FarSky wrote:
I just didn't realize I wasn't supposed to use that knowledge or taught skillset outside of the area specifically defined by my major. I'm not anywhere close to Journalism. In fact, going by my current career path, I'd have been 'better served' by getting my degree in Graphic Design with a minor in Advertising/PR.
But I believe that's Khross' point: Just because something has 'puppet' in the title doesn't mean that the core knowledge being taught isn't applicable for other, related areas. I'd wager that someone with a degree in Advanced Puppetry was taught the exact same skill set as someone who went in for a straight Theater Arts degree (writing, direction, set design, construction, et. al.) with Puppetry speciality on top of that, and the skills are thus applicable to any of the theater, television, or film areas.
I think you'll find that many people find work outside of their area of degree specialization. I know I did. My degrees and licenses had nothing to do with finance, for example. You'll find, if you care to look, is that this guy left a full-time position as an
Elementary School Drama Teacher at a public school. He should have been thanking his lucky stars that his school had that position and that he held it, rather than becoming frustrated enough with "class sizes, limited resources and bureaucracy" that he left to pursue a specialization that didn't significantly broaden his career possibilities. To compound his "wisdom" he came right back to the public school system he'd left because of "class sizes limited resources and bureaucracy".
FarSky wrote:
No degree pays for itself. Possible exceptions would be lawyers and doctors (and maybe a handful of tech-related certifications). You have to make the degree work.
Many public school systems increase a teacher's pay just for attaining a higher degree, this guy's problem is that he
left then
came back.
_________________
"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko