feywon
Well-known Member
- Location
- Rural North Central NM
Don't get me wrong, i value my formal education, incuding my midlife college degree. It is just...many only value the doors the degrees open not the learning. Just as not everyone learns as much from life experience as they could, not everyone takes as much from the process of earning higher degrees as they could.Well I am educated, and at one time that may have opened a few doors more easily for me.
However, now that we are retired we are all pretty much equal.
And for the record, the inequality was mostly in opportunities, not necessarily in value to employers or inherent worth.
My last job was almost a decade in HR At a large University where we cross trained well enough to make sure that anyone walking thru the door would be referred to the right division of HR the first time and often we could help them, answer their questions ourselves, saving everyone time.
Also, thru HR conferences it became clear even institutions of higher learning were moving toward KSA (knowledge, skills, abilities) assessments. As computers became pervasive IT Departments led that push. Because while degrees can open doors, not everybody with certain degrees can do the job at the preferred optimum skill level.
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