golodhendil
Active Member
I think something important about this "worthiness of university" discussion is that people have to realize university is not a be-all-end-all for everyone. This is especially true for many people in the sciences, esp. life sciences, including a lot of my friends. (I have less experience with the humanities so I can't comment as much on that)
Granted, a lot of the people who go into university majoring in life sciences have the professional schools in sight (med, dental, pharm, optom, nursing, all for which a life sci undergrad really isn't necessary and is probably making things more difficult for themselves), though of course the percentage of them that do end up getting into those programs is vanishingly small. While I am of the belief that the goal of a university education is to learn to be a critically-thinking "better" person and not employment preparation (direct job prep would require a college or professional program, or a "professional" undergrad degree), ultimately the one thing that a bachelor's degree in science "prepares" you for is graduate studies in science, from which one can then branch out to academia, industry, science journalism or science-related finance, etc. Without further training, a science degree is not "useful" for anything in particular (the one major exception is lab technician, which BSc can do; but many techs end up furthering their studies with graduate school anyway). And herein lies the big problem. Few of those people who intend to go into professional schools actually enjoy or care about science, so when their initial goal failed, they are unwillingly to pursue graduate school as a "backup" (not that grad schools are easy to get into anyway), and they are also unwilling to tech because they hated science to begin with. So, they end up with a degree on something they couldn't care less about and probably learned little from, and is not particularly useful without further specialization but which the most obvious specializations are in things that they hate. So they end up in a situation where they feel they "wasted" four years without significantly improving their employment odds. I think ultimately it's important for people to realize what a university education, especially one in the sciences, is truly about.
Granted, a lot of the people who go into university majoring in life sciences have the professional schools in sight (med, dental, pharm, optom, nursing, all for which a life sci undergrad really isn't necessary and is probably making things more difficult for themselves), though of course the percentage of them that do end up getting into those programs is vanishingly small. While I am of the belief that the goal of a university education is to learn to be a critically-thinking "better" person and not employment preparation (direct job prep would require a college or professional program, or a "professional" undergrad degree), ultimately the one thing that a bachelor's degree in science "prepares" you for is graduate studies in science, from which one can then branch out to academia, industry, science journalism or science-related finance, etc. Without further training, a science degree is not "useful" for anything in particular (the one major exception is lab technician, which BSc can do; but many techs end up furthering their studies with graduate school anyway). And herein lies the big problem. Few of those people who intend to go into professional schools actually enjoy or care about science, so when their initial goal failed, they are unwillingly to pursue graduate school as a "backup" (not that grad schools are easy to get into anyway), and they are also unwilling to tech because they hated science to begin with. So, they end up with a degree on something they couldn't care less about and probably learned little from, and is not particularly useful without further specialization but which the most obvious specializations are in things that they hate. So they end up in a situation where they feel they "wasted" four years without significantly improving their employment odds. I think ultimately it's important for people to realize what a university education, especially one in the sciences, is truly about.