http://chronicle.com/article/Graduate-School-in-the-Huma/44846
1/6/2010 9:07:06 AM
http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=553730
1/6/2010 9:11:40 AM
Yeah, now I remember that thread. I think my opinion on the subject has changed substantially since I've gotten out of school and started working.
1/6/2010 9:18:47 AM
1/6/2010 10:28:00 AM
Damn, finally made a typo. My TWW career is finished.
1/6/2010 11:28:18 AM
IF YOU'D GONE TO GRADUATE SCHOOL IN THE HUMANITIES, YOU WOULD HAVE CAUGHT THAT EGREGIOUS MISTAKE.Grad school: +2 to forum posting.
1/6/2010 11:33:55 AM
does everything need to "make Financial Sense" or "prepare you for your career" before you do it? You sound like a monkey being trained to carry out menial tasks in a lonely cubicle for the next 30+ years of your lifeEveryone should go to Grad school and the government should pay for it all by taxing only the rich. GRAD SCHOOL RULES!!!
1/6/2010 11:47:55 AM
^If you are in grad school, you must be new to it.
1/6/2010 11:52:27 AM
1/6/2010 11:55:39 AM
Buying a case of beer doesnt make financial senseYou dont get any real nutrients or vitamins from it, depending on how you consume it, it will likely shorten your lifeWhy does anyone buy beer?B/c they enjoy it.Im not really arguing against most of what has been said in the OP, some people do go to Grad School for all the wrong reasons (b/c its safe, etc), but saying its a bad idea b/c you arent in the work force is wrong. Im mostly railing on the idea that one NEEDS to go directly to undergrad, get a career with said degree ASAP, and begin building your wealth or lack of it.finances are such a drag
1/6/2010 12:16:17 PM
The purpose of beer, to me, is to get drunk. A 24 pack of cheap beer costs around 10-15 dollars. The purpose of graduate school should be to prepare for a career. The cost of graduate school is somewhere around 2.5k to 25k a semester. Of course, most students can't pay this, so they get a loan, meaning the tuition is actually even more expensive. At least the 24 pack of beer serves its purpose. Grad school, a lot of the time, does not, but you're paying a whole lot more.I'm not suggesting that everyone go directly from undergraduate to a career. I'm saying people should only go to grad school if it's going to help them do what they want to do. It should be an investment that's going to pay off later on. It shouldn't just be "college #2 because I'm scared of the real world." You should not go to grad school "because you enjoy it." When you say finances are a drag, what you mean is "having to worry about making money and providing for your own survival" is a drag. You're right, but it has always been that way. This idea has been instilled in people that everyone has a right to go to college and screw around, have fun, and not really worry about the financial ramifications. That's an incredibly shortsighted view, and the people that graduate with thousands of dollars in loans but no career prospects are going be exposed to that harsh reality.[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 12:35 PM. Reason : ]
1/6/2010 12:31:02 PM
1/6/2010 12:32:17 PM
Elizabeth Kostova, MFA, University of Michigan, and best-selling author of The Historian disagrees, I'm sure. And, yeah, why would the world need anyone to earn advanced degrees in history, literature, the fine arts, and philosophy?[/sarcasm]
1/6/2010 12:37:37 PM
1/6/2010 12:41:22 PM
^but you mostly drink shitty beer, so your opinion doesn't count.
1/6/2010 12:42:51 PM
It makes sense to have some of those people. Let's just look at UNC, though. How many philosophy/english/history majors are they pumping out per year? Do you think we really need all those? There are tons of colleges in this country that are primarily liberal arts colleges, and we've got all these people moving into the job market. There isn't a place for these people, because they don't offer anything other than knowledge thatThe argument here is not that we don't need humanities majors at all or that humanities are worthless. It's that people are thinking it's going to lead to a great career, and except for a select few, it's not going to.[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 12:43 PM. Reason : ^^^]
1/6/2010 12:42:57 PM
^ How many advanced degree holders in any discipline do we "need"?
1/6/2010 1:06:42 PM
Why do you ask these questions? We need more people being trained to actually do jobs, build things, design things, or work in professions. We don't need tens of thousands of people graduating every year that understand the dynamics of Ancient Egyption life. It's just not practical. There isn't enough demand for that knowledge. There's plenty of demand for health professionals, engineers, IT professionals.
