/DG/
silentigata ano (profile)
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2009
- Messages
- 4,601
1. OK, this is where I have a problem - throwing out "any direction" and asking why it's "totally unhelpful". There are a million different possibilities in the world, I could as easily suggest working starbucks because "many graduates do that" and ask why that's completely unhelpful.
Again, I have no idea why you keep spewing random nonsense like this. Someone suggested for him to check out academia as a direction. This is indeed an actual career path. Being a barista at Starbucks is not a career path--it's a part time job.
2. What I am saying is that any superficial knowledge you have of "the academic system" that you gain, whether through being a student or through TA-ing, has nothing to do with the reality of it and is about as accurate as someone who has NOT been through college.
Oh, get your head out of your ass. I know more about it than a random person who has not been to college.
That first statement indicates how little you know about how universities are run these days. Most large college classes at community colleges, smaller state schools and non-Ivies are now run by adjuncts/assistants who are contract staff and are paid less than minimal wage. Why would universities hire master's degrees when PhDs are so damned cheap and common? There are master's profs. but they tend to have come through from the 70s/80s and no one hires them to teach at unis anymore.
Professors with master's degrees are quite common at my university, and some of them are very young-looking (the youngest I personally know looks to be maybe in her early 30s). Perhaps this is unusual?
Edit: Interesting...I'm looking through the staff directory at my university and when I look at the staff in the arts departments, I'm seeing decent amount of professors with only BAs and BFAs. I didn't know you could teach at the university level with these degrees.