Coincidentally I received an e-mail from one Pranab Prabhash, who has written a book, but also attended business school. I asked him to write a guest piece on his experiences as an Indian attending business school and thought his insights and thoughts might prove useful to others. He is also the author of "Perils of Information Age" and is a book you may want to consider picking up. His post below:
Here are some very interesting outcomes of the HSBC surveys "Value
of Education". More than 90% of the parents in Asian countries India,
China, Indonesia, Malaysia believe that having an undergraduate degree
or higher is necessary for their children to
achieve their life goals. Interestingly, the number drops to almost 50%
for USA, Canada, UK and Australia.
When it comes to international education, the US is regarded as
offering the best quality of education worldwide, but is the most
expensive destination globally. However, a lot of surveyed parents
hugely underestimate the costs. A lot of doe-eyed students
come to US for studies and go in deep debt funding their college
education. Many of them are left disillusioned in pain and debt in the
end, but not many knew about it beforehand. Ironically though, as per
the HSBC survey a vast majority of Asian parents, considering
a university education abroad for their child, were willing to go into
debt to fund their child’s university or college education.
Among the surveyed parents, satisfyingly most have a specific
occupation in mind which is driven primarily by earning potential. The
most favored subjects for parents would be medicine; business,
management and finance; engineering; computer and information
services; or law.
As an international student who has done an MBA in USA, the above
data bothers me because I can see their validity in my personal
experiences and in the struggle of fellow international students. It
raises a few questions. Is college education worth the
money? Is college degree an appreciating asset or a depreciating asset?
Do we see prestigious colleges as educational institutions or as
expensive membership clubs? And most importantly, are all college majors
equally valuable?
Since, my MBA days I have pondered over the above questions, and I
believe today's internet fueled Information age is exacerbating the
issue. One of the key negative side effects of today's Information age,
among other things, is the issue of college majors.
There is a proliferation of worthless knowledge subjects and a growing
impotency of academic training. The college education system is feeding
on our insecurity to become successful and our ingrained reverence for
scholars.
If you are bothered by similar issues and want to know how to deal
with it, then the book Perils of Information Age might interest you.
7 comments:
Like "gender studies" ??? LOLOLOL
> i have pondered
10/10, would read again.
Indians, in particular, seem to equate graduate degrees, especially in STEM fields, with superior intellect, knowledge, and wisdom. If they were able to objectively look into a mirror, listen to recordings of themselves, or watch themselves at work, they would realize that this is the farthest thing from reality. They also believe that such a piece of paper confers social standing (maybe in New Dehli, but not in New York, where even the janitors have graduate degrees - many in STEM).
It warms my heart to know that parents in Mumbai, Jaipur, or Amritsar are pissing away what little wealth they have in order to buy their kids a worthless talisman that they are stupid enough to believe guarantees success. It's the one redeeming quality of the current higher education bubble.
Only two things left to do:
1. Make sure that foreign students, especially Southwest Asians, are the only ones who pay full (or even double) fare at today's American universities.
2. Send ALL OF THEM home for good once they've been separated from their money and have their parchment asswipe in hand.
What should I tell my daughter (at 15) who thinks she wants to start a business or restaurant, but wants to go to college? She thinks that if she gets good grades in high school, she can get scholarships to pay for it.
"Would've been far better off investing that money in a business of their own and develop real business skills by actually running as business, as opposed to questionable online material and multiple choice questions."
As a self-employed Indian who makes an income much higher than the national average, I concur with that :) Regular reader of Aaron's blog for many years and read most of his books :)
For most international students its not the degree that counts but a chance to gain residency in a Western counts. That is what they are paying for.
When you need wings to stay above the bullsh1t...
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