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Wait, I'm confused. See, I am about to graduate with a degree in theater. After four years of working my ass off academically and professionally, I have made serious connections in my field. I have learned, in the classroom and co-curricular opportunities, industry best practices as well as "real world eventualities." I have received job offers that are 100% due to the fact that I went to the college that I did, based on that school's reputation, that other students of other colleges (or no college) will not get.

I think that this was a pretty damn good investment, and I certainly understand why it's a degree option. So that people can learn how to do it.



My judgement on Theater degrees stands corrected :).

Now, does anybody have something to say on philosophy degrees, or ancient Greek, or does my opinion get to stand on those?


The idea that philosophy and classics don't belong at universities would have shocked nearly all of the great thinkers of Western history. Universities were supposed to be repositories of learning and civilization, not job trainee factories. That they have become the latter is a sign of decay.


> I certainly understand why it's a degree option. So that people can learn how to do it.

So nobody learned how to do it before it was a degree option?

What does a degree give you that an apprenticeship wouldn't?


As I said, I have opportunities specifically because of the college I attended. A degree has also given me a chance to try other disciplines in the industry than my primary, giving me a chance to learn and try doing scenic art, technical direction, dance shows, and more.

The benefits of a liberal arts education span through the actual degree department too.




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