Favorable positioning
pilotyip said:
What does a degree have to do with education? A college degree today is available with very little education.
. . . . which might have been true in Mark Twain's day. He said he never let his schooling interfere with his education. But that was in the 19th century; we're in the 21st century now.
There are degree mills. You can be anything you want to be, Yip, with a mail-order degree; just don't get caught . . . .
And I can PM you with the names of pilots hired a UAL and NWA without degrees. Their hiring was based upon quality TJ PIC.
. . . but how many of those hired were high school only, Yip? Even fifteen years ago, if you read the "Congratulations, FAPA Pilots" box in each month's
Career Pilot magazine, the pilots hired by the majors had at least a couple of years of college, if not Bachelor's or advanced degrees.
You can make a $100/k as a pilot in your mid 30's without a degree. This for many who love to fly airplanes will be a fantastic career.
. . . . if you're lucky, I repeat, lucky, enough to be hired by one of the few companies who do not require the degree outright or emphasize strongly its importance.
Frankly, I'd rather go with the percentages instead of luck. The percentages show that one has a greater chance of being considered by all companies with a college degree.
And as far as your comment about wanting uneducated pilots so management can manipulate them, nothing could be farther from the truth. We test for basic intelligence, and it has nothing to do with degrees. Smart employees make better employees, they can see a bigger picture. Much like SWA, a smart airline does not let the presence or absence of a degree stand in the way hiring the right candidate.
That is Southwest's philosophy. Only one company, Yip, though you mentioned before that jetBlue and Spirit hire without degrees. So, that makes three. Talk about putting all of one's eggs in one (three) baskets.
A degree may have little or nothing to do with actually flying airplanes. But it has everything to do with being educated
and positioning one's self most favorably for getting the job.