Doctoral Degree Tier List 2024 (Doctorate Degrees RANKED)

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 252

  • @ShaneHummus
    @ShaneHummus  5 месяцев назад +1

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  • @MadeEasy353
    @MadeEasy353 Год назад +834

    Just got my Ph.D. in Gender studies and Gender Engineering. So excited. Can't wait to engineer new genders and see how they behave. I always had a passion for Starbucks.

    • @leslieclarkson2291
      @leslieclarkson2291 Год назад +40

      Lmaooo

    • @masturchief
      @masturchief Год назад +51

      lmao you walk from Calc 3 straight to woman’s studies class 😂😂

    • @larrysmith2655
      @larrysmith2655 Год назад +44

      Man, that Starbucks about to have so much soy in it.

    • @zappyoak588
      @zappyoak588 Год назад +13

      SLAY

    • @efemboygg
      @efemboygg Год назад +14

      congrats, hopefully you end up on some advisory board at a fortune 500 or a professor with 0 chance of tenure when they cut the degree(literally only 2 jobs i can think of)

  • @braylonlane3756
    @braylonlane3756 Год назад +175

    As a teacher, nobody goes into teaching wanting to earn a doctorate to CONTINUE TEACHING. People with educational doctorate’s are then qualified to become good applicants for administrative roles like principal, superintendent, or director of community education.

    • @E.Nicole
      @E.Nicole Год назад +26

      I didn’t see this comment but I just made a similar comment. He needs to better research that degree because his overview was inaccurate. Most the time if someone wants to be a professor they’ll obtain a Ph.D and that’s only for higher education. You don’t need a doctorate to teach K-12.

    • @braylonlane3756
      @braylonlane3756 Год назад +5

      @@E.Nicole Precisely. In my state, it’s common for Superintendents and High school level principals to have Ed.D’s and common for professors to have Ph.D.’s

    • @Jim_Tacitus
      @Jim_Tacitus Год назад +2

      i keep trying to get my wife to pursue a masters (shes been a teacher for 20 years) but she doesnt want to be an admin. i dont think she understands the economics of it.

    • @jamesgaston2745
      @jamesgaston2745 Год назад +6

      I think another error he makes with this and a few other professions is we don't start in education for a big bank account. Satisfaction should be weighted more heavily because as a society we have pushed people towards a best financial outcome model and now we are seeing a very dissatisfied and disillusioned society.

    • @E.Nicole
      @E.Nicole Год назад

      @@jamesgaston2745 Great point!

  • @amydassi4429
    @amydassi4429 Год назад +32

    Shane, I know this is unrelated but I just wanted to share that I just graduated from college with a Bachelor’s in Business Management and landed a job with a $65k starting salary at a big company with great benefits and guaranteed advancement after 2 years! They also will pay for me to get my MBA if I want. Your videos helped me a lot in feeling confident that I chose a good major :)

  • @kevfer7570
    @kevfer7570 Год назад +21

    Just wanted to drop my 2 cents here, I'm a physics PhD student. I can't speak for other sciences, but if you have a bachelors in physics/math and you do just a little bit of career prep junior/senior year of college you can line up 70-90k jobs quite readily. As far as PhD goes, you can land really lucrative jobs in analytical fields like insurance, finance, medicine, tech deep into 6 figures. It's a very different reality than just grossly looking at all jobs marked 'scientist'.

    • @felixkalpa
      @felixkalpa Год назад

      McKinsey came recruiting physci/math bachelors a month before graduation in my year. The head of the recruitment team was former durector of the low temp condensed matter lab at Princeton. Becoming a destroyer of society is definitely an option for scientists tired of the research and publishing hamster wheel.

    • @pnutbutta1234567
      @pnutbutta1234567 Год назад +2

      Yep. Physics is a math degree so you can get a job pretty much anywhere.

    • @felixkalpa
      @felixkalpa Год назад +1

      The reverse isn't true, most of the math students I knew hated doing labs and avoided physics and chem classes.

    • @pnutbutta1234567
      @pnutbutta1234567 Год назад +1

      @@felixkalpa How they felt about it is irrelevant. On average, how many students have a passion for labs and homework over the course of a degree? Once you get the degree though, you can work in I.T., finance, insurance, government, medicine -anywhere

    • @felixkalpa
      @felixkalpa Год назад

      How many? At the undergrad level about 15% in my program were left after 4 years, some of them changing to pure math because they hated the labs (some of which were admittedly pretty bad and run by techs with axes to grind). But really doing just math makes more sense going into finance and consulting etc. because none of those gigs have anything to do with actual lab experimentation.

