How happy them seem. Sigh... pic from vanderbilt.edu |
Getting an interesting, well-paid job upon graduating from
uni is a rare and much-coveted occurrence these days. Actually, stories of
graduates finding any jobs at all are sufficiently scarce. Pretty much everyone
seems to go to uni (thank you, Tony Blair and your spiel about getting 50% of
school leavers into higher education), and apparently coming out of the process
merely with a degree to your name isn’t enough. More and more often, students
are going crazy doing everything they can for the purpose of improving their
CVs (and thus their employability), and as one of those ambitious, obsessed
freaks, I can tell you it can get a bit out of hand.
One way this has manifested itself is the fact that over the
past two years or so I have done a casual 11 work experience placements.
Holidays are over-rated, right? And I’m not alone… I’m sure there are many of
you out there juggling three jobs during term-time whilst trying to
simultaneously carve your niche in the blogosphere, learn a foreign language
and become a vet. So many young people are pushing themselves to the limits to
improve their employability, and why do we do this to ourselves? I blame
society, of course. At the end of the day, everything comes down to the notion
of success that is drilled into us from a young age: all my school
extra-curriculars led to being team captains, then the school council, a
prefect, getting into a good university, then hopefully coming out with a good
degree, which should then lead to a great job, allowing me to live in a nice
house, drive a snazzy car and have pretty handbags. Then I will be happy,
right? Of course I will. Because that’s the image of success.
With fees going up to a record high this year, a lot of
people are understandably questioning the value of a university degree. Will
having a degree really make so much of a difference to employers that it will
justify the massive debt accumulated in the process? Starting in September, a
four year cost will cost £36,000 – an incredible £22,500 more than it does
currently. We hear plenty of stories in the press of school leavers with
perhaps only a couple of A-Levels to their name earning more than graduates
from top universities who studied rigorous degrees. Are apprenticeships, work
placements and internships really more attractive to employers?
At uni, I’m sure no-one will argue with me when I say a lot
of students do nothing. I mean literally nothing outside their course (and
probably not very much of that, come to think of it), and that’s absolutely
fine. But on the flipside, there are a lot of students trying to do everything,
who struggle to say “no” to opportunities, and who suffer from FOMO (fear of
missing out, duh.) This is all very well until you realise you’ve barely got
time to do your degree work, and then that suffers accordingly. You just can’t
win, can you? At uni there are just so many incredible things to do, new things
to try and opportunities to seize, and with only a few precious years here, we
unsurprisingly want to get involved with as much as we can. Older people never
talk about their uni regrets saying “Oh, I wish I hadn’t got involved with so
many activities”, do they? It’s always the other way round.
So my advice to all students is to seize this exciting time in
your lives and get involved with some of the opportunities on offer. Chances
are you’ll love it and so will future potential employers. But don’t try and do
too much. Then you’ll fail your degree and employers definitely won’t love you.
So, just get the balance right, yeah? Easy. Path to success: sorted.
Brilliant, brilliant post xx
ReplyDeleteThank you very much - your comment means a lot. x
DeleteI completely agree. University is as much about the experience as it is about the degree. It's about discovering who you are, what makes you tick, what you're passionate about and it's also about meeting lots of different people, particularly those you wouldn't necessarily choose to hang out with. I would sacrifice a first class degree for a first class university experience with tons of memories and tons of friends. I find that my professors are really encouraging about all the theatre and CU stuff I do because it proves that I'm not a machine and that I have GENUINE interests. Great posts. Love the blog.
ReplyDeleteWell said, my friend. That's so good to hear. Thanks Ellie :) x
DeleteHi Rachel,
ReplyDeleteI've been following your blog for a while now and I'm genuinely so impressed!
This post sums up exactly how I feel about uni (I also go to Bristol!) and the FOMO thing made me laugh, it's definitely true - I'm sat here panicking desperately trying to sort out work experience but also planning to take a language course in the evening and write my own blog.
I just wondered if you have any advice on how you do so much? I'm the same as you, I love to do loads of things but even when I'm trying to be organised things always get neglected (it's usually either my blog or my uni work). Do you still get good grades whilst doing everything you do?! I'm just wondering if you have some advice or do you find you also have to sacrifice things, such as going out or uni work?
Thank you!
Hello there and thank you so much for reading and for your lovely comment.
DeleteGo for it! Definitely try and do all that if you can, but don't stress yourself out. I know, it's hard to find the balance.
I actually wrote this post in first year, but last year (second year) I did cut back on my extra curriculars and devoted more time to my studies. Uni work is most important at the end of the day, and we have to remember that. Thankfully I have managed to get results I'm pleased with. And to be fair I don't go 'out' out that much - not a huge club girl, and with my little free time I just like to relax on the sofa with my mates. And maybe a packet of Maltesers :)
I think the trick is to prioritise. We can't do everything, so pick what you really want to do and go for it.
Hope that helps a bit and I hope you're enjoying Bristol :)X