Yes, the poll is biased quite heavily towards people who are helped by their degrees, in my opinion. Also the question "does your current job utilise your education?" assumes (without saying) that education is only what you learn in school/college/university. But that's just simply a false assumption. Of course my work - for example - utilises education - and big time. But it's not the education I received in school. Heister seems to have built a Crooked and Lyin' Poll! >:OAlso, "No. And I don't care". The "Don't care" answer seems to me suggest that I don't care to answer the question. — Michael
Yeah, I definitely think it's not worth the money. If I knew what I know today, and I had sufficient confidence back then to refuse the peer-pressure, I wouldn't go either.I never went to college or university, and I have no intention of going. — Sapientia
Whether or not one obtains useful skills in a university education (which probably greatly varies by major: engineering or accounting majors on average probably obtain more job-specific skills than those majoring in ethnic studies or Renaissance poetry), there is the pragmatic consideration that a lack of a university degree is a barrier to entry for many jobs.Yeah, I definitely think it's not worth the money. If I knew what I know today, and I had sufficient confidence back then to refuse the peer-pressure, I wouldn't go either.
You spend roughly ~£60,000 (with all costs, including accommodation, food, travel, etc. for 4 years), and are stuck with debt afterwards (and much more for US, or if you are international in UK obviously). From a meagre paying wage job it will take you ~6-8 years to pay that back (factoring living costs, etc.), and the skills you gain (apart from the piece of paper) are really not much. I think you're far better off learning something valuable by yourself while working a job - any job pretty much - that pays your bills. — Agustino
Yeah, I definitely think it's not worth the money. If I knew what I know today, and I had sufficient confidence back then to refuse the peer-pressure, I wouldn't go either.
You spend roughly ~£60,000 (with all costs, including accommodation, food, travel, etc. for 4 years), and are stuck with debt afterwards (and much more for US, or if you are international in UK obviously). From a meagre paying wage job it will take you ~6-8 years to pay that back (factoring living costs, etc.), and the skills you gain (apart from the piece of paper) are really not much. I think you're far better off learning something valuable by yourself while working a job - any job pretty much - that pays your bills, and lets you save some. — Agustino
I hold an engineering degree. Learned almost 0 useful material. You go on a construction site afterwards, and don't understand anything. That's disgusting preparation, especially for someone who holds an Honours degree. It's all theory - but life is very different from theory. Academics like theory, because it's static, and it's easy to teach and control theory. It's much harder to teach real world.which probably greatly varies by major: engineering or accounting majors on average probably obtain more job-specific skills than those majoring in ethnic studies or Renaissance poetry — Arkady
Depends who the "employers" are. Large(r) companies want it not because they need it, but it's a way for the person in charge of hiring to guard his behind if you end up being a bad hire. He can then say to his managers - "oh well, I did my best, look at his education here, he seemed to have been the perfect candidate!". It's all about politics, not doing what's best for the business.Employers want that "piece of paper," — Arkady
I agree, but the careers for which it is worth it aren't many (doctors come to mind).I wouldn't make the blanket statement that it's definitely not worth it. — Sapientia
That's a terrible idea. Do you imagine how many people will start going to university if tuition fees are abolished? Where will that money come from? Remember the costs are ~£9,000/student/year and at the moment, with the current tuition fees, there are 500,000 UK only students attending. That's £4.5 BILLION/year. And the number of students who attend will increase significantly if tuition is made 0. Say doubling (universities are smart - they will market, to get funds from the state, that's free and easy money, just for attracting more students). Are you prepared to pay £9 BILLION every year for free education out of your own tax money?Well, I'm with Labour who've pledged to abolish university tuition fees. — Sapientia
I amended my above post to say "many employers," because certainly, university degrees are not necessary for every job (luckily, since most Americans don't hold them). There are obviously many, many jobs which don't require such degrees, from minimum-wage, unskilled work (e.g. fast food worker) to skilled work which may command a decent living (e.g. finish carpenter).Depends who the "employers" are. Large(r) companies want it not because they need it, but it's a way for the person in charge of hiring to guard his behind if you end up being a bad hire. He can then say to his managers - "oh well, I did my best, look at his education here, he seemed to have been the perfect candidate!". It's all about politics, not doing what's best for the business. — Agustino
Yes, once a person has some work experience under their belt, a degree (or lack thereof) becomes less relevant, as one's work experience becomes more salient. Younger people or more recent grads don't have this benefit, however.But, say someone came to be employed by me (a small company/employer) - I'd only have one real question, apart from getting to know their personality - can you get whatever job I'm hiring for done well? If you can, let's see it, and I'd give them a real world test right away. If they perform well, that's all I care about. I don't give a toss about their degree, because I've seen too many idiots with degrees. And there's many like me, especially smaller companies. Smaller companies care about results - politics, reputation, and bullshit aren't relevant.
