CONSIDERING FURTHER STUDY?
Here are Graduate Fog‘s Dos and Don’ts…
DO take full responsibility for this decision. Don’t sleep-walk into further study the way you sleep-walked into university. Wake up. You can’t afford to be passive when this amount of money is at stake. It is your responsibility – and nobody else’s – to investigate whether this really is the best option available to you.
DO have a clear goal in mind. Do you know what you’re going to do with this qualification, once you have it? Are you sure that employers value it as much as you think they do? If your answer to either of these questions is No, then think again.
DON’T assume more education equals a better (or better paid) job. It doesn’t. Shocking but true, recruiters say some qualifications are worthless on the jobs market. This is particularly likely if you later end up going into an unrelated field. An MA in astrology isn’t much use if you later decide to be an estate agent.
DO canvas opinion of people already working in the industry you’ve chosen. Not sure of the value of the course you’re considering? This is exactly the kind of question you can ask your contacts (see How to Build your Network). Ask them, “What would you do if you were me?” Often, you’ll find employers value a year of experience over a year of study. If that’s the case in your field, congratulations – you’ve just saved yourself four grand.
DO weigh the value of the qualification against the same period doing a junior job in your chosen industry. Even if recruiters say the qualification is useful, the question is: Is it more useful than the same period in work? Remember that for one, you get paid. For the other, you pay out. Do the maths.
DO find out if this qualification is necessary – or just ‘nice to have’. There is a huge difference. If it’s just a ‘nice-to-have’, is there a cheaper way you could add the same value to your CV? For example, would a short period of really good work experience do the same? (Even if it’s unpaid, it’s unlikely to cost you the same as a postgraduate course).
DON’T sign up just to avoid the recession. If that’s honestly your only reason for considering further study, think again. If you’re struggling to find work, there are better (and cheaper) ways to improve your employability, we promise. (See How to Fight the Recession).
DO a health check on the industry you’re hoping to break into after the course. Are you sure it’s thriving? This is particularly true if you’re considering a career in media. Graduate Fog hates to be a downer, but some parts of the industry are in real trouble right now. Spending thousands of pounds learning about a declining part of the sector is unlikely to be a good investment long-term. If your ‘dream industry’ is on its knees, could this be a good moment to assess your options?
DON’T take information from colleges and universities at face value. Remember, they’re selling you a service – so of course they want you to sign up. You’re smart enough to know how easily statistics can be manipulated, so keep your wits about you when doing your research.
DO question the government’s motives for encouraging you back into education. Did you know that when you’re a student you aren’t classed as ‘Unemployed’? Think about it. That’s all we’re saying.
It is Graduate Fog’s humble opinion that graduates should only do postgraduate study if:
- You know exactly what you’re going to do with the qualification after the course ends.
- You know that your chosen field is thriving, not declining.
- You have been told by multiple people currently working in your chosen industry that this qualification is absolutely necessary to get where you want to go and more valuable than the same period of time in a junior job.
But hey, it’s your call. After all, it’s your money – so it’s your risk.
*Anything we’ve missed on this subject?
Email Graduate Fog here and we’ll weave some extra info into this section for you.
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Hello Tanya
After I graduated I had everyone pressuring me to go back to university. A lot of them gave me the “a degree isn’t enough” line. Once I found out that there was virtually no funding for further study I was reluctant to spend such a large amount of money or get into more debt for something that may not have even made me more employable. I know several people with masters that cant get a job.
I would really like to thank you for this article as I could easily have just given in to what everyone was telling me to do. I think all 3rd year students should read this. For one thing its one of the few articles I have read about further study that even mentions the costs involved. Everything else seems to just gloss over it or not even mention it which seems irresponsible with the amount of money involved.
Incidentally I made a link to this page on Prospects which didn’t get removed unlike the one mentioned in your blog.
Hi Tanya,
I work for Skillset, which is the Sector Skills Council for the Creative Media Industries. We have found that while post-graduate study is highly valued in the media sector (almost 30% of the workforce possesses a post-grad qualification), more and more people and businesses are looking for post-grad courses that can fit around their working schedule and provide them with practical and up-to-date skills that they can use in their day to day work.
In response to this need, Skillset has developed the Build Your Own MA programme, which comprises about 80 (though more are being added all the time) professional development courses in modern media disciplines that are delivered through Universities and carry credits towards a post-grad qualification.
That means that a media professional can take a modular approach towards earning an MA by stacking up the credits from these CDP courses as and when they want to take them. The courses are being delivered through the Skillset Media Academy network in England (hopefully it will expand throughout the UK eventually), with different Academies offering a different selection of courses, and all the Academies recognise the credits earned from the other institutions within the network.
Hopefully this information is of some help to any people working in the media who are thinking of doing some post-grad education, but are worried about how they can make it fit in with their careers. More info on the Build Your Own MA programme can be found here: http://courses.skillset.org/build_your_own_ma