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Thursday, July 2, 2009

Is a Master's Degree Worth It?


The New York Times has an interesting piece on whether or not a master's degree is worth it. Basically they put this question to four people, a department chair at an ivy league school, a former college president, an MSN money columnist, and an economist.

Excluding professional master degrees like an M.B.A. and M.F.A., the prevailing thought is that a masters degree is not always worth the time and cost.

The department chair:
Some graduate degree programs can be very helpful for certain careers but many are not. And, remember, what is most interesting is not always most practical. Be sure you consider your motives and goals carefully. Do not simply assume that another degree after your name is going to open doors....

Bottom line — and much of this is about the bottom line — consider your needs carefully, research your options thoroughly, don’t believe everything you read or hear and invest your time and money prudently.
The former college president:
Earning an M.A. degree can be fun; it can provide knowledge; and can stretch the imagination. A cynic might conclude that the M.A. degree is the stepchild of the university community, is increasingly a commodity offered by universities in order to earn tuition dollars devoted to the Ph.D. programs. But in the marketplace, it adds to one’s personal narrative. It makes one more interesting....

In a bad job market does it make sense for students to seek a safe harbor and earn a master’s degree? Absolutely: if they can afford it; if the debt from their previous academic work is not too great; if someone else is paying; if they seek to reinvent themselves. If, if …
The MSN columnist:
In some fields, such as business or engineering, a graduate degree typically boosted income by more than enough to justify the cost. In others — the liberal arts and social sciences, in particular — master’s degrees didn’t appear to produce much if any earnings advantage. The Census Bureau has updated the data I used a few times since then, and the results are similar: certain graduate degrees just don’t seem to pay off.
The economist:
Not all degrees are equal — a master’s in anthropology or art probably has less incremental earning power than a M.B.A. or advanced engineering degree. If graduate enrollments soar as more decide to stay in school, the newly minted master’s graduates may find the job market not all that much better in a couple of years than at the present, and end up taking a relatively low paid job — and facing much larger student loan debts than otherwise.
This article hit close to home for me. I have one masters degree and I'm about to pursue another. I also recently made the hard decision not to pursue a doctorate. My first masters is a M.A., and I've found that many people often believe it is a professional degree (to my benefit). Actually, it is not. The masters program I will be starting in the fall is a professional degree and this fact is one of the reasons I'm pursing it.

My M.A. is in a social science and I came out $20,000 in debt. Do I regret this? Not at all. I wouldn't have been able to find my current job without it and it did increase my salary. Do I wish I could have done it for cheaper? Definitely. My second masters will only cost me books and fees - meaning I'll finish without any more debt. How do I feel about this one? Even more excited than the first, and I'd be lying if I said the cost doesn't factor into this excitement.

While I don't regret my decision to pursue higher education, I would be the last person that suggests someone should further their career by getting a masters in a field where the terminal degree is a Ph.D. - instead I would suggest going for the Ph.D. You'll have better career opportunities and be respected by your peers.

I am not talking about M.B.A, M.F.A., M.P.A. M.S.W., and other professional masters degrees. They are very different than an M.S. in History or an M.A. in Classics. And then there are the degrees I know nothing about, like masters in international development and human rights. Where do these fall?

When it comes to the larger question about advanced degrees I think as a society we expect certain requirements for certain jobs, when in reality those requirements are not necessary. Again, don't get me wrong, I would never assume that you could be a doctor without an M.D. or a D.O., or a lawyer without a J.D., but do you really need a doctorate to be an educational administrator? If you are not teaching or doing research (and most doctorate programs don't even teach how to teach) is a Ph.D. or a Ed.D. necessary for your day-to-day duties? I'm doubtful.

What a doctorate does give you is respect. But why should someone who has spent 10 years in school and almost none of those working full-time be given more respect than someone who has worked for 30 years, but doesn't have that degree? And this is where I get frustrated.

So my advice - before pursuing any degree make sure you know what you need to have to be promoted and respected in your field. I didn't really understand this until I was knee deep into my field. While I haven't been in my field long enough to be pigeonholed, I've decided to pursue a professional masters to learn more about the broader picture. Hopefully I'll eventually move from where I am into a place where I don't need a doctorate to end up in senior management.


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12 comments:

Jessie said...

Great post! This one was a really interesting read.

For me, a master's doesn't make sense right now. Though I will likely persue professional acreditation in my field (Human Resources).