  • @michaeldillman1660
    @michaeldillman1660 Год назад +222

    As a PhD student, one thing I think most people don't realize is that you don't pay for a PhD in most fields - excluding professional schools like Law/Med school.
    Typically, you don't pay any tuition and are given a stipend of ~$2,500-$3,000/month (twice that if you're in the University of Cali system) to conduct research, assistant teach, etc.
    Another thing many people seem to miss (Shane included) is that most doctoral students in social sciences (Econ/Psych/Poli Sci/etc) gain valuable data science skills that enable them to work private sector tech jobs after completing their program. For example, just half of Econ PhD's currently work in academia. The other half work industry jobs. The average pay shows $150k, but that's because the $100k academia jobs are balanced out by the $200k industry jobs.

    • @Thatguy-mo8jd
      @Thatguy-mo8jd Год назад +5

      Everybody knows PhDs get a stipend while in the program. Also your example using Econ shows how some are much more valuable while things like: art, history, engineering, etc are not so valuable. Also, the person who is smart enough to get a PhD in Econ is likely giving up a 70-80k job that doesn’t require crazy hours. So it still stands that a majority of individuals likely don’t come out ahead when looking at all those factors.

    • @TheWorldTeacher
      @TheWorldTeacher Год назад +1

      doctor: a teacher, from Middle English (in the senses “learned person” and “Doctor of the Church”): via Old French, from the Latin “doctor” (“teacher”), from “docere” (“to teach”). Later, the word “doctor” was appropriated by the medical profession to denote a physician.
      Throughout the modern world, tertiary education institutions have been given the right to confer Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degrees by the government of their respective countries. This is a fundamentally-flawed system for the following two reasons:
      As has been proven beyond any semblance of doubt in Chapter 22 of this “A Final Instruction Sheet for Humanity”, non-monarchical governments have absolutely no authority whatsoever over the populace of their countries or nations. And even if a nation was ruled by a LEGITIMATE government (that is, a holy and righteous king), it is not within the purview of a national ruler to adjudicate which educational institutions are qualified to confer scholastic awards to its citizens. That function is best executed by a completely independent administrative body, established by recognized experts in a range of academic disciplines. The role of a national ruler is to protect the population and to ensure that the law (“dharma”, in Sanskrit) is enforced and promulgated. Furthermore, universities and colleges (especially in the Western world) have been increasingly promoting what is colloquially known as “leftism” (“adharma”, in Sanskrit), as well as bestowing post-graduate degrees upon those who would never have been able to even enter a university in previous centuries (not to mention a certain proportion of abject dunces, simply due to the fact that life in the West is relatively easy, and those dullards are able to spend several years of their lives in study, without needing to work for their livelihoods).
      Personally, I am extremely glad to not be counted amongst those imbeciles who have garnered a masters degree or a doctorate at a government-endorsed institute of “education”. As the current World Doctor Himself, I have witnessed that the calibre of the typical doctoral candidate is nowadays so appalling, that I would be loath to be the recipient of a PhD degree from any extant so-called “university/college”. Honestly, I would consider it to be a great DISHONOUR! Even the so-called “hard sciences”, such as physics, chemistry, mathematics, biology, and engineering, have become increasingly adulterated by adharma. For example, in Western academia (and by the time you are reading this Scripture, most all the schools of higher-learning in the East too) it is, in practice, impossible for an academic to assert the scientific fact that intelligence has a biological (that is, a genetic) component, and even if one was permitted to posit such a truism, it would be frowned upon to stress the fact that a person’s genome is the predominating factor in determining one’s intellectual capacity (not to mention bringing racial differences into the picture!). See also “philosophy”.
      P.S. Marcus Tullius Cicero, the Roman statesman and philosopher who first introduced the term “doctor” in his book, “De Oratore”, in 55 BC, used the word to describe denote a MORAL guide of the state. Cicero breaks down the term “docere” further and summarizes that “to teach” means to provide truth through rational argument and statement of facts. Therefore, according to this most authentic definition of the term, very few so-called “doctors” are, in fact, doctors, at least in the field of academic philosophy.

    • @le4864
      @le4864 Год назад +1

      No lie this blew me up wow thanks!!!!!

    • @biajidejajchowdhury1058
      @biajidejajchowdhury1058 Год назад +4

      200k job for Econ phd, good luck!

    • @drmadjdsadjadi
      @drmadjdsadjadi Год назад +4

      @@biajidejajchowdhury1058 $200k+ is not hard to get honestly as an Econ PhD IF you are employed at a consulting firm.

  • @kennethkau2332
    @kennethkau2332 Год назад +78

    Hi Shane,
    Definitely overlooked Economics PhD’s. Econ PhD’s do very well on the job market compared to other social sciences, even better than Psychology.
    PhD Economists need advanced mathematics such as linear algebra, differential equations, probability theory, real analysis, and high GRE scores just to get into a PhD program. Rigorous barriers to entry limit the supply of graduates.
    All Econ PhD’s can code or use some sort of statistical software.

