Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a phd in the humanities and am looking at applying for program coordination jobs and the like. I refuse to adjunct, need a regular schedule and benefits. There are so few positions outside academia that value that kind of training.
I'm not familiar with a PhD program that provides actual training. What's your doctorate in?
Jesus. People are so freaking literal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hiring ex assistants with master's degrees? When will this madness end?
Not making sense. What's your problem?
Is it that liberal arts types can't find jobs in their degreed field? What's a non STEM person to do to make a decent living?
Anonymous wrote:And I've seen some with masters who think just because they have one, they should be in charge WITHOUT any experience![]()
As with any degree, it doesn't guarantee a high paying job.
Anonymous wrote:My masters was worthless. I do well, but I'd do just as well with my bachelor's. My husband, OTOH, makes twice what I do with just a high school education. Software development.
Having a degree doesn't mean you actually know how to do anything. And frankly, some degrees will always be worthless. We need to stop telling ourselves that a masters in humanities is a good investment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Degree creep is hitting me as well.
All the new management jobs for my government agency require a masters degrees (it almost does not matter what type). Meanwhile most of my superiors do not have masters degrees.
So with 14 years experience, and years of consistent excellent performance reviews, I cannot even apply for a management position. Well I can apply, but my agency is communicating in its posting that if I do not have a masters, do not bother applying.
I have no problems with people waiving years of experience for MS degrees in terms of qualifications. But to completely shut out those who do not have one, for a job that is not specialized enough for it to be necessary, to me is pretty unfair.
So now, at 36 with a family of 3, a mortgage and other financial credentials that I have worked for (CFA, etc.), I need to stop my life and drop $150-200k for business school?
Really? My corporation pays big $$ to land CFAs. Depending on the position it is more valuable than an MBA. Maybe you should try private sector.
Anonymous wrote:Degree creep is hitting me as well.
All the new management jobs for my government agency require a masters degrees (it almost does not matter what type). Meanwhile most of my superiors do not have masters degrees.
So with 14 years experience, and years of consistent excellent performance reviews, I cannot even apply for a management position. Well I can apply, but my agency is communicating in its posting that if I do not have a masters, do not bother applying.
I have no problems with people waiving years of experience for MS degrees in terms of qualifications. But to completely shut out those who do not have one, for a job that is not specialized enough for it to be necessary, to me is pretty unfair.
So now, at 36 with a family of 3, a mortgage and other financial credentials that I have worked for (CFA, etc.), I need to stop my life and drop $150-200k for business school?
Anonymous wrote:Yep it just keep getting worst. The value of a master degree is really over valued.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in IT and don't see many people with masters degrees. It's not valued here. quite a few people with no degrees, but who have a natural technical or sales aptitude.
We definitely give zero fucks for PHDs and it might be seen as a deteiment.
Depends on where you work. I work in the IT dept and the World Bank. Just like the rest of the Bank degrees are important. We expect Admins to have bachelors (several have masters) and our analyst (entry level professionals) are strongly preferred to have masters degrees. I have been there over 15 years and some of my peers and I laugh b/c we know we'd never get our jobs today if we applied for them. Sad but true.
Anonymous wrote:In my federal office, most new admins have bachelors. You almost have to have one now. so sad, what a waste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in IT and don't see many people with masters degrees. It's not valued here. quite a few people with no degrees, but who have a natural technical or sales aptitude.
We definitely give zero fucks for PHDs and it might be seen as a deteiment.
Depends on where you work. I work in the IT dept and the World Bank. Just like the rest of the Bank degrees are important. We expect Admins to have bachelors (several have masters) and our analyst (entry level professionals) are strongly preferred to have masters degrees. I have been there over 15 years and some of my peers and I laugh b/c we know we'd never get our jobs today if we applied for them. Sad but true.