Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Graduate school from a school that’s at least somewhat competitive.
Sorry, not sorry. Your view is extremely elitist.
This whole thread is elitist! Ha
Someone on this thread said that a bachelor's degree in English from Harvard is highly educated lmao
HYP/Oxbridge provide a truly exceptional undergraduate education. Look at how many bestselling authors and high level journalists have nothing more than an undergraduate degree from these institutions. And why are they favored over MBA's from middling institutions when it comes to the most coveted Wall Street and City of London jobs if the MBA is more "highly educated"? I actually think there is a case for the BA to MA conversion at Oxbridge, their knowledge in the subject probably is good if not better as an MA from a middling institution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Graduate school from a school that’s at least somewhat competitive.
Sorry, not sorry. Your view is extremely elitist.
This whole thread is elitist! Ha
Someone on this thread said that a bachelor's degree in English from Harvard is highly educated lmao
HYP/Oxbridge provide a truly exceptional undergraduate education. Look at how many bestselling authors and high level journalists have nothing more than an undergraduate degree from these institutions. And why are they favored over MBA's from middling institutions when it comes to the most coveted Wall Street and City of London jobs if the MBA is more "highly educated"? I actually think there is a case for the BA to MA conversion at Oxbridge, their knowledge in the subject probably is good if not better as an MA from a middling institution.
and a top 10 school could chime in.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least some graduate school.
Disagree. I have a masters in education. Dcum would not consider me highly educated, and I don’t either.
Not all graduate school is equal. My program was a joke.
NP. Agree. Masters of Education doesn’t translate into “highly educated” (ironically!)
Anonymous wrote:PhD. JD and MD are professional degrees, kind of like vocational school.
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.
PA school yes. NP schools are online.
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!
Anonymous wrote:I hear people on DCUM describe themselves this way. Define which degrees this includes & format of degrees (I would think no online degrees?).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can tell me when the two WWs started and ended. In Europe that would mean most people are highly educated.
This is an incredibly low bar.
Anonymous wrote:If you can tell me when the two WWs started and ended. In Europe that would mean most people are highly educated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Graduate school from a school that’s at least somewhat competitive.
Sorry, not sorry. Your view is extremely elitist.
This whole thread is elitist! Ha
Someone on this thread said that a bachelor's degree in English from Harvard is highly educated lmao
It may rub some the wrong way but it's true. The average Harvard BA is more well-read, more informed than the average holder of a non-rigorous master's degree from an undistinguished program. There's been an explosion of master's degrees due to credential inflation.
Please show your work.
The number of master's degrees conferred has doubled since 2000.
https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d12/tables/dt12_310.asp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Graduate school from a school that’s at least somewhat competitive.
Sorry, not sorry. Your view is extremely elitist.
This whole thread is elitist! Ha
Someone on this thread said that a bachelor's degree in English from Harvard is highly educated lmao
It may rub some the wrong way but it's true. The average Harvard BA is more well-read, more informed than the average holder of a non-rigorous master's degree from an undistinguished program. There's been an explosion of master's degrees due to credential inflation.
Please show your work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Graduate school from a school that’s at least somewhat competitive.
Sorry, not sorry. Your view is extremely elitist.
This whole thread is elitist! Ha
Someone on this thread said that a bachelor's degree in English from Harvard is highly educated lmao
It may rub some the wrong way but it's true. The average Harvard BA is more well-read, more informed than the average holder of a non-rigorous master's degree from an undistinguished program. There's been an explosion of master's degrees due to credential inflation.