• Commiunism
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    629 minutes ago

    Learned CS/Coding at school, ended up with a factory job in manufacturing.

    The meme is right, it is a pretty balling existence all things considered

    • @tux7350@lemmy.world
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      15 minutes ago

      Don’t ya think this might be a bit bias? They have a vested interest to sell you a philosophy degree.

  • @muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works
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    42 hours ago

    Going to college purely for a career is a hell of a gamble and the most likely positive outcomes are in fields where everyone fucking hates you (business majors, etc).

    Go to improve yourself. Learn all you are interested in. Experience new things. For most jobs, nobody cares what your major is anyway. They care that you can focus on a long term goal and achieve it and a college degree demonstrates that.

  • 小莱卡
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    33 hours ago

    why study when you can become a manosphere grifter for free?

  • @funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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    154 hours ago

    my boss got mad when trying to use the “Socratic method” on a project that I was contradicting them and questioning their every statement

    ?!?!?!!?

  • @MissJinx@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Look, as a 40yo I have to advise new kids to yes, do what you want, but research the market first. If you want to do Philosophy to be a teacher great, but if not mayber try other areas like socialology or history that have a slightly better market…Or just learn IT because that’s the future and you are never out of a job

    • @TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      or just study what you want and get job skills separately.

      our education system shouldn’t be teaching job skills anyway. it should be teaching higher order skills and the jobs should be training you at the specific job. most of the job skills you would learn in school will also be a 5-10 years out of date when you enter the workforce. or, if you are really lucky, your company will will be operating on skills from 20-30 years ago and your 10 year old skills will make you seem like a genius

      • @exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        118 minutes ago

        This often cited study from 2012 reported that something like only 27% of those with bachelor’s degrees were working in a field related to their major. It’s over 10 years old but there’s no reason to assume that the general broad principles don’t still apply in the modern economy.

        University educations have never been intended to be mere vocational skills programs. Being able to research, read, and write critically are important broad skills that are useful in life (including in the workforce), and most jobs out in the world don’t actually require significant specialized education.

        People who work in sales, management, design, logistics, event planning, contracting, marketing, advertising, finance, real estate, and things like that don’t need particular degrees to do those jobs, but most of the white collar world has degrees. There’s nothing wrong with majoring in English literature and then going into software sales, or majoring in history and going into logistics, or majoring in philosophy and becoming a journalist. It’s not like you get a free pass to stop learning once you’re in an industry, and keeping up means learning things that weren’t even known when you were in college.

        It’s liberating when you realize that the choices you made at 18 don’t box you in for life. You have the flexibility to make career changes into different industries, different roles, different cities, and different employers when you realize that most jobs can be learned as you go.

        And most jobs suck, so it’s worth finding something that fits your strengths and ignores your weaknesses, so that it’s just easier for you to do.

      • @Kage520@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Not really. I’m not sure how it ended up so rounded, but getting a degree is more than just “get skills for the job”. When you are getting any bachelor’s degree, you also have to take a certain amount of history, music appreciation, etc, heck my school even required lifetime fitness. It’s also learning alongside your peers to suffer together, I mean work together.

        Also, for something like engineering, you don’t want a job to teach the basics of safely designing a building. You want that in school so when your job asks you to do something dumb, you can explain to them why it is unsafe and correctly refuse.

        I like how my friend put it: “You COULD go to a technical school to get a job, but you wouldn’t be very interesting to talk to.”

        Ugh and I just imagined if they made something like “Walgreens pharmacy school” that would train you to be a pharmacist but only for Walgreens. Imagine if your ability and certification to work in any field was tied to a specific company. No way to leave to CVS or whatever unless you go to “CVS pharmacy school”. Sounds awful.

        • @TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          that’s not true. maybe you were required to do that, but every school is different and maybe have entire dropped the trad liberal arts or general ed requirements. my college had no such requirements you should take whatever you wanted as long as you had a major.

          some schools still also only offer liberal arts style degrees and have no technical degrees.

        • @JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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          2 hours ago

          This is really the type of scholarship you would expect in a capitalist society.

          Essentially, big corpos would scout HS and undergrad students for prospective employees and offer them tuition and a job contract, with payback requirements if they don’t graduate and fulfill the contract. Pretty much the same deal and college/pro sports.

          Especially in industries that have or are forecasted to have a big skills-gap.

          Despite sounding dystopian AF, it still somehow sounds better than what we have now.

  • @GraniteM@lemmy.world
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    1348 hours ago

    I talked to a guy who had a master’s degree in philosophy. He told me he worked for an investment firm.

    Me: What do you do there, convince investment bankers not to kill themselves?

    Him: Yeah, pretty much.

    Me: 😳

  • @Venus_Ziegenfalle@feddit.org
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    7 hours ago

    I’m not kidding I studied philosophy and now genuinely work in a factory as a mechanic. I’ve made it big according to this.

    • Bo7a
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      34 hours ago

      I have a degree in philosophy and I draw PowerPoint decks for other nerds to use and turn into data platforms that I used to build myself…

    • Hjalmar
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      03 hours ago

      What type of qualification ment that you could get a job as a mechanic? Was it the philosophy?

      • @TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        a lot of jobs dont need qualifications. just basic knowledge and a willingness to learn is enough. esp for a small company.

    • @GamingChairModel@lemmy.world
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      308 hours ago

      I was a dual major Electrical Engineering/Philosophy. The rigorous logic in some branches of philosophy was very helpful for programming principles. And the the philosophy of mathematics and philosophy of mind has overlaps with and supplements modern AI theory pretty well.

      I’m out of the tech world now but if I were hiring entry level software developers, I’d consider a philosophy degree to be a plus, at least for people who have the threshold competency in actual programming.

      • @ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        Most of my programming career was spent working for small consulting firms that created custom software for (relatively) small clients. The most important skill by far was the ability to talk to customers (and listen to them as well) in order to understand what they needed the custom software to actually do. Not only is this skill not taught in the Computer Science curriculum, it’s not even conceived of as a thing. My bosses were constantly hiring freshly-minted CS grads and could not understand why I rejected having them placed on my team. I instead always looked for people that had experience not just with programming but with things outside of the programming world entirely.

        That being said, I sure would not have wanted a freshly-minted philosophy grad either, for the same reason.

      • @sobchak@programming.dev
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        147 hours ago

        Yeah, the CS head at the small college I went to was also the Philosophy head (he got his doctorate in philosophy). The same formal logic class was a requirement for the CS, philosophy, and law degrees.

      • The Octonaut
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        218 hours ago

        CS is Computer Science, Cyber Security is abbreviated as CyberSecs, Google it

        • @redsand@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          23 hours ago

          Coming soon, C.S. degrees from Trump University

          Cock Sucking, the most stable, highest paying field in this economy. Enroll Today!

          Dual credit classes available to highschool students at scenic Maralago

        • @Taldan@lemmy.world
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          97 hours ago

          I have a masters in cybersecurity, and I see some people abbreviating is as CS sometimes, and it always bothers me. CS = Computer Science

          • @redsand@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            34 hours ago

            I too have seen it on occasion. But in the current market you’re best putting “Masters in C.S. from Standford” and hoping they interpret that to mean Cock Sucking. A significantly more stable and currently higher paying field.

          • @Pieisawesome@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            36 hours ago

            It’s not quite the same thing, but reminds me of Sillicon Valley when

            Spoiler

            The blood boy has a degree in calisthenics studies and abbreviates it as CS

  • SSTF
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    279 hours ago

    Looking down on manufacturing jobs is so cool.