Associate
- Joined
- 20 Apr 2004
- Posts
- 1,424
- Location
- Somerset
I totally agree with you UK-AL05.
Can you be successful ie have a higher than average salary without having spent years and a lot of money getting degrees ?
Well I knew a girl who was in my 6th form that did art, and is now a director at BBC so ....
Art is a skill. It's a skill you get better at the more you do (trying new styles and refining technique etc.). You don't need to get yourself in debt to do something that's basically a creative hobby. Artists succeed by having a great portfolio of there work, not from having a stupid BA written on their CV. Pretty sure most famous artists (Picasso, Monet etc.) didnt go to 'Uni.' Same principle goes to stupid degrees like 'photography' lol....
and what about the many MANY others that do art and end up in a crap job totally unrelated to art...
UK-AL05,
I understand if you have passion for the subject you do, but out of curiosity, how much money has it cost to put you through a degree, masters and now PhD??
You know what I meant. You may say that but I can't think of any reason why she would not be able to get that position if she didn't go to University. What do they do in "Art" that will help you as a Director?
Anyone stating "top 10 uni" instead of stating the name of it is most likely lieing so I just stopped reading.What the hell? I studied computer science, I'm Ph.D A.I candidate from a top 10 university ...
Most people in my course were pretty boring people. We went out on a friday night sometimes, sometimes we came back sober. That's about it.
Pick your job, then pick you degree. Only reason to do it the other way round is if you know you're doing a degree just because you can afford to. By that I mean my millionaire flat mate doing classics just because he wanted to knowing full well it won't get him a job at the end of it but it's ok because his debts are paid by his parents.
I can understand why doctors,dentists,surgeon,engineer etc that kind specialist job requires degrees but if your not aiming that high ie being a brain surgeon etc, are degrees worth the debt and time ? are they not just a status thing like "ohh i have a degree on my cv im gonna standout from the rest of the flock" etc ?
I don't think it will be worth it next year where students are expected to pay £9000.
Going to a crap University just means you beat everyone else who isn't very clever. Kind of like winning the special needs 100m run.
I take it nobody still bothers to actually work out what a normal average graduate earner will actually pay back after the fee increase...