the Bachelor's Degreehttp://chronicle.com/temp/email2.php?id=wWwv6kBkcTbYktwbjrJkskjtdhknjqvf
4/30/2008 10:56:00 PM
hmmm my Bachelor's Degree is paying me back 3x my investment into it; in the 1st year,
4/30/2008 11:01:04 PM
well, if you wouldn't get a degree in history or English, then u might be able to get a job that actually pays something. but that's just my thoughts on the matter...
4/30/2008 11:04:24 PM
The average person with a college degree will earn over a million dollars more than one without one. I heard that on the radio the other day. Dont know if its true or not, but I can see it.Ive never understood why someone would go to Duke to then teach english in public schools. What a waste of cash.
4/30/2008 11:06:46 PM
4/30/2008 11:07:19 PM
You and I may be able to find common ground here. Let's see if we can.I--and many others--posit that not everyone can or should pursue a four-year degree. I mean, I've known plenty of people that have and others that could have benefited from vocational and technical education: electricians, E&I techs, HVAC techs, masons, plumbers, refrigeration techs, healthcare workers, welders, and so on.Businesses are skewing job placement by requiring BA/BS degrees of entry-level office assistants and the like. In some cases, these businesses are also offloading a significant portion of their OJT costs onto colleges and universities. I have even heard individuals with the HR departments at State and Carolina "bragging" that they had a person with a master's from Duke answering the phones. That's not desirable--that's a broken system! There are undoubtedly eager individuals out there that more closely match the education requirements for such positions--I mean, doesn't anyone realize that the Duke masters' holders began scanning the horizon for their next jobs as soon as the phone-answering jobs were accepted? Who in hell gets a master's to answer phones?In any event, in many cases these days, the bachelor's degree will not get you to where it once would. The master's is the new vehicle to reach that destination.[Edited on April 30, 2008 at 11:19 PM. Reason : .]
4/30/2008 11:12:51 PM
i am glad i got my degree, granted i am doing a job that didnt require one, it helps my pay and promotion prospects
4/30/2008 11:36:34 PM
obesity and dependence
4/30/2008 11:38:32 PM
America's Most Underrated Producteducation for education's sake
4/30/2008 11:39:30 PM
^
4/30/2008 11:47:25 PM
What the fuck does that have to do with anything?
4/30/2008 11:49:37 PM
I kinda wonder how people fail out of collegejust do the work, it's not that hard
5/1/2008 12:06:30 AM
5/1/2008 7:48:58 AM
5/1/2008 8:02:23 AM
^As if anything different is inadequate.But, yeah, I feel you.I also think it would be nice to relegitimize the work that doesn't involve a college degree. For the most part, those jobs are really, really important work, and if folks don't respect it and pay an honest dollar for it, it's not gonna get done, and if it does, it's not gonna get done right.
5/1/2008 8:43:34 AM
mine is paying itself off. at a decent pace. but's it's no cake walk.and i also don't feel like paying extra taxes next year b/c some democrat wants to bail out these people that make dumb decisions either.
5/1/2008 8:51:21 AM
5/1/2008 9:07:19 AM
This is why I pushed my sister towards engineering and not some bullshit degree in dance, math, english, history, etc....
5/1/2008 9:17:30 AM
if the high school system was worth a damn, and kids actually left HS with a working knowledge of the world it wouldnt be a big deal
5/1/2008 9:47:39 AM
5/1/2008 10:02:28 AM
5/1/2008 10:02:39 AM
i think half the people here are missing the point. the idea here is that colleges are admitting lots of students when they know that a LARGE chunk of them have no business being in college in the first place. they just want their money.
5/1/2008 10:14:58 AM
welcome to the free market.I disagree though with respect to its worthlessness.. At least for me, the leap between my critical thinking skills in high school and my critical thinking skills in college college were remarkable and I, for one, am all for a better informed populace in a republic. I'd like to think that that is a common occurrence across the board, but TSB has proved me wrong time and again on that statement. ]
5/1/2008 10:20:01 AM
^^ and why shouldn't they?yeh good one. let's start denying poor people the right to an education b/c we "think" the colleges are out for profit herding.[Edited on May 1, 2008 at 10:20 AM. Reason : .]
