The older I get and the more I learn and figure out, the less I know. I would have loved to have had access to forums, and the internet like this when I was growing up, and going through highschool/college. I'd like to think I would have made a few different choices that didn't pigeon hole future Dan, but then again I'm not so sure. It would have broadened my horizons for sure. Growing up in a small town, with small narrow minded viewpoint of the world beyond my borders. I was only a few years too late. The lost generation between x and millennials that grew up primarily without tech and was raised by a generation prepping us for a world that was no longer there.
Think of and calculate your education ROI. Figure out how much time you need to invest into getting the designation, then figure out how much your time (as a young engineer now) is worth. Then figure out how much extra having that designation could potentially earn you, and how long it will take to pay you back. Your time now, is relatively cheap (and available) now. As you get older and gain experience it won't be. It's a big world out there and it's constantly changing. You don't yet know where you'll be in 10 years, but getting it now could open a really cool door for future Xyphota.
I wish more schools would explain degrees, and diploma programs like that. Maybe we'd have less student debt crisis when people realize their bachelor of arts degree majoring in historic basket weaving has an ROI timeline of 327 years, with 3 available roles in the entire world. Maybe it would qualify you to work at a rena fair and make $150 a weekend.
That's not in the buisness model, university's are major for profit operation now, they don't care what you take or how useful it is, so long as you keep paying tuition.
Part of that problem IMO, highschool teachers, most of them don't have the life experience to know that university isn't the magic bullet...at least not for everyone, most of them went from school, to school back to school. So what do they do, push absolutely everyone to go to university, now kids head there thinking that's what they HAVE to do, they pick some kind of bs degree because they really don't know what they want to do and feel they need a degree, come out the other end with a bunch of debt working at Starbucks with there useless arts history major.
I think university is good, for some things, engineering for sure...degrees that have jobs, but so much of it is just fluff, and some people just don't have the aptitude for uni.
I'm not a uni grad, there was no way to afford it, so I went with what worked for me, but if you can afford it and it works for you, it pays dividends. I have a handful of friends who are engineers, etc, I make the same and more than some, but I work a shit load harder, no vaycay days, etc etc, they have benefits I will never have, and I am definitely envious of that some days
Plus none of them have ever taken a sh!t in a porta pottie at -25
IMHO, in an ideal world everyone would have the benefit of attending some university courses to push oneself intellectually and perhaps gain some appreciation that there is some subject matter that is above (or beyond) us. Additionally, we would all have to perform some type of menial labour to learn that no task is beneath us regardless of the station we were born to.