likalaruku said:
I was told 3 things:
1)College is only for people who absolutely know what they want to do, for rich people with nothing better to do, & for gifted people who are damn good at what they do.
2)(Told to a group by a brutally honest college tour guide) It doesn't matter what major you take, the jobs you got a degree for won't be available when you graduate & what few students don't drop out usually end up working at one of the many car dealerships.
3)A college degree is not a guarantee for a good paying job. I can't tell you how many graduates I've seen working at Payless, Taco Bell, or folding pants in a mall.
I think that this is the wisest response that I've read.
Personally, I don't regret my degree. Saying that, I only finished it yesterday. WOOOOOO!!!!
But seriously, I want to go into teaching, which requires a degree. There are some areas of life for which you need a degree. Doctors, lawyers, engineers, scientists.
On the other hand, in the three years I've been here, I haven't met many people that haven't been disillusioned with the whole experience. Spending an awful lot of money acquiring skills and knowledge that they will never apply in real life.
One thing that I've found is that most degrees seem geared towards turning people into academics. You will write longer and longer essays about more and more obscure topics, culminating in a 10,000 word dissertation about a poem no one has read or some forgotten King's half-brother. After becoming an expert in that half-brother, you will go off and work in the civil service or some international company. You will start at the bottom anyway, because the only skill you acquired is essay writing.
Unless you are really good at essay writing and enjoy them, then you can go on to do a PhD and write 100,000 words on that half-brother's thoughts on the feminist movement.
Another thing I feel about university is that it is inherently unsatisfying at times. You are essentially spending three or four years taking. In every job, someone is benefiting from your existence, even if you're just putting burgers in a bag for them. Being a student however, doesn't directly benefit anyone but yourself. If I write an essay, exactly one person reads it, despite the fact that he knows all about the topic anyway.
When you are studying and feel that you aren't even benefiting yourself, that's when people start to get disillusioned with the whole university thing.
Also, this is a very good article that I would recommend.
http://www.cracked.com/blog/the-question-youre-not-asking-should-you-go-to-college/