dylan020
the next 007
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ok, little bit of a rant...probably due to another all night study session so bear with me
Just a little background...Im a junior (1 class shy of senior) and I was a pre-med/Biology major for 3 years and have now switched to a double in criminal justice and psychology last spring semester. I was mostly a C student in the former major (mainly due to the difficulty of attending a primarily hospital based school and receiving instruction from Ph.d's teaching at the Ph.d level) Since the switch, I havent made less than an 88 on any assignments, tests, papers, experiments, etc. Im also in the running for an internships with the FBI, Secret Service, and US Marshals. So, Im pretty confident I've found my calling/niche. Also, I work full time for a moving company and have been there for 3 years so full time student and worker. Im almost ready to quit this job because they are calling me in on my school days after class and working me until 11-12pm knowing that I have a test online to take in a specific window (UAB is 'going green' so no more paper tests) So, now to the rant
For those of you with bachelor's/master's degrees, I have a question or two. First of all, Im having difficulty grasping the way the system is done. After seeing/working with professors in this new major, its even more apparent that there is a huge gap between theory and practical use in the field. Now, Im talking in general, not just this field. Why in the hell do we continue to preach theory throughout the undergraduates 'career' when there seems to be very little carryover to use in a real career. Im just not understanding why someone in the administration cant come up with some kind of senior level class/seminar to try and bridge the gap between the two?!?!?!?!
Secondly, Im just curious about whether the masters degree holds that much more water than the bachelors. All I need is the bachelors for the FBI, so Im good there. I know a masters would be that much higher education, insight, training, whatever you wanna call it so its not like Im not interested in it for dumb reasons like just trying to get done and get a job. Is there some kind of benefit other than a bump in pay grade?? It just seems like its more theory based courses that are just on a more critical thinking level. Just would like to get others inputs on what your opinions are on these things??
Just a little background...Im a junior (1 class shy of senior) and I was a pre-med/Biology major for 3 years and have now switched to a double in criminal justice and psychology last spring semester. I was mostly a C student in the former major (mainly due to the difficulty of attending a primarily hospital based school and receiving instruction from Ph.d's teaching at the Ph.d level) Since the switch, I havent made less than an 88 on any assignments, tests, papers, experiments, etc. Im also in the running for an internships with the FBI, Secret Service, and US Marshals. So, Im pretty confident I've found my calling/niche. Also, I work full time for a moving company and have been there for 3 years so full time student and worker. Im almost ready to quit this job because they are calling me in on my school days after class and working me until 11-12pm knowing that I have a test online to take in a specific window (UAB is 'going green' so no more paper tests) So, now to the rant
For those of you with bachelor's/master's degrees, I have a question or two. First of all, Im having difficulty grasping the way the system is done. After seeing/working with professors in this new major, its even more apparent that there is a huge gap between theory and practical use in the field. Now, Im talking in general, not just this field. Why in the hell do we continue to preach theory throughout the undergraduates 'career' when there seems to be very little carryover to use in a real career. Im just not understanding why someone in the administration cant come up with some kind of senior level class/seminar to try and bridge the gap between the two?!?!?!?!
Secondly, Im just curious about whether the masters degree holds that much more water than the bachelors. All I need is the bachelors for the FBI, so Im good there. I know a masters would be that much higher education, insight, training, whatever you wanna call it so its not like Im not interested in it for dumb reasons like just trying to get done and get a job. Is there some kind of benefit other than a bump in pay grade?? It just seems like its more theory based courses that are just on a more critical thinking level. Just would like to get others inputs on what your opinions are on these things??
