Do you think we are reaching a point, or will reach it very soon, where a college education is essentially worthless. By worthless I mean expected, like a High School diploma. Where so many people entering the job market, even for jobs that may not be professional, have a college education. And therefore if you dont have a degree you are screwed becasue so many other people do...or if you do have a degree it isnt really a big deal. degree inflation lets call it. And if this is or becomes the case then a masters degree will become basically what a college degree once was. before we know it, people will be spending up to 26 to 30 years in school getting graduate degrees before they enter the work force.
10/27/2005 9:27:35 PM
"Reaching"? More like already there.
10/27/2005 9:29:23 PM
It's okay, there will always be a need for somebody to make the french fries at McDonalds. jk, obviously
10/27/2005 9:29:51 PM
thats what im saying, but im talking about even jobs that are not professional. even vocational jobs.
10/27/2005 9:31:17 PM
no. according to the census bureau (for what that's worth), there were only 27% of people over age 25 with a bachelor's degree (as of 2004).http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/GRTTable?_bm=y&-_box_head_nbr=R1402&-ds_name=ACS_2004_EST_G00_&-format=US-30&-CONTEXT=grtand since baby boomers are starting to retire, a large chunk of the highly trained workforce (specifically engineers and the like) will need to be replaced. and a bachelor's degree is quite enough to do that for the foreseeable future, i think.add:but i do forsee that many more people who probably would be better off learning to be plumbers, etc, are going to get degrees and expect more.[Edited on October 27, 2005 at 9:35 PM. Reason : ]
10/27/2005 9:33:46 PM
Probably will end up with more discriminating private schools in the future, less discriminating public schools, and it'll end up that whether you went to a private/public university means the difference between having gotten an average education and having gotten an education that means something to an employer.
10/27/2005 9:37:08 PM
wow only 27% that is lower than i thought. i think eventually it will reach that point. and when i say that i mean for jobs that today might not require a degree but eventually even the applicants who apply have them.
10/27/2005 9:38:02 PM
this is why i'm applying to several PhD programs right now
10/27/2005 9:39:44 PM
i want a masters eventaully, but i just got out and im enjoying it.
10/27/2005 9:42:18 PM
<--- hopes to return to grad school next fall
10/27/2005 10:30:32 PM
There will always be trades that don't require a college degree and pay well, electrician, Plubmer, AC Work, General Handyman Carpentry, Painting. These are all trades you can work today and make a comfertable living. I personally think if anything will happen, the High School years will turn more like college years, in that they will become more specialized. no more of this "first year college" stuff, Students will already be on a career path by the time they reach college. Plus there is also a point where the time and money invested in an education don't account for the extra money. This is just a my two cents, and personal thoughts.
10/27/2005 11:50:46 PM
[Edited on October 27, 2005 at 11:51 PM. Reason : .]
10/27/2005 11:51:21 PM
Yes, of course.
