007-01-17 16:10:27 · answer #6 · answered by Educated 7 · 0 1

Sure, I think some people get it just so they don't feel left out.

They may not rationalize it that way, but that could be the underlying reason, sure.

2007-01-17 16:47:09 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No - I believe people get them because they give a person a sense of great achievement.

good luck!!!

2007-01-17 16:11:30 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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