That "substantially" doesn't mean much. It's the difference between $20K and $60-80K/yr (and even with a degree it takes 10s of years to reach that level) with the stipulation that people who earn bigger salaries are often required to travel more, attend more expensive events, live in more expensive places (close to the job), etc. In real cash flow terms, it doesn't end up being a big difference. They live at slightly higher standards of living, but because their bigger wage implies bigger costs, they are still a few pay-checks from starvation.None of this changes, however, that holders of a university degree earn substantially more over their lifetimes than those who don't hold such a degree (again, at least in the U.S.) — Arkady
Well I, for example, wouldn't look at that as a plus necessarily. It's not that hard to gain admittance to even great universities if that's your only goal in today's age. I know some people who graduated from top universities who are utter idiots. Their degree doesn't change that. As for "completing the course work" => most people cheat, even on that. It's amazing how much cheating is going on in Universities. Back when I attended, I never cheated, but I know many people who have, including paying to get others to do their course works.However, beyond the "politics" aspect, a university degree also sends a sort of honest signal to an employer, i.e. that this applicant was qualified to gain admittance into a university, was intelligent and disciplined enough to complete the course work, etc. — Arkady
I agree - degrees aren't what they used to be.Unfortunately, as the value of degrees becomes debased by things like affirmative action or legacy admissions, grade inflation, or lowered standards for academic coursework, this signal likely communicate less useful information to employers. — Arkady
You spend roughly ~£60,000 (with all costs, including accommodation, food, travel, etc. for 4 years), and are stuck with debt afterwards (and much more for US, or if you are international in UK obviously). From a meagre paying wage job it will take you ~6-8 years to pay that back (factoring living costs, etc.), and the skills you gain (apart from the piece of paper) are really not much. — Agustino
It will be paid for by increasing corporation tax and income tax for people earning over £80,000. So that wouldn't be coming out of my tax money, and if it was, I would be okay with that, as I'd be happy enough to be on a salary of £80,000 or more. — Sapientia
It will be paid for by increasing corporation tax and income tax for people earning over £80,000. So that wouldn't be coming out of my tax money, and if it was, I would be okay with that, as I'd be happy enough to be on a salary of £80,000 or more. I'd have a lot more left over after tax than what I currently make. — Sapientia
Yeah, that commutes to ~£60,000 with the current tuition of £9,000 (9K*4+6K*4). As for the years I cited best case scenarios (starting with a very good job at £25,000-£28,000, and growing). My point is even 6-8 years is terrible for the value you get out of it.I spent ~£27,000. That was back when tuition was £3,000 a year (plus £6,000 maintenance). — Michael
The government doesn't reward the rich well enough. If I'm a billionaire, I have no problem paying for education a large amount of money. But that means I should have disproportionate rights in absolutely controlling how that education gets implemented (afterall, it's my money!). Not some dumb politician to take my money and do stupid things with it. I should have control over what happens to that money. If that happened, then rich people, at least many of them, would be interested to pay their fair shares of taxes. But at the moment, there's no benefits to paying your taxes. You're better off taking that money away to a fiscal paradise.The rich (or some of them, rathe) complain about a having to pay a disproportionate amount of tax, but given that almost everyone would prefer to earn £80,000 and pay 50% tax than earn £20,000 and pay no tax, it's hard to empathise. — Michael
The fact is that these 80K/yr people struggle to make ends meet... — Agustino
Yeah, that commutes to ~£60,000 with the current tuition of £9,000. As for the years I cited best case scenarios (starting with a very good job at £25,000-£28,000, and growing). My point is even 6-8 years is terrible for the value you get out of it.
The government doesn't reward the rich well enough.
