Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I saw posts recently that described a city as being “highly-educated” due to its hospital presence and I thought to myself, no. I don’t consider nurses, nurse practitioners or PAs to be highly educated. Hospital admins usually have degree mill MBAs. Now the doctors are obviously highly educated!
You know NP/PA school is an intense 3 years and then you have ongoing education as well. And they're competitive programs to get into. I have a Harvard MBA and consider myself "highly educated" an absolutely think my PA friends are at least as or more highly educated than me.
Yeah that person is a fool. PA school is quite difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I saw posts recently that described a city as being “highly-educated” due to its hospital presence and I thought to myself, no. I don’t consider nurses, nurse practitioners or PAs to be highly educated. Hospital admins usually have degree mill MBAs. Now the doctors are obviously highly educated!
You know NP/PA school is an intense 3 years and then you have ongoing education as well. And they're competitive programs to get into. I have a Harvard MBA and consider myself "highly educated" an absolutely think my PA friends are at least as or more highly educated than me.
Anonymous wrote:At least some graduate school.
Anonymous wrote:I have no idea what DCUM consider to be “highly educated” but, to me it implies someone who was raised exposed to books and a variety of reading material. Someone who knows history (not deeply like a scholar, but enough to know past facts and how they affect us and their implications). Someone who can read critically.
In essence, to me a formal high education (Master, PHD or even college) DOESN’t *means that person is highly educated. One could have only a high school diploma and work at 7-11, but if that person was raised by thoughtful parents and likes to read a variety of things from a variety of sources, that person can be considered highly educated.
Of course, a formal high education USUALLY (but not always) makes it easier to achieve that as to get there you MUST acquire knowledge and read, and, most importantly, you have the opportunity to discourse and argue ideas and different theories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I saw posts recently that described a city as being “highly-educated” due to its hospital presence and I thought to myself, no. I don’t consider nurses, nurse practitioners or PAs to be highly educated. Hospital admins usually have degree mill MBAs. Now the doctors are obviously highly educated!
You know NP/PA school is an intense 3 years and then you have ongoing education as well. And they're competitive programs to get into. I have a Harvard MBA and consider myself "highly educated" an absolutely think my PA friends are at least as or more highly educated than me.
Anonymous wrote:I saw posts recently that described a city as being “highly-educated” due to its hospital presence and I thought to myself, no. I don’t consider nurses, nurse practitioners or PAs to be highly educated. Hospital admins usually have degree mill MBAs. Now the doctors are obviously highly educated!