Get a STEM degree and you'll be far better off than anyone else. Stem being hard science (not psychology) technology, engineering or mathematics.
:thumbsup: IMO, that's the absolute best advice that one could give to anyone in or entering college right now. It's just a shame that more young people in the U.S. won't or can't follow that advice.
I don't mean to be rude old bean, but there is evidence to suggest that those american unis may be less than they're cracked up to be:
W graduated from Yale University in 1968 and Harvard Business School in 1975. Yet he failed to run his own oil business in big oil state Texas.
And guess who's teaching at Yale? Blair launched his Tony Blair Faith Foundation. This was followed in July 2009 by the launching of the Faith and Globalisation Initiative with Yale University in the USA.
That's right; Blair talking peace. A man who couldn't return to his home country, the one he once ruled, without a bodyguard. A man who led Britain to bankruptcy, bought into an ******* war and he is allowed to teach at a prestigeous uni? Nobody see a problem there?
Yes, but Bush is just an anecdotal example, and there's no indication that it represents the rule. More likely, it represents the exception. Whether we're talking about Yale and Harvard or Cambridge and Oxford, it's guaranteed that we'll be able to find the names of people who either didn't set the world on fire, or who failed their way to the top. But according to Forbes, approximately 90% of billionaires with MBA's obtained their master's degree from one of three Ivy League schools: Harvard Business School, Columbia Business School, or Wharton Business School.
As for Blair, despite the controversy that now surrounds him, he is a former world leader. It is fairly common for universities to try to attract upper level political leaders into temporary teaching positions. It makes for good PR.
At some point these kinds of discussions become Chevy vs. Ford, or Jaguar vs. Mercedes, if you like. Based on where someone might have attended college, we all have our opinions and sentimental favorites. But the fact is, based on
objective data, the U.S. has a global domination in the area of university level higher education.