For me, working while getting a degree provided the greatest learning. Granted it took longer but for those of us that didn’t have sufficient funds for school it was a necessity. Work experience can be a great teacher, particularly if you are working in your desired degree field. Then once you earn your degree the total experience can perhaps be helpful in joining a top company with maybe an attractive salary.
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Jack Peterson DI Forum Luminary Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Air Force
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Ok, So here we are in the Philippines, we are talking about Silliman University, Yes? Reading the posts and seeing both sides of the to and Fro ( to a degree) we should/maybe could, look at it this way, to me anyway, One Job on offer and 1 of the the Requirements is this, a Degree in something. So 2 lads go forward, 1 with a degree and 1 without. Who gets an interview? We could go around in circles But......... we know where we are.
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RichD DI Forum Adept Veteran Air Force
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Things like opportunity, timing, etc are very tough to quantify. How much of success is made and how much is luck.
In the end, it's all about preparing for life and education is just one piece of that. Another piece is experience as you call out. The numbers say having both is the best path to success. It's hard to argue that an education hurts you and I've shown a good ROI. It's much easier to argue that not having one does. Statistically speaking the numbers show that a degree clearly has value.
In the end, I think we just have different perspectives because we look at life through different glasses. What's right for most people isn't necessarily right for everyone.
In many circumstances, a degree begets experience, so it's not really one versus the other, but the best way to get the experience. If I want to work for General Motors as an engineer it's going to be a lot easier with a degree. I could also start my own company and do some really cool stuff which also might get me there, but my money is on the degree.- Agree x 2
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You mentioned that half of those who start college do not graduate. When I had my engineering orientation, the speaker made the classic statement, “look at the person on your left and on your right. Only one if you will graduate”. For engineers, only 1/3 make it all the way.
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Rule #1. The exceptions do not invalidate the rule.
Rule #2. There will always be exceptions, but they are statistically a minority.
When you plan, you don't plan to get rich by winning the lottery, as those odds are very long. Education is one of the surest ways to a better salary and that is a fact.
https://www.bls.gov/opub/ted/2017/h...-weekly-earnings-of-718-in-second-quarter.htm
There is a good analysis here of the various options that is balanced in my opinion.
https://www.moneycrashers.com/college-degree-worth-it/
As with any investment, larger investments typically take longer to pay off, but once they are paid off you are in a better place over time.
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education with the need to get rich. We all know it isn’t true. Personally I am happy for the education that I have; anybody can take away your money but they cannot take away your knowledge and your joy of learning and knowing. I made sure to pay for my kids to go through the University if North Carolina system free of student loans before moving here. To do otherwise would have been negligent as a parent. If they wish to pursue riches in the future they may. If they wish to have rewarding careers (I’m seriously not sure that some people understand that “rewarding” can mean other things than money), they have that option too. A teacher may love to teach, a mathematician may love to work for an insurance company, a physicist or engineer for IBM, a doctor self-employed. None will be super rich and some will be working poor but all will be doing what they chose to do and are in fields that they love. And there are the small number of non-college degrees entrepreneurs that some of us want emulate, or want their children to emulate, who were focused on money and, partially because luck prevailed but also due to drive/ambition and the willingness to take big risks, became very rich, in some cases DESPITE going to college, where they actually wasted their time. That is like telling your kid to make life plans to be better than Michael Jordan and make his living that way. The university can open doors to a career that you love, but nothing can give you the gifts of drive and ambition, the courage to take risks and certainly the 3rd NECESSARY ingredient, which is LUCK. If you are living here and retired from IBM as an engineer happy like I am, that is a success IMHO. But Bill Gates, Michael Dell etc., no college degree but rich as God, they ain’t living HERE.
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Just a few generalisations there Dude! A vocational degree is often for working class people looking for security, salary, career, contribution etc. Sometimes they are the first from their families to attend higher education. At least that was the case for me. My parents were too busy either dying from pneumoconiosis or slaving away at 3 part time jobs to support me or introduce me to the gentry.
Often here in the Phils folk have mortgaged the cow and house so the eldest can get h/her Nursing license - that’s hustling and trying to make money too. Life sucks educated or not, most of us will never get to encrust our CRs with diamonds or have the Butler polish our ringpieces after. There are many routes to security, education being just one.- Like x 2