Craig
10-29-2002, 03:33 AM
Maybe this should go in the Rant Room, but ...
I've been a several companies and none of them really seemed interested in any continual education for their employees that wasn't directly work related. So while they'll shell out the bucks for "training" in useless 1-week (or less) classes on relatively obscure software packages, they don't seem interested in their employees taking graduate classes toward a MS or MBA degree.
Really how much do they expect to get when they send us half way across the country (or even overseas) to take some class that's less than a week where we are just following examples in a 3-ring binder. Is it that much better than letting us go to the bookstore and buying a book. Oftentimes, I have even gone to training for things I have never used (like when I was at the consulting firm).
Isn't the investment in a graduate degree a better investment to the company as it both ties us down to the employer long-term and helps us expand and practice on more general skills that are appicable toward improving process in the current and future projects. Also, the employee would be doing the graduate coursework on their own time, not the companies.
So, do employers really value a buzzword next to a 2-day training class over the long term investment of a Masters degree ? From my observation, this definitely seems to be the case many times.
I've been a several companies and none of them really seemed interested in any continual education for their employees that wasn't directly work related. So while they'll shell out the bucks for "training" in useless 1-week (or less) classes on relatively obscure software packages, they don't seem interested in their employees taking graduate classes toward a MS or MBA degree.
Really how much do they expect to get when they send us half way across the country (or even overseas) to take some class that's less than a week where we are just following examples in a 3-ring binder. Is it that much better than letting us go to the bookstore and buying a book. Oftentimes, I have even gone to training for things I have never used (like when I was at the consulting firm).
Isn't the investment in a graduate degree a better investment to the company as it both ties us down to the employer long-term and helps us expand and practice on more general skills that are appicable toward improving process in the current and future projects. Also, the employee would be doing the graduate coursework on their own time, not the companies.
So, do employers really value a buzzword next to a 2-day training class over the long term investment of a Masters degree ? From my observation, this definitely seems to be the case many times.