>>11928947Mainly that theyre trained robots, usually in the real world (aka the free market) you have to solve problems with no guidance and that have never been solved before in a daily basis, thats the exact opposite of whats done in the education system (except, maybe in your thesis, but then the problem with thesis and dissertations is that you dont have a client to satisfy the needs of, youre like a state company that gets every money it needs from taxes). College graduates have an extremely limited mind, its narrow, closed to possibilites outside of an scope thats so small that the second it strays from it the person becomes a burden
You ever notice how people that go to college almost always want to be an employee? They subconsciously know what Im saying is true
>>11928951Creating systems, databases, maintaing code, researching for market preferences, dealing with governmental bureaucracy, building new offices or upgrading the spaces, human resources, etc
Its always best when the employee shows some previous experience doing what we want, usually we also get promising candidates from other companies and small talk (obviously everything possible is researched before we call him)
>it doesn't take a degree in physics to get coffee or use a printerYup
>writing programs, analyzing date, and other high skill required jobs usually do.I fail to see why, specialists without degrees are the most desirable in some occasions as they spent the same if not more ammount of time you did in college, but on an specific field (like data analysis)