Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on what kind of degree they are getting (most humanities degrees are pointless unless from specific top schools) and what they want to do later in life. I know several people who didn't go to college and who are very successful. I know several people who went to college and are struggling to find steady employment in their field 5 years later.
I don't think it is neither foolish nor wise, I think there are a lot of questions that have to be answered first before judgment can be made.
I disagree and this is one of the most pathetic things I keep reading. Either knowledge for knowledge's sake is worth it or it isn't; the school shouldn't matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a college degree is necessary nowadays. Most graduate degrees, however, are a waste of money.
REally? I'd say college is like high school used to be, and in most highly paid or respected jobs, you need a grad degree.
Anonymous wrote:Going to college is not a waste of money, no.
Even if it doesn't lead to a more lucrative job (which I think it will), don't you want you daughter to be educated for the sake of being educated?
And yes, name can make a big difference.
Anonymous wrote:Major is HIGHLY important if you want to support yourself/find a job.
We have a glut of 'communications, sociology, political science, history, etc majors. You better be top in your school and have connections otherwise you are Barista.
Engineering, IT , nursing, chemistry, etc are employable. Education majors planning to teach at the elementary-HS should do fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on what kind of degree they are getting (most humanities degrees are pointless unless from specific top schools) and what they want to do later in life. I know several people who didn't go to college and who are very successful. I know several people who went to college and are struggling to find steady employment in their field 5 years later.
I don't think it is neither foolish nor wise, I think there are a lot of questions that have to be answered first before judgment can be made.
I disagree and this is one of the most pathetic things I keep reading. Either knowledge for knowledge's sake is worth it or it isn't; the school shouldn't matter.
Anonymous wrote:It depends on what kind of degree they are getting (most humanities degrees are pointless unless from specific top schools) and what they want to do later in life. I know several people who didn't go to college and who are very successful. I know several people who went to college and are struggling to find steady employment in their field 5 years later.
I don't think it is neither foolish nor wise, I think there are a lot of questions that have to be answered first before judgment can be made.
Anonymous wrote:It is no guarantee, and there will always be individual cases where someone's degree was a waste, huge debt load, etc. but statistically there is no greater predictor of increased income than having a degree. Most jobs that make 30K or more per year require a degree, and if they don't require one, they use a degree as a weeding out tool. 30K isn't much, but it is certainly more than minimum wage. When you look at lifetime earnings, the picture gets much more dramatic.
People always talk about what degrees are wastes, but even if you look at "useless" degrees like communications or liberal arts (as opposed to engineering), as an aggregate, college educated students are doing better than people without college educations in the economy.