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Paul Boz wrote: » I studied liberal arts. Lots of philosophy, history, political science, and sociology. Every day confirms the value of my education. I look at everything around me as a social experiment. My liberal arts background has played a significant role in my career, as well. I've found that I interact with people better than most people in IT. There was a study released two or three years ago by Harvard that stated that the value of a liberal arts degree was on the increase as employers look less at the direct skills of a degree and more at the indirect. Liberal arts majors often have to write significantly more than non-liberal arts majors so the liberal arts majors are typically far better at business skills off the bat. I approach college as a means of bettering myself as a human being, not as a means to supplement my career. I've gotten pretty far without having finished my degree on experience and certs alone so there's no reason to not continue studying everything from astronomy to oceanography "just cuz."
BradleyHU wrote: » here we go again with the degree vs certs/experience thread....*sigh*
ITHokie wrote: » Granted, but I'm not sure many people need to spend thousands or go into debt to better themselves. I've learned far more about life by reading, studying, and traveling on my own than I did at college. I realize there are any number of variables and different personalities that could lead to other conclusions, but my personal opinion is that liberal arts classes are beneficial, but not necessarily cost-effective for personal edification.
Paul Boz wrote: » [edit] For what its worth this thread made me email the LSU admissions office about hooking up some spring '11 schooling. I don't travel any more and my employer pays for credits so why not. FAFSA?? *sigh*
it_consultant wrote: » Its a valid thread or conversation. When people go from college to industry with zero usable knowledge it devalues the degree. Same as paper certs did in the late 90s. This board is for IT pros, understanding where our industry is in terms of training is very important.
phantasm wrote: » You're right, it is a valid discussion... just like it was the first 300 times. If you've been through college then I would hope an individual would know how to do some research. In other words, the search feature is our friend. As for the OP's original question, I question both my A.S. and my B.S. every day.
it_consultant wrote: » I have a different axe to grind, everyone is told from an early age that a college degree is the way to a higher salary. In many ways thats true. It is not true in IT. It is also not true for a good many skilled labor jobs where people make way higher than the average US salary. The electrician we use to wire server rooms makes...God I don't know, we pay whatever he charges. He is over 150K a year easy. He's 34 and does not have a college degree.
Paul Boz wrote: » I don't just stop learning when I leave a classroom. Academia provides a different level of education from amateur DIY. There's a reason why people pay to go to MIT even though the courses are publicly available for free. There is no replacement for hours upon hours of instruction, guidance, and knowledge from people who have specifically dedicated their lives to their craft. I do not think that ANY college is required to be successful or intelligent, as many people I know have never set foot on a college campus and are extremely successful, intelligent, and well-rounded human beings. That doesn't mean that they too wouldn't benefit from college courses. I'm also not saying you have to PAY for college courses either. There's an extreme volume of recorded lectures on the Internet covering just about every college curriculum. The only thing that you don't get out of that is the interaction and thought development. My wife is a final-semester kinesiology major and she's taking four 4000 level courses this semester as well as two senior-level labs. I have sat in probably 30 hours of her classes this year as a casual observer. Typically professors don't give a **** if you sit in as long as its a lecture, your quiet, and you don't make yourself obvious. I didn't have the math requirements to take 4000 level astronomy at LSU but I sat in every lecture for every 4000 level course anyway because I'd had 12 hours of astronomy through the 3000 level and the professors knew I wanted the knowledge more so than the credits. [edit] For what its worth this thread made me email the LSU admissions office about hooking up some spring '11 schooling. I don't travel any more and my employer pays for credits so why not. FAFSA?? *sigh*
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