Re: The Crisis of College Affordability
I started college as a chemistry major and switched to a double major in English literature and philosophy. I was young and idealistic and wanted passion in my life and loved the intellectual interplay of those fields.
Then I graduated from college and found that an English/philosophy degree is in practical terms worth almost nothing. I finally found a job selling photo portraits in a department store for a pitiful, barely five-figures salary. It was big move up in salary when I got a job as a Clerk, Grade 2 with the state, in the motor vehicle division.
I have come to believe that things like English literature and philosophy are properly to be considered as hobbies. These are fine things, part of rounding out one's life. But they are useless in real life terms for finding employment that pays a good wage. Yes, by all means, read literature and philosophy and history and study art and all the rest - but do it in the evening instead of watching television.
People who say "the liberal arts teach you to think, and this is very valuable"...well I'm here to say that is idealistic and not true. I got a liberal arts education and it really did nothing for me in terms of my economic life, which is pretty much the purpose of going to college.
Fine, if you're a rich kid and you're going to work in Dad's business, then I can see going off for four years of history, literature, and philosophy to polish you into a learned gentleman. But for the average middle class kid who needs to get a job after college, the whole liberal arts thing is a seductive, idealistic trap.
I went on to get masters degrees in journalism and business administration before finally finding my career niche in something that I trained myself in and had nothing to do with my bountiful education: software development. With better vocational guidance in high school, I think I might have figured out back then that I had an interest in and aptitude for engineering-type work. But that was never discussed in my high school. One simply went off to college...and chose whatever major caught one's fancy. What a waste of time and money.
Originally posted by Basil
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Then I graduated from college and found that an English/philosophy degree is in practical terms worth almost nothing. I finally found a job selling photo portraits in a department store for a pitiful, barely five-figures salary. It was big move up in salary when I got a job as a Clerk, Grade 2 with the state, in the motor vehicle division.
I have come to believe that things like English literature and philosophy are properly to be considered as hobbies. These are fine things, part of rounding out one's life. But they are useless in real life terms for finding employment that pays a good wage. Yes, by all means, read literature and philosophy and history and study art and all the rest - but do it in the evening instead of watching television.
People who say "the liberal arts teach you to think, and this is very valuable"...well I'm here to say that is idealistic and not true. I got a liberal arts education and it really did nothing for me in terms of my economic life, which is pretty much the purpose of going to college.
Fine, if you're a rich kid and you're going to work in Dad's business, then I can see going off for four years of history, literature, and philosophy to polish you into a learned gentleman. But for the average middle class kid who needs to get a job after college, the whole liberal arts thing is a seductive, idealistic trap.
I went on to get masters degrees in journalism and business administration before finally finding my career niche in something that I trained myself in and had nothing to do with my bountiful education: software development. With better vocational guidance in high school, I think I might have figured out back then that I had an interest in and aptitude for engineering-type work. But that was never discussed in my high school. One simply went off to college...and chose whatever major caught one's fancy. What a waste of time and money.
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