I have no problem paying for education a large amount of money. But that means I should have disproportionate rights in absolutely controlling how that education gets implemented (afterall, it's my money!). Not some dumb politician to take my money and do stupid things with it. I should have control over what happens to that money.
But at the moment, there's no benefits to paying your taxes.
You're better off taking that money away to a fiscal paradise.
Depends. Is the better option to have higher social status (that's mostly what that job is) and join the insane asylum when you're 50 because of too much stress?And my original point still stands; these people prefer to have this £80,000 a year job with its higher tax than the £12,000 a year job with its lower tax, so even though it might not be fair, it's still the better option. — Michael
Right. Yes you are correct, I just tried it. I have no idea what error I did when I calculated the first time. Either way, I've just assumed they had to pay £36,000 (just tuition fees) in loan repayments and they'd make up the remaining 6K/year working part-time or over the summers.Well, you actually said "from a meagre paying wage job", but even then, if you're earning £28,000 then it'd take 65 years to pay back £60,000 (not including interest), as it's 9% of income over £17,775, so £920.25 a year. — Michael
Right, but it shouldn't be the gov's job to punish people who haven't done anything illegal.I don't think it's the government's job to reward people. Its job is to provide necessary services to the country, which at the very minimum is keeping everyone alive, healthy, and safe. — Michael
No, I'm saying that people who provide disproportionately - for whatever reason - should have greater decision power in the changes that are going to be made.That's not how democracies work. Or are you suggesting that oligarchies are a fairer form of governance? — Michael
Sure but many rich people wouldn't rely on many of the public services anyway - say ambulances, hospitals, waste removal from the list you've provided.You mean aside from the armed forces, the police, a judiciary system, the fire service, the ambulance service, hospitals, a central bank, waste removal, roads, etc.? — Michael
I agree, obviously.(Not to mention that private police services and militaries is a recipe for disaster). — Michael
Yes, but when you do this, your country suffers significantly because they lose all potential taxes from you (apart from stuff that's unavoidable such as all the taxes involved with salaries/employment). They may as well settle on mutually favorable terms, then at least they get some of the taxes.I don't think anybody is holding you hostage to your home country. You're free to move to the Cayman Islands if you like. — Michael
No, I'm saying that people who provide disproportionately - for whatever reason - should have greater decision power in the changes that are going to be made. — Agustino
Right, but it shouldn't be the gov's job to punish people who haven't done anything illegal.
Sure but many rich people wouldn't rely on many of the public services anyway - say ambulances, hospitals, waste removal from the list you've provided.
Yes, but when you do this, your country suffers significantly because they lose all potential taxes from you (apart from stuff that's unavoidable such as all the taxes involved with salaries/employment). They may as well settle on mutually favorable terms, then at least they get some of the taxes.
Paying a higher tax than everyone else is a punishment.Paying tax isn't a punishment. It's a necessity. — Michael
No, but neither do I want to live in a society where foolish good for nothings that we currently call politicians call the shots.So, what, the more tax you pay the more votes you get? That's not a democracy; it's an oligarchy. And if all the power rests with a small number of the most wealthy then you end up with something like Russia. Is that really the sort of society you want to live in? — Michael
Private health care.The rich don't get sick or suffer injuries? — Michael
They also do that privately, largely. Part of estate management.They don't have bins in their houses that need to be emptied? — Michael
Yes, they do require this.They don't drive anywhere? They don't require an army to protect them from foreign invasion? — Michael
Private security.Or a police force to protect them from would-be burglars? — Michael
Yes, they do require these.Or an independent judiciary to ensure that business contracts and the like are honoured? Their properties never catch fire? — Michael
Yes they work there, but many don't pay their taxes there.They still live and work in the US or the UK or France or wherever. So I really don't understand what you're trying to argue here. — Michael
:s A civil engineer isn't a construction worker mate...No, I don't think you are. Is it the university's fault that you got an education just to be a construction worker? — Heister Eggcart
I'm probably one of the best educated people on the planet actually in terms of schooling. I was always the very top of the class, in both school (I was valedictorian) and university (apart from first year when I almost failed). So I doubt your statements are anything but blind attempts at trying to rationalise things.Again, you're trying to pigeon-hole your failed education experience into a macro problem for everyone, which is dubious thinking. In fact, I'm going to start a thread about this topic, since none of this has anything to do with Question's OP. — Heister Eggcart
