what amazes me is that professions in the past that used to have apprenticeships or technical courses are now university course professions
and itâs unnecessary and expensive and the pay hasnât increased either
another rort is making people pay for back ground checks, not only is that useless it doesnât help with anything other than covering bosses asses and bosses getting kickbacks
indisin@aussie.zone â¨3⊠â¨weeks⊠ago
Going to Uni does also delay the lifelong 9-5 grind, Iâd recommended it based purely on that, but you do get a piece of paper at the end that can give you a leg up and maybe more money if you picked something useful.
wscholermann@aussie.zone â¨3⊠â¨weeks⊠ago
Iâm not convinced these days it does give you a leg up to be honest except in professions where itâs mandatory.
And while you might delay the grind, you may very well have to grind longer to pay off the debt incurred.
In short, folks should not be fooled into think Uni is some kind of golden ticket.
indisin@aussie.zone â¨3⊠â¨weeks⊠ago
Completely agreed that itâs not a golden ticket, itâs only useful if itâs a benchmark to entry kind of degree. Youâre not walking in to a hedge fund without one and zero experience unless you have connections. Degree and zero experience will work. Uni also helps build connections and foster independence (read: when hiring I donât want to hire a child, I want an adult with opinions).
Also the cost can be mitigated, e.g. go study in Scotland and return even more independent and free thinking.
Masters and PhD though IMO are purely if youâre passionate about something that canât be learnt on the job and have time/money to burn.
wscholermann@aussie.zone â¨3⊠â¨weeks⊠ago
The hedge fund example would fall under âdegree mandatoryâ for the profession. Although this is not written in stone anywhere, in practice based on what you are saying itâs effectively mandatory.
The Scottish system is not available for most in Australia as you must satisfy three conditions:
LowExperience2368@aussie.zone â¨3⊠â¨weeks⊠ago
Ok Iâd like some opinions. What courses constitute as useful?
indisin@aussie.zone â¨3⊠â¨weeks⊠ago
I can only speak for CompSci, although when hiring I donât give a shit if someone has the degree as Iâd prefer to teach and have someone asking interesting/left of field questions - but lots of hiring people do care though and test you on the fundamentals.
Very easy money.
wscholermann@aussie.zone â¨3⊠â¨weeks⊠ago
A uni degree in Comp Science. Usually what they teach you is out of date and by the time you are done something new has come along anyway.
I feel like in this field certifications probably hold a bit more weight.