10/28/2005 12:23:33 AM
we're well on our way. A degree is not what it used to be. More and more colleges pop up all the time making it easier to get into school. Because the selection process is less rigorous we end up with more graduates who haven't preformed at the same level as previous graduates. Then you factor in that if someones parents have some degree of higher education it's that much more likely they will. So you get more and more people attending college every year, whose kids will in turn attend college most likely. It used to be that a degree itself was enough to get you a job. Enough people have degrees now that a degree itself isn't enough and that will continue to become more and more true.The baby boomers thing. This has been said numerous times, but you have to realize that with medicine, technology, and a more health conscience society people are living longer. So they want/can work longer and in most cases have to work longer to make ends meet. People who were supposed to start retiring a few years ago have not. I'll see if I can find sources for this on the internet, but I've seen it from several sources. And it just makes sense.As far as trades go, it's absolutely true you can make good money being an electrician, plumber or etc., but young people don't want those jobs because of work conditions and reputation. I think we'll see more people with degrees "settling" for those jobs even though they'll be making decent money eventually. (Depending on where they live.)As of right now I think kids just go to college because it's the next thing to do after highschool and they believe it will help them get a job. Almost all of my friends I came into State with have changed their major atleast once. Very few 18 year olds really know what they want to do for the rest of their lives. Some think they do, but most do not. So you get people who aren't really here to learn, they are here because this is where they think they should be. The "C's get degrees" philosphy comes into play more and more because they don't really care if they learn anything or retain the info. as long as they have a degree. Personally I think to help with the problem of degrees losing value maybe we should force kids to take some time off between highschool and college. Then maybe make and enforce some strict minimum gpa requirements especially with in their specific concentration. I don't want to hire people that have less than a B avg. in their main area of study. Basically weed out the people that don't really want to be there to learn.I wouldn't want the government coming in and making schools do that, but I think more schools should hold their students to higher standards.[Edited on October 28, 2005 at 9:22 AM. Reason : ,]also you'll get more people not finding good/perm. jobs until they're older. I believe this is already true in some european countries. Time magazine had an article (I think last spring) about how kids in the US are going to live with their parents after graduation. That this is becoming more of a trend (due to not being able to find work) and that the age to which they stay is getting longer.[Edited on October 28, 2005 at 9:28 AM. Reason : .]
10/28/2005 9:18:56 AM
i think being a service industry nations leads to a lot of jobs that really dont require that education either. i mean how many ppl graduating with computer science have to start off in tech support or web design/maintenance crap?
10/28/2005 9:44:18 AM
damn you, page stretching URLsthis thread is a pain in the ass to read
10/28/2005 10:04:22 AM
10/28/2005 10:27:34 AM
10/28/2005 11:09:04 AM
I am willing to bet that just as you only needed a few years of school a few generations ago, then only needed high school, then only needed a bachelors, that soon you'll need a masters, etc etc. I don't know what can really keep that from happening.
10/28/2005 11:11:43 AM
^^ i've had it happen to me, but not always. nto sure why
10/28/2005 11:12:50 AM
10/28/2005 11:20:22 AM
College degrees will always be great for the people that are pursing a certain career. Almost all degrees have will benefit you if you plan to work in that field. The biggest problem IMO comes from people with no career goals that choose to be a COM or English major for lack of anything better to do. If you want to pursue a career that requires a degree in English then go for it. If not, why would you choose to be an English major?
10/28/2005 11:37:50 AM
Getting a PhD, and do this type of mental gymnastics daily.I'd love to see more emphasis put on community college programs for many kids getting out of school. I went into college directly from high school and that was a big mistake I believe. Sure there was all the social stuff that I wouldn't trade for anything, but I do have to consider my first two years somewhat of a waste. YMMV.From a pure cost/benefit analysis I'm an idiot to have gone this far. I like what I'm doing and will probably stay in academics for a long time, but can easily see doing something completely out of my field in 5 years as well. Again, YMMV.Do you need to go to college? Yes, if your want to work for someone else, but in many (most) cases it's just as a gatekeeper mechanism to see if you can complete a long term goal. The uber-specialization of many programs has gotten way beyond what a liberal arts degree was 50 years ago. Sometimes I wonder if we shouldn't just go to a model whereby we have more technical schools and programs in addition to the traditional 4 year degrees.
10/28/2005 11:40:01 AM
This thread started with the worst reasoning ever and ended with posts so long i wont even bother to read them.
10/28/2005 11:42:44 AM
I met a 20 year old exterminator who made 75k a year. Made almost twice what I did, and I have a Masters.
10/28/2005 11:52:33 AM
I don't know about this degree inflation. I think that a lot of the trade jobs will probably prefer individuals who have come out of vocational and technical schools versus holding a four year degree.I don't see the degree inflation as being so severe though. While a lot of jobs will probably require masters degrees to advance beyond a certain level, I think the bulk of these degrees will be earned part time as professional degrees and not as a straight through college type of deal, paid for by employers. Most larger companies are actually pretty good about funding further education for their technical and management-tracked employees.