Miss L said...

I think it all depends on what you want to do with your masters degree. If you're taking just for the sake of higher education, then I think it's a waste of time. I know a few over-educated idiots with 3 degrees and a masters - with no real professional experience.

I think people going into their masters should know EXACTLY what they'll be doing with that education. I'm doing my masters right now - and only because it is specialized and will help me advance in my career. When I complete my master's, I know my income will increase by 400% - so, to me, totally worth it.

hustler said...

I don't have a master's but I am pursuing a second bachelor's in a different field. It is to have a career that I want with the salary that I want and I think the payoff will be worth it. Not only in salary terms, but I will be doing something I like, and that is worth it.

Bank Gal said...

I don't have a any degree or formal education past high school. It was financially possible for me and I didn't want to finance it. Now, I'm almost 24 and I make $55k-$60k a year in the financial world. And I'm in a position where I'm probably going to be promoted which means a pay increase. However, I'm strongly considering going back to school (at night) to persue my associates and then possibly my bachelors. However, I refuse to finance it, so I'm just waiting on paying off my current debt so I can save for going back to school in the evenings.

I've realized that while my career right now may not require me to get a degree, certain positions I may want in 5, 10, 15, or 20 years from now may demand it.

I'm also going to see what kind of programs my employer might offer for their employees going to school to persue a degree in the business or economics or finance.

Great article!

Bank Gal said...

Sorry, I meant it WASN'T financially possible for me.

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An American Girl in Taiwan said...

Your blog post was just what I needed to see: a real person's perspective on the worth of a Master's Degree...

I'm looking to get my M.A. in Linguistics as I want to be in publishing (or teaching)and have been stressing if I'm making the right decision or if I should just get my teaching certificate as teachers seem to still be in demand even in this poor economy situation.

Great blog!

Anonymous said...

Masters degree is nonsense! Anyone with an undergraduate degree can do a Masters degree and to be frank many people who obtain these degrees are not that great in the real business world. No one needs a Masters degree it’s just employers believe they have some value since too many people have undergraduate degrees. You should not be rewarded with a higher salary just because you have a masters degree it’s about how you deliver to the business. No one should give a dam about letters after your name. Plenty of failed business people obtain masters degrees. The good ones do not even need an undergraduate degree let alone a masters because nothing will stand in the way of their success and most importantly they deliver. This is why I will not necessarily hire people because of their degree and if I do they will be in exactly the same salary, at least until they prove their worth

Anonymous said...

I think MA's BA's MBA's or PHD's alone never get you the job. While you are studying you need to have continued to hold jobs because employer's just want to see someone who is reliable and capable of working. In my experience the degree never gets you the gig (except for some specialist areas such as medicine, sciences, and things that actually require a degree). Many employer's wouldn't mind taking on a graduate, but their education will not be the deciding factor in most cases. In a nutshell, study for yourself, and for the love of your subject. If you want jobs, keep a steady work history, and things will happen. You can hold degrees, and get jobs that have nothing to do with your degrees, but that is OK if you didn't study for the purpose of getting work. I am sure there are plenty of people who just do the degree and think that alone will get them work. In the end, there can be ten other people competing with you who have the same degree, plus lots of work experience and can give the impression that they will fit in better in the work environment

Marlon Dlouhy said...

It is true that the value of graduate degrees vary according to the career path they will be applied to. Nevertheless, a degree adds to the knowledge you have as a person, and to the status you hold in society. It is an honor to have a title attached to your name.

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Anonymous said...

Unfortunately, in the sciences, what's happening is that a degree is used to instantiate somebody as existing or not. If somebody who does not have a PhD comes up with an original idea in the sciences, no matter how clear it is that it's their idea or invention, they wont get a whit of credit, because they don't exist. Its like that in all the sciences.

And as machines do more and more, soon, jobs in the sciences will be some of the only jobs that exist that offer any job security.

We only need so many prostitutes, artists and politicians, but we need lots of scientists.

The situation is similar, but far worse than the situation in some Arab countries of half of the workforce being excluded from working. A growing number of Americans cannot afford te education they would need to get a real job, and have no hope of ever getting that money.

The sum total of knowledge is increasing exponentially and that means the skill level required to gain realistically secure employment is also rising very quickly.

Nobody wants to admit this because then they would have to admit we are failing, miserably at meeting this need.

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