Uzique wrote:
doctors and lawyers are different, though, because they are vocational/professional degrees that are basically direct-links into a lifetime profession. they are pretty exceptional as far as normal degree-awarding academia is concerned - almost like a separate subset of qualifications that operate completely independent of normal education. regardless of funding arrangements or standards or government interventionism, the medical, veterinary and legal professions will always do fine in picking up as new people as they need. engineering, maths and sciences are a little more vulnerable to outside market/education forces, because they are nowhere near as historically stable and safe. that is all im questioning... as long as you certainly aren't "gloating" about your degrees paybacks, and realize that many people have to make a smart decision re: payback on science/math degrees, too. there are a lot of degree-awarding institutions that are not worth any amount of loan money, tbh, whether or not you take math.
Oh, I absolutely agree that there are many institutions that aren't worth any amount of money. That's a given.
I do, however, disagree with your exclusion of engineers in the ranks of doctors and lawyers. Like them, we're a protected industry i.e. you need to be a licensed professional in order to do any sort of work within the jurisdiction of the license. I'm certified in New York State for instance, so while I can look at plans for an electrical system in another state, I wouldn't be allowed to sign off on that work. It would have to go to a Professional Engineer in that state for certification. Yes, it's an archaic way of doing business, and no, I don't necessarily agree with it philosophically as a free trade advocate, but it does force the standards to remain above a certain bar.