Kirra wrote:
Matter of opinion as to whether it was a waste of time, don't you think?
Not really. I'm still trying to pin down what value your English courses added to your Nursing Degree. For the courses to "mean" something, they must have contributed something because the inane and purely perfunctory role you ascribe to them seems a most capricious waste of time:
Kirra wrote:
To graduate with a BSN I had to write papers in a particular style, I learned that in English. It served me well, because I graduated.
Of course, that still seems mostly dysfunctional.
Kirra wrote:
And I do need a higher degree because my profession demands it..an Associate degree only provides so many jobs.
Hmmms ... Where did I mention "Associate's Degree" in my post? I said you pursued a vocational degree. A B.S. in Mechanical Engineering is also a vocational degree. A B.F.A. in performance arts is likely vocational as well. However, a B.A. in English or History or Philosophy is probably avocational.
Kirra wrote:
Now it might be a waste for you, let's say, because you are naturally gifted in that area. I was not..and still am not the best writer..but If I ever choose to go the route of publishing, I am sure I will need another class or at minimum lots of critiques.
Ahhh, this doesn't really matter for our discussion. Although, I suspect you might be better in some realms of publishing, etc. than you might think ...
Kirra wrote:
It doesn't effect my ability to be a bedside Nurse though.
It doesn't? Your English classes contributed nothing to your ability to pursue the vocation you desired short of satisfying some bureaucratic red tape? If so, then why should we force you to take these classes? If these classes were the pedagogical equivalent of solipsism, then why should we take them? Or even make them the most common set of classes amongst all degrees?
_________________
Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.