10/28/2005 12:05:31 PM
i think its just certain fields that this occurs in. the "goto" degrees i described earlier are 1 section and the technical but very booming/broad categories like computer science are another.
10/28/2005 12:15:12 PM
^^, it may not be so bad now, but it will only get worse. In the sense that the degree itself will not be enough. Grades will be more of a factor and experience.For the trade jobs i just don't think that's true. If I need to hire an electrician, am i gonna hire the electrician with no degree or the electrician with a degree. If both are equally qualified electricians then I'm taking the guy with the degree. It will make the company look better. My dad installs phone systems, nobody when he started at his position had a degree. All the new guys do. Plumbers don't need a degree, the reason a plumber will have a degree is because graduates are gonna go "damn i can't find a decent job with my degree and I NEED money. If i learn plumbing, hvac, etc. I can make good money". because so many people have degrees, it's more likely that there will be better canidates than you. They will choose not to use their degree. I work side by side with a few guys that are in their 30's only my boss works in a field related to his degree. The others are doing something completely different.
10/28/2005 1:06:22 PM
Check out cnn.com America's negative numbers video clip.
10/29/2005 6:59:24 AM
^ you just putting that out there for general interest or are you trying to make some kind of point?here's a link to the video for anyone else interestedhttp://cosmos.bcst.yahoo.com/up/free;_ylt=Anh01g06RtQIaGiXZRG9.G2z174F;_ylu=X3oDMTA5dXJmZWdsBHNlYwN2aWRlbw--?ch=49799&cl=146231','playerWindow','width=793,height=608,scrollbars=no'sorry it's stretching the page.This thread is talking about today's america vs. america.. say 30 years ago. Not %of minorities or %of whites, nor is it discussing US vs. other countries. That statistic just shows that it's an issue all over the world, not just in the US. The other education related statistics just show that we suck compared to other countries. And if most of that clip was really news to anyone they are just uninformed individuals. The only thing I didn't really expect was the 50% of blacks and hispanics not finishing highschool. But that statistic is a little misleading (statistics can be easily manipulated). I would put a good sum of money down saying that a majority of that 50% is coming from blacks and hispanics living in poverty. And yes i know many more blacks and hispanics live in poverty than whites, and in some istances that's a problem and in others it isn't, but it's irrelavent. The point is that blacks and hispanics that are econimically equal to the avg. white are probably only a little less likely to finish highschool than whites if at all.When you observe broad ass statements, especially statistics, you gotta step back and ask yourself what's really influencing that statistic. Consider all the factors involved, not just one as simple as skin color.If you were just putting it out there for interest, I thought it was somewhat interesting. Like I said there was quite a bit of stuff i had already known. However, it still sucked as journalism. All it did was point out a bunch of problems, it didn't provide the public with any insight as to what was causing these problems nor possible solutions. So now dumbasses will just go around regurgitating statistics without any real information regarding the issues.[Edited on October 29, 2005 at 1:31 PM. Reason : link]
10/29/2005 1:29:26 PM
just general info. and yes I run into people all of the time quoting some statistic when they can't even tell me where it came from. Satistics can be manipulated, skewed, biased or simple made up and dished out to the public to see what happens.
10/29/2005 1:35:40 PM
10/29/2005 1:47:14 PM
^ he's right, unless enough people get masters degrees that those people become "a dime a dozen" then it will be "why hire someone with a bach. when i can get someone with a masters willing to work for the same price". As for right now though the good news is that even though it may be easier to get into college and graduate than it once was, it's still difficult to get into grad. school.
10/29/2005 3:27:55 PM
well, i'm just glad I have a job after I graduate. I feel bad for the rest of you guys that don't have one lined up.
10/29/2005 3:53:56 PM