Thank you for bringing this up, as someone who just came out of Uni I can really relate to a lot of what people have said. I ceratinly agree there is a problem with the the education system... a serious one! I could go on about it for days actaully :|
Firstly, those who say to ingore the colleges telling students to go to Uni are totally right. They are seriously bias! The majority (if not all) of the teachers would have gone to Uni so are likely to want to encourage their students to go and have the same expirences they did. Then add to that the fact that the colleges performance figures are heavly based in how many of the their students go to Uni only compounds the issue.
I went to Uni because of it was presented as THE main option, every other option was vague and unclear so naturally I choose the ‘safe’ route. 4 years of suffering later I have failed my degree and have all the debt of a graduate. I was obviously not suited for acadmeic work due to my plerthera of reading and writing difficulties, but I did not have the confidence as a teenager to go for something more “risky”... as it was presented by my 6th form.
The only thing that saved me really was going here before uni:
http://www.ibtc.co.uk My parents are to thank for that.
So to summaries I’d advise taking school and college opinions regarding unis with a metric ton of salt!
I think the lack of career prospects from degrees has been discussed a lot, I will just say that judging from the position of most of my friends (who mostly did quite well in their degrees, including several firsts) the posters here are correct, degrees don’t help at all with a career unless its something like medicine.
I will add two positives about Uni here though, social life and societies. Uni is the best place to make real life long friends and in my expierence this alone can make the whole thing worth it...
don’t underestimated how important this is! I also learned a lot through student societies (Conservation volunteers in my case), they were ultimately more useful for my career prospects than thr course (even I think, if I had passed).
I don’t know much about computer science and CGI, but I think talking to the employers is the right thing to do. Unis and colleges have no idea whats really required in most professions in my experience.
phil.p":2k6co01o said:
There was a letter in The Times a few years ago on the subject of degrees. A chap wrote that when he was young (in the '50s) "O" levels were introduced as being suitable for the top 20% of the population, and now degrees are deemed suitable for the top 50%. Human intellect hasn't changed very much in sixty years - so therefore something else has.
This just caught my eye and I will just go straight to the point and say it: There is no such thing as intelligence. People are equipped with mental tools that make the good at different things, some can interpret text really efficently, others can can figure out a complec equation like its 2+2... the whole thing is far to complicated to simplify down to one person being “smarter” than another.
The reason I highlight that is that I think the chasing of this outdated concept is one of the biggest issues with our education system. We are obessed with exanations testing who is “smarter” or capable... trying to find prodigy’s. Surely we would all be better served by just helping everyone be the best they can be, regardless of how “good” that best is.
Sorry for the rant phil. your post just reminded me of this trail of thought.