Yes you are right, university does not guarantee a job, which is why its best to do a degree specific to a career.
I graduated from Durham Uni in 2003 and have been working 3.5years in an nhs hospital as a Biomedical Scientist. The career specifically asks for a Biomedical sciences degree so it limits the amount of people applying for that career. Okay i dont earn alot, just over £20k but it is a nhs hospital, if you go private in Bupa etc you can get alot more.
If i didnt go to uni and do this degree there is no way i would have just taken out a £95k mortgage and bought my house so im glad i went to uni, its the best decision i ever made.
As anything if you want to get anywhere in life you have to work hard for it, i never got a penny of my parents from the age of 16 so ive had to be pretty determined to survive.
2007-11-23 09:10:26
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answer #1
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answered by MysticMaiden2000 3
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You are correct in thinking that a college/university degree does not guarantee a good job to anyone.
However, university is much more than just a hope for a better job (although that is a big part of it). A motivation to go to uni should be to improve yourself, to expand your perspective, to learn to think, and to gain culture and knowledge.
A degree doesn't guarantee a better life, but it sure improves your chances of achieving one.
2007-11-22 15:38:13
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answer #2
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answered by MD Student 2
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The fact that university is no guarantee of finding a good job is no reason to pooh pooh it altogether. It still increases your chances of finding a good job. But that also depends on what you study in college. Getting a history degree or a psychology degree, for example, aren't much better than having a high school diploma. But getting an electrical engineering degree or a degree in computer science or a nursing degree will increase your chances of getting a job quite a bit. There's no guarantees in any area of life. After all, a house could fall on you at any time, and you could die. We live our lives on probabilities, not certainties.
2007-11-22 12:43:03
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answer #3
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answered by Jonathan 7
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People who go to college to get a job have wasted their time and money. You go to college to get an education - all other benefits of that education are secondary.
Given the choice of being well educated or highly paid, I'd pick the education every time. Most others though would pick the high pay and therefor place no value on the education for the sake of education as its own measure of success. Without placing a value on that education, it isn't possible to gain maximum benefit from it.
2007-11-22 12:46:55
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answer #4
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answered by CoachT 7
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With the greater advantageous expenses of going to college countless companies are offering courses to human beings at 18 who could desire to bypass to college yet might somewhat start up incomes at present away and prepare on the job. The emails say that via the time your friends graduate you would be incomes as much as they could besides. i've got considered countless emails approximately this come into my college these days - in case you ask your head of sixth style she may well be waiting to indicate you contained in the perfect course. the sole organization call i will bear in strategies is cost Waterhouse Coopers.
2017-01-06 00:23:17
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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Some people go to University to better themselves and be educated. You cant expect to have a flood of job offers after graduation. You have to work your way to the top. Education is just something to help you get a job but doesnt entitle you to a job
2007-11-22 13:06:24
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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A college degree in and of itself won't guarantee you a job these days, though it certainly won't hurt. It also helps if you have relevant work experience (e.g. internships), are involved in activities, and have polished interviewing skills. Luck also plays a part, I'll admit.
2007-11-22 12:43:05
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I agree. I think college prepares you to work for an employer. Well, what if you'd rather be your own boss? Is a degree that important? Sure, learning is important for success, but there are others ways to learn material than sitting in a class room. Also, what's the deal with college forcing you to take certain classes. It is ridiculous that one can not graduate with a science degree without taking some history. I agree. I think college is a con for SOME people.
2007-11-22 12:42:31
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Just do what I did after high school, get a job and hope that you keep it (I didn't). I'm unemployed now but that has to change eventually.
2007-11-22 12:43:07
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Ask yourself if you learned anything? Well if you did then good. Now ask yourself did you have fun? If you did, it shouldnt matter. But if you didnt, you didnt learn alot now did you.
2007-11-22 12:41:47
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answer #10
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answered by S75 3
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