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Skip Grad School. Life Is Better With Experience.

Rebecca Thorman

Rebecca Thorman

Posted Jun. 04, 2008
Tagged: , ,

Originally posted on Modite

A few weeks ago, I met a twenty-something pursuing an advanced degree in Political Science to become a professor, although he had no real-world experience in politics. I listened to Mr. Poli Sci and then I said, “How can you possibly teach something you haven’t experienced?”

Mr. Poli Sci became quite defensive at this point claiming he had objectivity (!) since he wasn’t personally involved. I tried to think of one successful person in politics that attempted to stand on both sides of the fence. Politics is about having an opinion. It’s the very definition of passion.

In talking to Mr. Poli Sci, I realized he had committed two common Generation Y sins. One, he had a vague interest in a topic, but no passion, fostering an apathetic approach towards life. Two, he went to grad school to fix it. Life is better with experience. Here’s why:

1) Grad school is good on paper, but barely. An education doesn’t allow your competencies to be realistically measured, or allow you to be differentiated among other candidates. An education simply signifies that you have completed a degree. It doesn’t provide the full picture of your marketable skills.

Moreover, an advanced degree may bring you more money, but it’s not guaranteed. What is guaranteed is the extra stress your additional student loans will create and the regret you’ll feel for wasting your efforts when you don’t end up using your degree. Seems barely worth it considering “grad school is a confidence-killing daily assault of petty degradations.”

2) Employers look for experience, so should you. Real-world experience reigns supreme over schooling. Every time. Your experience in the real-world interacting with real people and real situations allows you to be uniquely suited towards a particular position. Of course, you need education and knowledge to put places on a map. But then you have to go live life to arrive at a destination.

Sure, Mr. Poli Sci would be a good professor, but never great. Great professors have fervent opinions, they know intimately the subject matter upon which they speak, and they have formed a deep respect for the other side. Most importantly, they’ve formed these opinions as the result of real-world experience.

3) Objectivity gets you nowhere. It’s easy to be objective when you haven’t risked anything. But success in business is not objective. Decisions are based on the relationships you have with others, and the emotions of how you’ve lived life up until this point. The facts can be laid out in front of you, but it is ultimately the experiences you’ve had that determine an outcome.

4) It’s better to do something, instead of just learn about it. Why, exactly, are so many of us in such a hurry to re-institutionalize ourselves? I spent years in college yearning to be done with school. Especially the flash card part.

Going to grad school is not having the guts to get on with life. You’re not telling corporate America anything by indulging in a larger map. You’re just making it harder to figure out which road to take. Want to give the finger to the establishment? Go blog. Go start your own business. Go to work every single day and rock every single day.

Preparation is hesitation. Action is change.

Rebecca Thorman, 24, is the Executive Director of a young professional organization in Madison, Wisconsin. Rebecca aspires to be an entrepreneur and writes at modite.com/blog. See Rebecca Thorman's other posts and profile.

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3 Comments

Rebecca
06/09/08 10:52 AM

@ Chris - Thanks for your comment! Certainly, grad school is valuable to some people, and it sounds like you have a particular affinity for the working grad school person, which is great. My argument was that for most people - not all - it's smarter to gain some experience. I've never applied to grad school myself, but see how it can be valuable. I just don't believe that to be the case for most people judging from my experience. I appreciate you sharing your differing experiences. Also, see below concerning professional degrees. Thanks!

@ JD - I love your comment because it illustrates when an advanced degree is appropriate. I think professional degrees - something like law, medicine or an MBA - are quite different than grad school. Those are the examples you use, and I agree, in those fields you absolutely need the degree. But those degrees aren't in the same ballpark as a grad school degree for most people. Thanks for sharing your thoughts!

JD
06/08/08 09:55 PM

I think Chris makes the right point. The writer of this article is extremely naive. Every industry is different. I work on Wall Street where the vast majority of people have MBAs from the top Ivy League schools, most people also went to the top Ivy League schools for undegrad. So people spent a lot on their educations. But most people average over $500,000 per year in income also. It pays off well. True strictly from a financial perspective it wouldn't pay off if they went to work as a blog writer but in that sense virtually nothing but experience would help them anyway.

People need to determine whether grad school is worth it for them based on what they plan to do. If your goal is to be a lawyer at a top-tier firm than you need to go to a top law school, of if your goal is to be a senator or the President than it helps as well. If your goal is to run a computer repair shop than it really doesn't matter.

Chris
06/05/08 11:43 PM

Did your graduate school application get denied? I sense a lot of anger. Your conversation with one "Mr. Poli Sci" does not accurately reflect the entirety of the graduate student population. How many people have had careers for years and find graduate school a necessary next step in the career path? How many juggle work, graduate school, and family life? Are these people being foolish? No - they have made a logical, and perhaps financially or personally difficult decision to continue their education. For you to so quickly dismiss these hard working people by lumping them all in with your friend, Mr Poli Sci, is shameful.

I do agree with you that undergraduate students should first work and gain some experience before moving into graduate school. This will allow them the opportunity to gain the experience and knowledge base from which they can draw upon should they decide to one day enter graduate school. Alternatively, perhaps they will realize their dream job is something completely different from what they had studied.

After gaining experience in the work force, People with direction and motivation will be able to exceed with the tools they acquire in graduate school. If nothing else, at the very least they will gain the pride and self confidence of knowing they made it through a higher form of education that others, such as you dear blogger, have not. Give some respect to the working professional who is a part time graduate student - it might not have been right for you or your friend, but it might be right for them.

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