Why Earning A University Degree From An Ivy League School Is Always Absolutely Worthless And Will Never Help You Attain A Job, Why Failing School Alwa
by Dr. Harrison Sachs 2020-05-27 16:47:27
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This essay sheds light why why earning a university degree from an Ivy League school is always absolutely worthless and will never help you attain a job. Moreover, why failing school always has no real world consequence 100% of the time is elucidated... Read more
This essay sheds light why why earning a university degree from an Ivy League school is always absolutely worthless and will never help you attain a job. Moreover, why failing school always has no real world consequence 100% of the time is elucidated and the top hacks for how to easily get through an Ivy League school degree program are identified in this essay. Furthermore, how to minimize Ivy League school tuition costs and how to make substantial money without having earned any Ivy League school degrees is delineated in this essay. In spite of its touted merits, a university degree from an Ivy League school is absolutely just as worthless as the piece of paper it is printed on. In other words, earning a university degree from a prestigious Ivy League school will not have even a modicum of any bearing on helping you attain a job nor command a higher starting wage. Much to the dismay of prospective Ivy League university students, it is eminently unfortunate just how devalued degrees, certifications, and other credentials have become in the digital era. This is something that university students truly wish they knew before enrolling in their university degree program. The fact of the matter is that the pursuit of a university degree, even from a Ivy League school, never warrants the opportunity costs nor tuition costs. Even if you earn an impeccable 4.0 GPA in a university degree program and have obtained multiple degrees and certifications, it still will have absolutely no bearing on your ability to attain a job in the real world, even over other far less qualified job candidates. Even the once desirable degrees, such as STEM degrees, engineering degrees, medical doctorates, nursing degrees, and law degrees, are preordained to leave you indebted for decades, financially setback for decades, and either unemployed or egregiously underemployed. Moreover, you will be worse off post earning the university degree from the Ivy League school than you were before you pursued your post-secondary education endeavors since you will have not only forgone years of full-time laborious work in the workforce for a fruitless pursuit, but will also not reap a better job outcome post earning a university degree even from a renowned Ivy League school. Even when coupled with ample work experience, the advanced degrees and certifications, will almost never ever help you even elicit an interview request from prospective employers. This is because, the prospective employers do not personally know you and therefore cannot accurately forecast how your accrued knowledge, skill set repertoire, and previous work experience will translate into better performance outcomes over other applicants whose work experience may vastly trump your own. In other words, educational credentials mean absolutely nothing to almost all private sector employers. Even after applying for thousands of jobs, you are fortunate if the best outcome you elicit entails getting an interview for a couple minimum wage, dead-end jobs in which you are grossly overqualified to fulfill. If you pursue one of these minimum wage, dead-end jobs, you will discover that the coworkers you work alongside with have no degrees nor certifications and also have little to no work experience. In other words, you could have attained these minimum wage, dead-end jobs years ago that do not provide you with a sustenance wage, years before you even stepped foot onto a Ivy League university campus.As per the worthless of a university degree, about 1.5 million, or 53.6 percent, of bachelor's degree-holders under the age of 25 in 2011 were jobless or underemployed, the highest share in at least 11 years. In 2000, the share was at a low of 41 percent, before the dot-com bust erased job gains for college graduates in the telecommunications and IT fields. Out of the 1.5 million who languished in the job market, about half were underemployed, an increase from the previous year (Weissmann, 2012). Less
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  • 8.00(w)x10.00(h)x0.2
  • 104
  • Independently published
  • February 15, 2020
  • 9798614113063
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