Nope Greeny it doesn't (at least not here), thats why it's not posted, even though to a couple of brain dead fools on this board who seem to want every one to think it is...ELKCHSR, what's your GPA? Let me guess... that doesn't matter either.
2004 Graduates from MSU College of Engineering
yep, your right on that, but my full point is what (besides the education) do these individuals have to add in real life experience, and the even bigger question is....
Are these the only degrees sought after by every one that will net this as a base starting salary with only a degree to start?
Plus the amount you’re mentioning is journeyman level (Less time in trade than going to school, plus showing earnings each year instead of paying out) in most building trades doing manual type labor. There is a difference though, one you can work at till the day you die, the other is a young mans sport generally speaking and the health goes to shit by the time their in their mid 40's.
You see cheese, you just dont get it.
LOL... That’s why you get so defensive...
Besides, Butz the Putz… You are just as easily made fun of if not more so, and it’s just as easy to poke holes in most any thing you post, simply because you pull the same shit you defame others for. Hence, fear of letting most every one know who you are including name, for fear of really opening yourself up to even more self created abuse and criticism.
Hmmmm.. Yep, I don’t know…
Like anything, college is what you make of it.
The electives served me well $$$$ wise when I needed them, because of the knowledge it gave me at the time... But upward and onward is what I say, don't trap yourself into a box...
OAK!!! Now that is funny...
I thought you would have figured out that I meant Montana Tech
I had an idea, but because it wasn't spelled out to that extent wasn’t totally sure, plus I wanted to try a different approach than a brick and mortar school to see what the difference in training is.
I did find, it takes a few weeks of research to understand good schools from bad, accreditation, quality of teaching, types of degrees and extra studies to each, plus figuring out which would fit my background the best and what perspective companies were looking for, but I suppose that should take place any where before jumping in to this commitment.
I'm not into getting an engineering degree (even though this could be a possibility down the road), or mining I would have gone to Butte if that was what I was truly interested in but which you have a valid point for mentioning.
40-50 year olds that asked to many damn questions, and had trouble following along cause they had been out of school for so long.
I've seen the same type and they drive every one around them nuts, these individuals are this way because they have never experiencing life, they wake up one day from their stupor and head to school to see what they’ve missed, these individuals will always be like this, even in the work place twenty years in (most of us know of these people), but I’ve also seen it from kids who don’t have enough back ground in life to understand the concepts their trying to grasp.
No, it's a general assumption of the age bracket.If you're basing your assumptions off freshman,
Very few are willing to dedicate their time to pick up on the bulk of the learning at the get go, and I should say that by the time most are hitting Jr-Sr. year levels, they have realized there is light at the end of the tunnel and will submit more energy into a higher level of completion, are two years older and figured a little more of what they want to do in life, plus the two years make a huge difference on maturity levels.
Bottom line is, as I have stated before, there is an exception to every rule, and maybe most of those exceptions are here on this board as the averages go just because of the amount of input continually submitted, but MOST "Kids" aren’t' ready for any thing after high school except where the next party is (want proof, start a business and hire them on if you can find enough to help run a business), or some thing besides school to entertain them ( I now get to see them on the fire lines en-force).
You do have a lot of washing out in every trade, industry, schooling endeavor by young people because their busy searching for their own place in life or rut to crawl into.
I would say that after a couple years out of school, some are more than ready to take the plunge into higher learning and get some thing out of it besides a bit of paper and a piece of ass.