As an engineer by applying for it (with my degree, obviously). As an independent? By creating my job.I don't know how you got your job, or any job you've had in the past. If you're gonna hipfire how simple everything is, don't be so bummed when someone like me slams you with equally dismissive replies. — Heister Eggcart
That's not the point. The point is that you have so many advantages which you're throwing away.Credit enough not to land me a decent job, yeah. I'd be pretty well off if I could only tap into my Americaness, and my whiteness, and my maleness, and my <insert any other supposed privilege> — Heister Eggcart
Ehmmmm no. The system isn't supposed to ensure your success at all. You seem to have a very communistic mentality. That's how it was back in the day - eh - the fuckin state took care of ya! Let's take you and send you to North Korea shall we? You may like it there, they guarantee you a place to work in the field you studied! ;)systems in place that are supposed to ensure such success — Heister Eggcart
It's nothing but your arrogance and inflamed sense of self worth that makes you think degradingly of working at McD's.Again, "just go start your own business, hur dur" is equivalent to the person who laughs at my unemployment and just says, "lul, you have a degree that can't land you a job? Stop complaining, there are so many jobs out there! Like, you could flip burgers at McTrump's!" — Heister Eggcart
Just like losing weight, making money doesn't involve secrets. Just hard work.Okay, Joel Osteen. I'm sure you'll want a tithe before you share your secret expertise, amirite? — Heister Eggcart
Supposing that the world doesn't need anymore doctors (there's too many) why the fuck would you become a doctor? It's your fault for going into something that the world doesn't need anymore. You keep throwing the blame, but it's not anyone's fault.If I train myself to be a doctor and cannot be a doctor, for whatever the reasons, then I'm not making that work — Heister Eggcart
No, I never suggested you accept to prostitute yourself, or sell drugs, or stuff like that. So I'm not telling you to be a slut at all - I'm telling you to do something that is useful and helpful for others (and obviously legal) - as far as I see, I'm telling you to stop being a selfish bastard (I want I want) and start being an unselfish and upstanding man (what can I give to the world?).the position where I have to be a slut and sell myself to any career path that enables immediate money, however much that may be. — Heister Eggcart
No, actually the reason there are specialised fields is that there's a need for all those fields in the world. They fulfil a whole different array of human needs, that would otherwise go unmet. They definitely don't exist in order to ensure selfish people get the career path they want. Otherwise we'd have career paths of watching TV out there for sure...the reason that there are specialized fields to begin with is to make available for those that would want it a career path that is narrowed and focused on a niche — Heister Eggcart
No, that's not quite true. People did whatever was necessary and needed to do. A soldier wasn't going to be a soldier his whole life.If one gets training in field x, they worked in field x. That's it. No reworking, no retooling, no, "lawl, just find something else to do, hehe XD". To NOT place someone in the field that they have experience in would have been seen as complete and utter madness. — Heister Eggcart
The world doesn't give a damn what you want. The world has its own needs, and it will go on with them, whether you like it or not. However, if you ignore the needs of the world, don't be surprised when you find yourself unrewarded for your work.It merely means that that safety net needs to be worked on, not for people to treat those who are trying to go after specific careers they'd like to work in as being lazy, unreasonable asswagons. — Heister Eggcart
I have quite a decent medical knowledge (of course nothing like a professional - but I could go head to head with a 2nd year medicine student, and some conditions/diseases I understand really well), and many doctors I've been to were disappointing in their "knowledge" and advice. — Agustino
Right, but it shouldn't be the gov's job to punish people who haven't done anything illegal. — Agustino
No, I'm saying that people who provide disproportionately - for whatever reason - should have greater decision power in the changes that are going to be made. — Agustino
Sure, but many rich people wouldn't rely on many of the public services anyway - say ambulances, hospitals, waste removal from the list you've provided. — Agustino
Yes, but when you do this, your country suffers significantly because they lose all potential taxes from you (apart from stuff that's unavoidable such as all the taxes involved with salaries/employment). They may as well settle on mutually favorable terms, then at least they get some of the taxes. — Agustino
Paying a higher tax than everyone else is a punishment. — Agustino
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