Author Topic: [NEWS] College tuition now free for 125k a year and below families in NY  (Read 7317 times)

Do u know how hard it is to become an assistant manager / full manager with only a highschool diploma?

loving lmao good luck trying
when i worked at walmart, my manager had worked there since highschool

but besides the point, Tony I don't know how much you know about the market of jobs(because you don't seem to want one), but you are making some bold claims.

I work in the software business and I know a ton of people who do game dev without having degrees? You are saying it's impossible to get jobs without degrees but you just named 3 different fields of work that have plenty of people without degrees in them?

how does that prove your point?

Do u know how hard it is to become an assistant manager / full manager with only a highschool diploma?

loving lmao good luck trying

It's not hard at all. Not at Walmart lol.

You don't need a college degree to be an assistant manager or store manager at a loving walmart store.

The only degree you actually need for Walmart is head pharmacy technician which earns more than the actual store manager.

It's not hard at all. Not at Walmart lol.

You don't need a college degree to be an assistant manager or store manager at a loving walmart store.

The only degree you actually need for Walmart is head pharmacy technician which earns more than the actual store manager.
^^ this is actually true

I worked at walmart before and I can vouch for this

most of my assistant-managers/managers never had a degree

You don't need a degree for most jobs but it helps a ton

Entirely dependant on the degree you get. Also bolster never went to college/university and I think he makes 90k a year

Entirely dependant on the degree you get. Also bolster never went to college/university and I think he makes 90k a year
I don't know why Tony says everyone requires it now days

It's like hes using it as an excuse so he can be lazy and mooch on his couch all day

"I'm not the problem, the system is!!!"

You practically need a college degree in almost every non-entry level jobs now.

You practically need a college degree in almost every non-entry level jobs now.
i mean, yeah, companies want people who are educated in the relative field
and college is a "waste of time" ?

Tony should start a Harvest University, where if you pass all the classes (and pay him $20k a year) you can get into the Harvest.

You practically need a college degree in almost every non-entry level jobs now.
Seeing that most jobs are organized in a pyrramidal structure, I'm going to make a guess and say that the majority of non-entity level jobs only require previous job experience.

You practically need a college degree in almost every non-entry level jobs now.
well im shocked!!! you mean companies want people that went to school and learned valuable skills and high level math for jobs that require it???

well im shocked!!! you mean companies want people that went to school and learned valuable skills and high level math for jobs that require it???

Getting a degree isn't bad for this don't get me wrong before you insert more low grade sarcasm.

The fact is you could have went from the ground up at your job. Get laid off because the business goes bankrupt. Then when you want to apply to a new company with the same job title you can't get the loving job because you have no college degree as proof and they won't accept your previous experience from a similar job.

You could go from intern at a bridge architect company to bridge engineer in about 10+ years. Give or take

Then when you want to work for a new business you can't loving get hired because you have no actual degree.

It's handicapped.

Not only that the job market sucks in general to begin with.

Most people after college find out they can't get any loving job with their stuffty degree.

Even So, a job is more likely able to hire someone with a college degree Vs. someone with no degree but with 10-20+ years of experience.

As a personal preference I want all people designing buildings to have a degree. To me it's along the same lines as being a doctor.

Yes, it's entirely possible to build a career through experience, but information and career specific procedures are not static. A degree ensures that new students can be taught the most recent way of doing things.