Fall back value of degree overrated
Scrapdog, you flew in the USAF, you had to have college degree to be an officer, which is the only way to be a pilot in the USAF. In the past when college grads could not fill the military pilot ranks, the degree was waived to get qualified pilots. Guess what they did a great job. As I have said before I have nothing against a college degree, but it is not necessary to succeed in this business. The fallback value of a degree is greatly over rated. I have a BS and a Master's in Management, but at age 53, when Zantop pretented to go out of business to get consessions from the Teamsters, I was making $250/wk loading cargo. The value of an unused degree is highly over rated. 53-year-old unemployed airline pilots are not eagerly greeted in any industry that I know of, even of having a couple degrees. Of course, I did not apply for many of the "College degree preferred jobs" such as apt manager, telephone direct sales, and plumbing floor manager at Home Depot, etc. If you get a college degree you have to use the knowledge gained in college in order to develop a career or the degree is useless. After getting a degree, flying an airplane is not a knowledge expanding experience; it is skill development experience. Anyone care to chime in and share their experiences on entering the non-aviation job market after being out of college 20-30 years?