No flames...I don't intend to offend anybody. Just really curious.
I'm always wondering why some pursue extremely expensive schools, degrees, or higher education when they know that they would be staying at home. Is it for personal development? I understand that some might have pursued it with the intent of working and deciding later on that staying at home was best for the family. I have a friend who went for a Master's degree knowing fully well that when they have a kid, they wouldn't want to go back to work.
My main motivation for higher education was for career advancement.
Re: S/o: Staying at Home and Education
You know its interesting you mention this, because I see it completely the opposite way. I feel like the SAHMs with degrees and certifications are better prepared to rejoin the workforce someday.
I do not have one day of college under my belt and I had to work VERY hard to get to the level and salary I got to. When I go back after a long hiatus, its going to be very hard for me to re-enter at the same level. I am basically going to have to start all over, because I don't have the degrees to back me up. And at this point, 4 years after leaving my job, I no longer have strong references.
Hard science lady here!
Love the chemistry and engineering, hate the corporate structure. I just don't have the personality for it. Would prefer to be a MOM over all else.I totally see what you're getting at. DH doesn't have a degree (long story) and my stepmom doesn't either. Both have had to work their ways up to get where they are. My stepmom desperately wants to leave her job, but because she has no degree, she can't laterally transfer into another position in another county. Simple as that. 20 years of experience don't count for anything with school systems. Education is the WORST at degree snobbery.
But, just because I have a degree, it doesn't make it any easier for me to walk out and get a job in my field. My degree was in public relations/journalism. I have almost completely lost touch with the PR field. My last jobs were in sports marketing, media relations and market research. None of which were solely PR based. I don't even know who the major PR players are right now.
It's a total double-edged sword with the job market right now. You're damned if you do and damned if you don't.
Honestly, I feel like I fell short with my education the day I accepted the job at my company (That I've been with now for 11+ years). I do have a Masters degree in Ind Eng and yet...i went to work as an IT consultant. I honestly haven't really used the real depth of my education since day 1. I mean you don't have to use FIFO, ergonomics, OR, QC, JIT, 3rd law of thermo etc. in telecom consulting. It did give me a good analytical foundation for work, i.e. thought process, how to ask the questions and such. So, let's just say the almost 2 years of blood sweat and tears that went into my thesis "An optimized scheduling heuristics for an open shop facility with preemption" is laughable in my real life application. I do think it's kinda cool that i have a book "published" in my college's science library though :-)
I do feel that my education fulfilled a big need in my own self esteem. I wanted to get a degree and an advanced degree to prove to myself that I could do it and that I was smart enough (and perhaps to help deal w/ some of my "daddy doesn't really love me " issues i may still harbor). My dad's an ME (from Duke) and he "only" had a BS. I was definitely also trying to make him proud.
Also, I never EVER thought about kids or marriage while I was in college. They just didn't even enter my mind at that age.
It's so funny living in Augusta GA my whole life I have a different perspective. I actually quit college a year short of a BS so that I could focus on full time work and got to school part time for a 2 year assoc. degree. In this town, it is 99% who you know. I can almost guarantee if I applied for a job where I went to high school with so-and-so's daughter that I would get the job based soley on that connection if I had no degree vs. Missy Educated with a Masters but nobody knew who the hell she was. It's the backasswardsness that I love/hate about this town.
LMAO...Laurann, you CRACK.ME.UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! If I were still living in my hometown, then this would be the EXACT same for me :-)
Photo by Everything Nice Photography
My blog
Oh gosh. Let me count the ways I love you, Karen. You always put things in perspective. LOL
LOL, you, too, Myra! Can you tell I watched "Who Is Clark Rockefeller?"--well, until the recording messed up. (Apparently, there were issues with the network.)
Photo by Everything Nice Photography
My blog
This. And let's not forget that college was not all about traditional eductaion and classes and degrees. That experience in general helps shape who you are today. You're learning book smarts, but you are also learning about yourself and life. Even without the degree, i'd be a different person today had i not gone to college.
Hilarious! I heart all the ladies in this board.
I think this is so true. Being a Mom is such a very important part of my place in life right know but it is not entirely who I am. I graduated with degrees in Journalism and French and found myself with a job in Marketing. I put myself through KSU's MBA program while working full time at a crappy paying job. I started my grad. school before I met DH and finished shortly before we got engaged. I did it for myself, as part of growing both career-wise and personally. Whether or not I would get married or have kids some day didn't cross my mind in the least.
If I do leave the workforce and come back I don't expect, or really even want, it to be at the same level I am at now. I am ok with my career taking a back seat until kids are through school.
DD- 9
DS-6
c/p- April 2016
missed m/c- 6w5d; discovered 8w2d- September 2016
My lupus Birth Story
This is so true! I grew up in Augusta, so I know exactly what you are talking about. Sometimes I miss that small town feel.
I never planned on being a SAHM even after I got preg with DD. I got accepted into grad school the week before I found out I was preg and decided it was now or never, plus there is no way I could be a FT mom, grad student and employee. I've been using the time as a SAHM to get my Masters even though I don't plan on using it to it's full potential until after DD gets much older. But atleast I still have it. So I guess for me it's a combination of personal accomplishment and preparing for "just in case" scenarios.
Ditto!!! I totally agree. I will continue working on my Masters degree and until I finish I will be a SAHM. I'm going to be a first time mom and pursuing a masters degree. At this point in my life working full time had to go. I'm def not Superwoman. As soon as I finish my degree I plan to return to work. I need adult interaction and conversations and at this moment in time school provides that for me. If you plan to return to the workforce in the future you will be competing with much younger kids who will have some form of higher education. Depending on my DH to provide for our family is very nice, but on the real. I have to plan for my future and our future children. Depending on my hubby in this economy is almost setting myself up. What happens if he gets sick, becomes disabled or dies??? My mom always said a smart woman must have a plan and she is still happily married to my father. But she reminds me how good it feels to make her own money... LOL
When I planned out my education, I did consider if I would be a SAHM, however like others have said, you don't know at that time if you will be able to have kids and/or if you will ever get married. So when I decided to get my masters and switch careers (from retail-buying to IT) I picked a career that I would be able to support myself and be able to afford IVF (if I never got married).
Luckily for me, I did meet my DH and I have 2 wonderful kids. I don't regret having my degrees, nor do I think they were a waste of time. I think the skills that I have learned through attaining education and working have made me a better mother. Plus I'm super proud that I have a masters that I attained while working full-time and paid myself. I hope to instill in both kids the importance of education.
This is me exactly also. I have an aesthetic license and about 8 years of retail management under my belt but, that is it. I don't think you would ever waste that education. It would just give you a jump start when and if you re-entered the work force.
My BFF and I were talking about how some of the smartest women are working at preschools and as teaching assistants. She has older kids at a private school and almost all the people working there other than teachers have children attending - shock, even the lunch lady...... smooches to ya Myra.
My dad used to tell me college was important not so much to learn a trade or to know everything, but it trains you to think through things and to go find answers and information when you are working towards solving a problem or an issue.
My parents paid for my education, I chose the easy route, they offered to pay for it all if I stayed in state at a public school...so I went to GT. About 1/2 way through I realized I should have gone liberal arts but heck I made it that far, so I was graduation. I never saw myself as working with kids, but when I was at BellSouth it was very family supportive...yet when the decision came, many factors were weighed and home I stayed. I cherish my GT days and friends, it was VERY hard and pushed me to my limits and I learned alot about what I can do when I apply myself, so its not wasted in that sense.