1/6/2010 2:27:32 PM
1/6/2010 2:37:58 PM
^^ If you had studied more in your humanities courses, you'd probably recognize the blatant paradox in your statement. It's like saying, "The small town atmosphere here is so great that everyone wants to live here," or, "All Cretans are liars. I am from Crete."Who do health professionals care for and who do engineers engineer for and who do IT professionals provide their services for? Only others in their respective fields? NO! They ply their trades primarily for everyone else! And those in the fields of history, literature, the fine arts, and philosophy don't provide anything of value to society? Really?!And please answer my question:
1/6/2010 2:44:30 PM
1/6/2010 2:56:00 PM
This article seems to be aimed at people who are trying to become academics and professors and whatnot. Not just people aspiring to those careers, but people aspiring to those careers and thinking they will automatically be well paid, respected, exciting, secure, even glamorous...people who don't realize that those elbow patches are actually functional.And anybody endeavoring a PhD for those reasons is obviously delusional.[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 3:07 PM. Reason : ]
1/6/2010 3:06:24 PM
^^ I'll give you a bit more time to find the paradox. I don't give people definitions, either--I hand them a dictionary.So, you always believe in a market-driven approach to "demand"? Really? [Edited on January 6, 2010 at 3:08 PM. Reason : ^ LOL--"elbow patches"! An essential part of the academic uniform! ]
1/6/2010 3:07:03 PM
Yeah, I don't see it, and I doubt you do either. Otherwise you would have just pointed it out.Of course I believe in a market-driven approach. Any other approach is unacceptable. Do you think there isn't a market for labor? That the cost of labor (i.e. the wage level) isn't determined by supply and demand?[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 3:47 PM. Reason : ]
1/6/2010 3:36:44 PM
^ *Sigh* If everyone or most people or even significantly more people were to become health professionals, engineers, and IT professionals--as you seem to be suggesting--there wouldn't be nearly as much demand for them. And my other points stand.And here are just a few succesful people who undoubtedly disagree with your premise:
1/6/2010 4:11:01 PM
1/6/2010 4:26:37 PM
1/6/2010 4:37:36 PM
^^ So, college is simply job training? If that's the case, why do we even need degrees--advanced or otherwise? We could just tack on a couple of extra years of high school vocational training and let employers directly "certify" each person in his or her job in the various disciplines, right?In the past, employees learned their jobs, well, on the job. It's good to know that you're totally cool with employers off-loading their job-training expenses onto colleges.^
1/6/2010 4:39:30 PM
1/6/2010 4:45:07 PM
^^^^ I agree with his argument.[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 4:47 PM. Reason : k]
1/6/2010 4:47:09 PM
1/6/2010 4:52:32 PM
1/6/2010 5:01:09 PM
1/6/2010 5:02:52 PM
^^^While that would be the ideal... it's an ideal, and thus relies on certain conditions that simply aren't true.It can't happen because people enjoy fooling themselves. Most kids just out of HS and going to a college are going to say "fuck no, I'm better than that" when offered the tedious desk job... even if they end up going to that same job after getting out of school with a largely meaningless or unspecialized degree. These same people are staying in grad school because they still think they're better than that boring desk/cube job (and to be fair, many of them are... but someone has to do the work), and hope that a grad school degree will let them escape that group of jobs that simply as for a 4-year unspecialized humanities degree.We send people to college before they really know what they want to do with their lives or even have a realistic sense of what is available to them. It's no surprise that people get stuck in dead-ends after four years and then decide to continue school hoping that it'll unlock more opportunities.For your system to be applied in our world, you'd need some sort of overseers to analyze a person's capabilities and place them into a learning/career path to that end. Whoever runs the system would quite literally be telling people what they will do for the rest of their lives... and at that point, you're resembling communist China.[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 5:08 PM. Reason : .]
1/6/2010 5:08:00 PM
1/6/2010 5:10:41 PM
i agree with the main idea of this thread. i was once considering graduate school in the area of political science only to realize i was just hoping to prolong becoming a part of the "real world". more recently i considered getting a master's in education, mostly because "everyone else is doing it." once i found out how much $$ private therapists are able to make i've definitely reconsidered that and i'm half-heartedly looking into occupational/behavioral/physical therapy programs now.
1/6/2010 5:39:56 PM
I think people should always pursue advanced degrees when they genuinely have passion for the subject. If that subject is in the humanities, more power to them. If they are pursuing the degree simply because they are lost in regards to their life direction, that isn't always the wisest financial decision to make, and yet a lot of people are oblivious to that. The question is not whether or not it is better to have more degrees than less, that is a red herring. Instead, IMO the question should be in regards to the timing and motive of the decision to get a Masters or PhD. In other words... not if, but when, and what?[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 6:57 PM. Reason : -]
1/6/2010 6:56:06 PM
I still like to think of college as a place for privileged, middle/upper-class children to better themselves as people (and show their employers that they are conditioned to work tirelessly at menial tasks). My outlook on life has changed even from the few humanities I was required to take. Graduate school in the ECE dept. seems to be necessary for people who want to go onto R&D side of things, nowadays.
1/6/2010 8:50:26 PM
Since philosophy has gotten a bad wrap in this thread so far & it was my undergraduate degree, I'll just add that I know a number of law students who got there start in philosophy. NCSU offers a philosophy degree with a law concentration.After undergrad I worked full time for 3 years, and now I'm back at NCSU getting a Masters in Public Administration (gov & non-profit type work). I don't expect to get a dream job right out of grad school, but I think the public sector is doing well enough that I will have a job in my field within the same year that I graduate. And that is with my undergrad & grad school experiences both happening within the humanities. But if all else fails, I'm confident I can always get my old job back at the vet clinic.My husband on the other hand is studying Classics (ancient greek & latin languages), and between scholarships, teaching a few classes, and the like his graduate education isn't costing him anything, and its given him the chance to travel all over Europe, especially around Rome, all over the US for conferences (he's in California for the week right now where the temp is mid 70's & sunny all week), & may be spending next summer in Greece.I guess all this is to say that, while college educations are about more than vocational job training, if you're smart about it you can get jobs studying what you love. Do your research first obviously, but don't not pursue your passion because an online article is down on the humanities and said your field of study isn't sciencey enough.[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 9:14 PM. Reason : .]
1/6/2010 9:12:36 PM
I'm a bit confused on what the main argument this individual is making. Going to graduate school for humanities is bad, because it places a debt on somebody who is unlikely to find a job to pay off the debt? I don't buy that argument. I do agree with the other point of "considering post doctoral life". However, I don't believe that argument is limited to humanities.
1/6/2010 9:47:28 PM
1/6/2010 10:16:09 PM
1/6/2010 11:25:38 PM
1/7/2010 12:40:05 AM
Shannon Vickery, MA (emphasis in Health Policy), Duke University Host and director of productions, UNC-TV
1/7/2010 7:13:32 AM