Master_Yoda77
Juggalo
Ozzman takes what I say way too seriously here. I mean, do most people get a degree in a subject that they absolutely, truly, fucking adore every second of the day? Like, what kind of sick, twisted fuck loves accounting?
I never said it was an easy class, by no means is it, especially for good universities. It can in fact provide worthwhile skill sets that employers will consider, I don't deny that either. My point is simply that it's not going to be the thing that gets you a good job if you don't have something else better and, or more pragmatic going for you. If you apply to IBM with a bachelor's in philosophy as your major, I hate to break it to you, but they ain't hiring you unless you want to be the janitor.
I thoroughly enjoyed the entire 3 years of my maths degree. Maybe I'm just weird, though. A lot of people on the course at the same time as me did seem to be doing it for the prospects of a good job, rather than for the love of the subject.
My friend once put it best when he said that he was interested in pursuing a graduate degree until he realized that he had to actually converse with graduate students.
Sounds like a conceited douche.
Although I have to admit, going to the pub with a bunch of guys whose conversational technique is basically an oral form of Einherjar's posting sounds like my idea of a nightmare.
Now imagine hanging out with multiple of them every fucking day for the rest of your life.
I also realized that my heart wasn't in it anymore to be competitive in my field. How could I expect to succeed when there were others out there who were far more interested and dedicated to the subject than I was? Sure, I could keep up, but ultimately I knew that I would never be anywhere close to the top student in my class, or even close to a recognized name in my area of research, no matter how niche my dissertation was.
Did anyone actually submit a song yet?
@Internally Deformed What do you plan on doing with your English degree anyway?
But higher education is for the sole purpose of employment. Otherwise, the education system is completely fucked.I also think it's incredibly limiting for the sole purpose of higher education to be preparation for employment. The benefits of humanities educations are less tangible on an individual scale, but I think a populace with a better understanding of its cultural and ideological context is far more likely to move in a positive direction than one in which people are educated primarily by the mass media. Many people highly educated in a specific, practical or science based field - in my experience - are astonishingly uneducated otherwise.
But higher education is for the sole purpose of employment. Otherwise, the education system is completely fucked.