koalabear
~Armed and Fuzzy~
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2001
- Posts
- 101,964
Obviously your degree allowed you to know everything about everything. My crappy BLA only let me retire in my early fifties.
MercMORON's cousin, no doubt.
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Obviously your degree allowed you to know everything about everything. My crappy BLA only let me retire in my early fifties.
Obviously your degree allowed you to know everything about everything. My crappy BLA only let me retire in my early fifties.
MercMORON's cousin, no doubt.
I retired at 24....kiss my ass.
Why don't we talk about the degrees Bill Gates has?Obviously your degree allowed you to know everything about everything. My crappy BLA only let me retire in my early fifties.
Exactly. My dad was either VP or pres of one bank or another for most of my adult life until he retired a few years ago. Bachelor's degree in psychology from a college that doesn't exist any more. My sister has a BA in sociology and owns her own mortgage company as well as co-owning a yoga studio and practicing Chinese herbal medicine. Owns a huge house in an expensive suburb of Hartford, CT. Her partner, co-owner of the studio, has a degree in liberal arts and ran an IT dept the size of a small city before he retired in his fifties to do the yoga teacher/studio owner thing. Guy who posts here as Hungry Joe is a successful software engineer with no undergrad degree; if he had bothered to finish his degree, it would have been in English or Philosophy. Then there's the famous people like Steve Jobs...An acquaintance of mine has a degree from an Evangelical Bible college with some kind of specialty in eradicating cults and evil spirits. He used it to get into the police academy and become a cop. Now he runs around the country giving trainings to law enforcement about cults.
There's no such thing as a useless degree.
I think he lacks perspective.Pretty much out there.
I'm willing to bet department store managers are all rocking MBA's or at least and under grad in biz management.
The King of comebacks, no doubt.
Retired what?
Exactly. My dad was either VP or pres of one bank or another for most of my adult life until he retired a few years ago. Bachelor's degree in psychology from a college that doesn't exist any more. My sister has a BA in sociology and owns her own mortgage company as well as co-owning a yoga studio and practicing Chinese herbal medicine. Owns a huge house in an expensive suburb of Hartford, CT. Her partner, co-owner of the studio, has a degree in liberal arts and ran an IT dept the size of a small city before he retired in his fifties to do the yoga teacher/studio owner thing. Guy who posts here as Hungry Joe is a successful software engineer with no undergrad degree; if he had bothered to finish his degree, it would have been in English or Philosophy. Then there's the famous people like Steve Jobs...
I think he lacks perspective.
You'd lose that bet. I think what you're missing is the notion of on the job training. My dad--see above for thumbnail--has always said that he preferred to hire lib arts majors to business majors. He can teach the job to a trainee who has learned how to think. The stuff business majors are taught is either learned on the job or irrelevant. He did as much un-teaching of errors with business majors.
Why can't they be sold in the marketplace? What sort of evidence do you have?
Military/investor/pot farmer...now I just go to school and collect my money....enjoy my hobbies.
I'm not saying it doesn't happen....esp considering hiring within. I'm talking about a 22 y/o kid who is going to graduate here in the next week or two, with a BLA he/she is not going to get squat compared to someone with a more specialized degree.
The job market for a fresh grad today is not what it was 20, 10 or even 5 years ago.
Wooing young voters, President Barack Obama is on a blitz to keep the cost of college loans from soaring for millions of students, taking his message to three states strategically important to his re-election bid. By taking on student debt, Obama is speaking to middle-class America and targeting an enormous burden that threatens the economic recovery.
Before Obama got his road trip under way, Republican opponent Mitt Romney found a way to steal some thunder from the president's campaign argument: He agreed with it.
http://nbcpolitics.msnbc.msn.com/_n...takes-on-college-costs-eyes-young-voters?lite
I think the mistake in the whole conversation is that we equate a "successful life" with "fiscal achievement." To me that's a poor yard stick.
I don't want to have a career, no matter how much dough I pull, if the whole time I'm doing it I'm bored and wishing I were doing something else.
I think the mistake in the whole conversation is that we equate a "successful life" with "fiscal achievement." To me that's a poor yard stick. My dad did fine in his career, raised three of us, gave the family a good home, etc, etc, etc, all the Eisenhower Years stereotype earmarks of success. And he's always said that he wished he'd gotten a Ph.D in history and been a college professor instead.
I don't want to have a career, no matter how much dough I pull, if the whole time I'm doing it I'm bored and wishing I were doing something else.
Oh I'm not talking about getting rich as hell...l'm more than happy/content with my middle class life. No annual exotic vaycay's but I have comfy pad, a couple projects, the occasional night on the town and I'm not worried about "omg how am I going to eat this week??" .
I'm set up for that now which is why I'm going to school, because I wan't my PhD in Botany and or Marine Biology. Neither is a road to wealth but I love it. All thing's considered I actually feel quite privileged to be where I'm at in life.
I'm not saying a BLA can't do anything, or that it is no good...just saying for a new grad with one the current job market is still pretty bleak.
Have you posted with the guy who goes by Dribble on here? You should.
I'm thinking of studying biology myself in fact. I may have to go back to school yet again...
I've seen him around, haven't really talked to him much.
If you are considering a biology degree I would highly suggest you get through chem/O chem before you decide to go further into biology class's beyond intro stuff.
It's like getting a handle on algebra/calculus before digging into physics.
You have mutual interests.
Already got 'em. I did those when I thought I was going to med school.
Are you fucking kidding me? Think for a moment about what you just said.I think the mistake in the whole conversation is that we equate a "successful life" with "fiscal achievement." To me that's a poor yard stick.
And how did "fiscal achievement" figure into that?My dad did fine in his career, raised three of us, gave the family a good home, etc, etc, etc, all the Eisenhower Years stereotype earmarks of success.
And if he'd done that, then you might be fiscally screwed right now.And he's always said that he wished he'd gotten a Ph.D in history and been a college professor instead.
Are you fucking kidding me? Think for a moment about what you just said.
And how did "fiscal achievement" figure into that?
Was he able to put you where you are because he magically made rainbows appear in the sky, or was it because of his "fiscal achievement"?
And if he'd done that, then you might be fiscally screwed right now.
We're in the same box.Get out of that box.
I think the mistake in the whole conversation is that we equate a "successful life" with "fiscal achievement." To me that's a poor yard stick. My dad did fine in his career, raised three of us, gave the family a good home, etc, etc, etc, all the Eisenhower Years stereotype earmarks of success. And he's always said that he wished he'd gotten a Ph.D in history and been a college professor instead.
I don't want to have a career, no matter how much dough I pull, if the whole time I'm doing it I'm bored and wishing I were doing something else.