Does it matter if i get a bachelors in Psychology? It seems pieces of graduating paper are just to get past the first wave of Human resources hiring. "He's got a degree..okay next pile. When's my break?"
...yes, and no. What you're describing can and does happen, but there are a lot professions that just don't work that way. If you're going to be a doctor, you need an MD. "Any degree" won't help you. If you get into accounting, I think they pretty much expect your degree to be in accounting, even though there's actually no requirement to have a degree at all unless you're planning to be a CPA. For example, if you know quickbooks, you can conceivably get a job doing AP/AR with no degree at all.
The positions your'e talking about are the ones where HR has one position to fill and they get 100 applicants. the job doesn't need a degree, but half the applicants have one and half don't, so they toss the ones that don't to simplify the process. But that makes you one of 50 instead of one of 100. Is that worth four years of your life?
There are a lot of cases where a degree just doesn't matter. Look at
vocational schools. If you try to get a job as a plumber or an electrician or something and say "Hi! I have a psychology degree!" they're going to laugh in your face. College just isn't the path to take to get hose kinds of jobs. Alternately, if you have an
MCSE or a
Cisco certificate, that would probably open a lot more doors for you than a computer science degree.
Then there are results driven positions where paper doesn't matter at all. If you're good at sales,
nobody cares one tiny bit what pieces of paper you have. I used to sell cars for Toyota. My background at the time was computers. They asked me why I was even applying, since I had no sales experience. I told them I was tired of making less than six figures and wanted to be rich like all my friends. They put me in their sales training program and hired me on the spot.
So, this thing you're talking about having a degree getting you past HR, yes that does happen. And sometimes it doesn't. A degree will hold open some doors for you that might otherwise have been closed. But it's certainly no magic wand that will make things happen for you and it's not the only option. I know a woman with a law degree who's been chronically unemployed for as long as I've known her. I know a millionaire high school dropout. And yes, I also know people who knuckled down, spent 7-8 years in school getting pieces of paper and now they're making six figures.
But the degree is not magic, and it's not required to live a decent life. It's a
valid option. Not the only option.
When you say college is unrealistic with math (an i may be taking that out of context) does that include University also?
I'm not sure what I said that prompted that question. As you say, that might have been a context issue.
The kind of money i can move out and live on my own while still going to things like this: http://www.magiccitycomiccon.com/ Still vague i know but lol.
Heh. Comic con. I tried to go to the San Diego con last year but couldn't get tickets. Need to find somebody who's gone before so I can get it on the previous attendee early sale.
Your expectations are very low. Live on your own, have fun. Ok. That's, what...$30,000 a year? Florida is cheap, so 25k, maybe? You certainly don't need to be making six figures for what you want. Here's a thought: it sounds like you have a safe, comfortable nest. Living with parents (I assume), college is paid for, there's no reason to drop out and plenty of reasons not to.
But...I would advise you to
investigate other options. For example, if somebody offered you a $12-$15/hr job right now, would you take it? If you could live the life you want right now, without spending a couple more years in school and hoping that the job market hasn't become worse in that time, would you?
I really want a 10$-12$ paying job
I'll take that as a yes.
So why not look into it? For example, it's
$188 to take the A+ certification test. That's an entry level computer desktop support certificate. No classes, no college required. Walk in, take the test. Now, I highly recommend that you don't just walk in. Download test materials. Take sample tests. Learn the material. That's something you can easily do in your spare time for free. And then once you have it, go apply for a couple jobs. Or alternately, Try a technical recruiting agency. At one time,
TekSystems used to offer a deal where they'd put you through a six week course to prepare you for the A+ in exchange for signing a non-competition agreement, and once you passed the test they'd hire you. Deals like that might still exist.
Or if you don't want to do computers, maybe get a forklift certification. Entry level for a forklift operator is in the $10-$12/hr range, and once you have some experience, median pay is
$33,000/yr. I mean, we're not talking lots of money here, but it's enough to do what you want. And you might be able to do it
now without years more in college. And if you take night classes instead of day classes you probably don't even need to leave the safety net you have,
while you're making money that might turn into a career able to give you the life you want,
Don't want to drive forklifts?Why not get a
commercial driving license? AIPB
bookking certification? Become a licensed
tax preparer? Get a security
guard card? Maybe become a licensed real estate sales agent and sell houses? No degree required. Only a
63 hour course. I took mine through a local real estate office. It was under $200.
There are
so many options other than college.
Why not look into them?