It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: Stormdancer777
a reply to: Willtell
My daughter took a three month course in phlebotomy, cost three thousand, she can't find work and they keep pumping the students out.
originally posted by: GraffikPleasure
People complaining about not having jobs after graduating.... There's a lot more to it than that let me assure you. For instance I know there was a nursing program that was 18mo, sure you could cheat through school but if you didn't pass the test at the end that was like a state or federal test you have a worthless degree... Guess what that's ANY school you go to. Are all situations like that, no.
originally posted by: greencmp
It's not the school which guaranteed the loan though, it's the federal government and you cannot default. There is no way out of federal loans and offering one would open the floodgates anyway.
originally posted by: greencmp
That makes sense, I gathered that my perspective is atypical.
Being that there aren't any valid degrees for software development, I never found it helpful to include it. Now that HR people are beginning to understand that, they seem to have switched over to the certification circus.
originally posted by: Aazadan
originally posted by: greencmp
It's not the school which guaranteed the loan though, it's the federal government and you cannot default. There is no way out of federal loans and offering one would open the floodgates anyway.
Federal loans are forgiven (in fact, you can even be reimbursed) if the school you're attending loses accreditation or is forced to close while you're attending. It's been this way for a long time. Depending on the size of the school closing (ITT is pretty big) you might not get 100% reimbursement but it will be close. The feds in turn will get their money back from the sale of the school.
originally posted by: Aazadan
originally posted by: greencmp
That makes sense, I gathered that my perspective is atypical.
Being that there aren't any valid degrees for software development, I never found it helpful to include it. Now that HR people are beginning to understand that, they seem to have switched over to the certification circus.
I'm in software development as well. Listing a degree on your resume will never hurt you (unless you run into one of those crazy people that think degrees are a negative). At worst it's neutral, but even then it's a positive because the automated filters HR uses look for education, and then the HR people who aren't professionals look for it too.
Certifications for software are pretty useless, aside from a few boot camps, but even those are questionable.
What I've found in software is that what matters above all else is what you've done and what you know how to do. Degree's really only come into that if they taught what the employer is looking for. Anything else is for HR.
It's such a varied field though that it can be tough to sum things up in a 1 page resume if you've got some diverse experience.
Yes, ITT seems like a scam to me but then, so does UMASS. What are the chances of that being targeted?
originally posted by: greencmp
Even assuming that they were able to recover the initial investment, when would they return the money us? You are forgetting where the capital came from and the consequences of its confiscation.
originally posted by: greencmp
a reply to: charlyv
I assume by "they", you mean ITT. The government could only do one thing, subsidize, and subsidize they did, with our money.
The effect that subsidy had on ITT was a boon in students funded by government guaranteed (taxpayer guaranteed) loans. They simply responded to the increased demand in a completely natural and predictable manner.
And I was simply pointing out that no state college is ever held to comparable private standards.
originally posted by: charlyv
In order to get that money, the government should have insisted that their curriculum was geared at putting people in the workplace. If you go to a technical school and find that your credits are most likely not transferable, there is a problem and employers were cognizant of that as well.
Most kids want to be web developers, gaming/graphics engineers and mobile wizards. That is fine, but a solid foundation in Windows/Linux systems and network administration and VMWare, will almost always get you in the door. To me, that should have been a mainstream requirement, as you really need that foundation to go further. All of that other good stuff is indeed good stuff, but understanding the technology is paramount in the eyes of business.
originally posted by: Aazadan
originally posted by: greencmp
Even assuming that they were able to recover the initial investment, when would they return the money us? You are forgetting where the capital came from and the consequences of its confiscation.
Open to being wrong on this, but I was under the impression student loans are created the same way banks create loans, they simply leverage an initial pool of money and treat it like an investment. That pool is managed through the repayment of loans. It's not funded through taxes other than the initial outlay.
originally posted by: charlyv
originally posted by: greencmp
a reply to: charlyv
I assume by "they", you mean ITT. The government could only do one thing, subsidize, and subsidize they did, with our money.
The effect that subsidy had on ITT was a boon in students funded by government guaranteed (taxpayer guaranteed) loans. They simply responded to the increased demand in a completely natural and predictable manner.
And I was simply pointing out that no state college is ever held to comparable private standards.
In order to get that money, the government should have insisted that their curriculum was geared at putting people in the workplace. If you go to a technical school and find that your credits are most likely not transferable, there is a problem and employers were cognizant of that as well.
Most kids want to be web developers, gaming/graphics engineers and mobile wizards. That is fine, but a solid foundation in Windows/Linux systems and network administration and VMWare, will almost always get you in the door. To me, that should have been a mainstream requirement, as you really need that foundation to go further. All of that other good stuff is indeed good stuff, but understanding the technology is paramount in the eyes of business.