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Collins on Packer & Durham
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<blockquote data-quote="Augusta_Jacket" data-source="post: 864724" data-attributes="member: 1191"><p>The cold reality is that even a degree factory diploma from "Online University of the Never Attend Class a Day in Your Life" can set you up for success if a) it has even the most minute amount of accreditation and b) you know how to leverage it properly. If you graduate as a football player with a degree in just about anything you have a great chance to be successful in life if you leverage yourself well. With the exception of work in licensed fields such as medicine, and to some degree engineering, specific degrees aren't really necessary. I have a government degree from the USCGA, and yet I work in environmental engineering alongside coworkers with engineering degrees, business degrees, and all kinds of other degrees. All a degree really does any more is open the door and get you into an interview. Once you've been out of college a few years, people really don't care about what your degree is in or where it came from, but rather what value do <strong><em>YOU </em></strong>bring to the job.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Augusta_Jacket, post: 864724, member: 1191"] The cold reality is that even a degree factory diploma from "Online University of the Never Attend Class a Day in Your Life" can set you up for success if a) it has even the most minute amount of accreditation and b) you know how to leverage it properly. If you graduate as a football player with a degree in just about anything you have a great chance to be successful in life if you leverage yourself well. With the exception of work in licensed fields such as medicine, and to some degree engineering, specific degrees aren't really necessary. I have a government degree from the USCGA, and yet I work in environmental engineering alongside coworkers with engineering degrees, business degrees, and all kinds of other degrees. All a degree really does any more is open the door and get you into an interview. Once you've been out of college a few years, people really don't care about what your degree is in or where it came from, but rather what value do [B][I]YOU [/I][/B]bring to the job. [/QUOTE]
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