5/1/2008 10:20:06 AM
i'm not saying i know a solution and i see the problems with making standards tougher. maybe the criteria for entrance should just be rethought.
5/1/2008 10:25:53 AM
^ Yes, it should be much more difficult to be accepted into college. This is one way to help make the four-year degree mean something again.
5/1/2008 11:48:36 AM
I disagree. It already is VERY difficult to get into a good school. It is ultra-competitive coming from high school right now. Society always benefits from having its people educated.Your 4-year degree means something...you just have to figure better and different ways to set yourself apart.[Edited on May 1, 2008 at 12:21 PM. Reason : .]
5/1/2008 12:20:58 PM
not all four year degrees mean something.its really not that hard to get into college, at all. you can make all b's in regular or college prep courses or you could take an honors class in high school and be likely to get that same B, yet look like a student that cares more about learning and also have a higher GPA due to the weighting. just like anything else in life, its a game. some play, and some don't. but as a general rule its not that hard to get into college in the united states. our four year colleges are the caribbean med schools of the world.
5/1/2008 12:37:43 PM
5/1/2008 1:02:28 PM
^^^ I hope you aren't lecturing me on the value of and how to use my degree. I was referring to the general perception of the degradation of the four-year degree.And I stand by my position--no matter how difficult it is to get into college now. It should be even more difficult.
5/1/2008 1:19:56 PM
dont be defensive. I am not lecturing anyone but your position that we should have less people getting higher education in our country is counterproductive to the common good of all.
5/1/2008 1:22:33 PM
5/1/2008 1:29:02 PM
5/1/2008 1:29:11 PM
5/1/2008 1:52:12 PM
5/1/2008 2:12:41 PM
5/1/2008 3:02:50 PM
5/1/2008 3:23:26 PM
^^I agree.What exactly is the point of getting a 2.0 at UNCG or ECU or wherever? It benefits no one but the school that took the money. To their credit, don't a lot of schools do give you the boot after multiple semesters of 1.0-2.0 grades?[Edited on May 1, 2008 at 3:24 PM. Reason : ^^]
5/1/2008 3:23:49 PM
it benefits that person who got the knowledge and the degree (if they graduated). there are plenty of programs of acedemia in those schools that are challenging. that person with the 2.0 from ECU who graduated is MUCH better off with that degree than if they had not. I argue society is better as well, because that person has a much better shot at making a reasonable income to support themself, as well being more educated and contributing to society in non-qualifiable ways.
5/1/2008 3:26:55 PM
I disagree with that.If you get a 2.0 from one of those schools, you clearly didn't bother to learn much of anything. When you factor in the opportunity costs of going to college and learning squat, it's not beneficial at all.
5/1/2008 3:31:58 PM
are you kidding? are you trying to argue that a person with no degree would get a better job and make more money than a person with a 2.0 GPA who graduated? GTFO of here. that makes no sense. you can always get jobs below your education. you can almost never get jobs above it.now, if you go and dont finish, then yes, it is a huge waste of time and money.[Edited on May 1, 2008 at 3:35 PM. Reason : . ]
5/1/2008 3:34:03 PM
5/1/2008 3:35:21 PM
college degree > no college degreeto do anything. how do you argue against that? your exact line of study often means very little to the career you enter. I have a comm degree and I am a PM for a large commercial construction company. I certainly would not be where I am without it.
5/1/2008 3:37:49 PM
5/1/2008 3:40:30 PM
5/1/2008 3:44:00 PM
Are the type of students who earn a 2.0 at ECU going to ever reach that ceiling?
5/1/2008 3:45:16 PM
just because at age 21 you screw around and drink too much beer in college does not mean your work ethic is screwed the rest of your life. people mature. additionally, once you are 25+, no employer gives a shit about your college GPA. they just want to know if you have a degree.
5/1/2008 3:50:57 PM
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5/1/2008 6:11:09 PM
5/1/2008 10:27:38 PM