    • @kennethkau2332
      @kennethkau2332 Год назад +11

      Also, Econ PhD’s have great employment prospects in government, finance, business, etc, not to mention econ professors are some of the best compensated.

    • @TheMorhaGroup
      @TheMorhaGroup Год назад +2

      yeah especially with the Swedish body creating a noble prize -Esque award for it, econ has really picked up steam in value

    • @Simple.Wordless
      @Simple.Wordless Год назад +3

      Yeah my Economics chair at my public university makes $230,000+

    • @michaeldillman1660
      @michaeldillman1660 Год назад +1

      If you aim for industry jobs from the start, you can gain the data science and consulting skills in most social sciences (Poli Sci/Psych/Econ etc)

    • @mr.nicolas4367
      @mr.nicolas4367 Год назад

      Real analysis?

  • @dannypresson
    @dannypresson Год назад +51

    Hello Shane. If you want to generate more content on this topic you may consider exploring the specializations within each of these disciplines. For instance, I have a PhD in Industrial/Organizational Psychology but I have never, and will not ever, conduct a therapy session like a Clinical Psychologist. In fact, it would be illegal for me to do so.
    Psychology has many sub-disciplines beneath it (e.g., Clinical, Experimental, Cognitive, Neuropsychology, Social Psych, and I/O). As you probably already know, all of these areas have significantly different educational tracks and outcomes. Point being, when you present information for psychologists with a PhD, it can appear incomplete given the different avenues one can go down. Apologies if you have already done this, I just recently found your channel. Best.

    • @TheWorldTeacher
      @TheWorldTeacher Год назад

      doctor: a teacher, from Middle English (in the senses “learned person” and “Doctor of the Church”): via Old French, from the Latin “doctor” (“teacher”), from “docere” (“to teach”). Later, the word “doctor” was appropriated by the medical profession to denote a physician.
      Throughout the modern world, tertiary education institutions have been given the right to confer Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degrees by the government of their respective countries. This is a fundamentally-flawed system for the following two reasons:
      As has been proven beyond any semblance of doubt in Chapter 22 of this “A Final Instruction Sheet for Humanity”, non-monarchical governments have absolutely no authority whatsoever over the populace of their countries or nations. And even if a nation was ruled by a LEGITIMATE government (that is, a holy and righteous king), it is not within the purview of a national ruler to adjudicate which educational institutions are qualified to confer scholastic awards to its citizens. That function is best executed by a completely independent administrative body, established by recognized experts in a range of academic disciplines. The role of a national ruler is to protect the population and to ensure that the law (“dharma”, in Sanskrit) is enforced and promulgated. Furthermore, universities and colleges (especially in the Western world) have been increasingly promoting what is colloquially known as “leftism” (“adharma”, in Sanskrit), as well as bestowing post-graduate degrees upon those who would never have been able to even enter a university in previous centuries (not to mention a certain proportion of abject dunces, simply due to the fact that life in the West is relatively easy, and those dullards are able to spend several years of their lives in study, without needing to work for their livelihoods).
      Personally, I am extremely glad to not be counted amongst those imbeciles who have garnered a masters degree or a doctorate at a government-endorsed institute of “education”. As the current World Doctor Himself, I have witnessed that the calibre of the typical doctoral candidate is nowadays so appalling, that I would be loath to be the recipient of a PhD degree from any extant so-called “university/college”. Honestly, I would consider it to be a great DISHONOUR! Even the so-called “hard sciences”, such as physics, chemistry, mathematics, biology, and engineering, have become increasingly adulterated by adharma. For example, in Western academia (and by the time you are reading this Scripture, most all the schools of higher-learning in the East too) it is, in practice, impossible for an academic to assert the scientific fact that intelligence has a biological (that is, a genetic) component, and even if one was permitted to posit such a truism, it would be frowned upon to stress the fact that a person’s genome is the predominating factor in determining one’s intellectual capacity (not to mention bringing racial differences into the picture!). See also “philosophy”.
      P.S. Marcus Tullius Cicero, the Roman statesman and philosopher who first introduced the term “doctor” in his book, “De Oratore”, in 55 BC, used the word to describe denote a MORAL guide of the state. Cicero breaks down the term “docere” further and summarizes that “to teach” means to provide truth through rational argument and statement of facts. Therefore, according to this most authentic definition of the term, very few so-called “doctors” are, in fact, doctors, at least in the field of academic philosophy.

  • @abrahamlincoln7912
    @abrahamlincoln7912 Год назад +29

    I’m trying to get into dental school right now. There are plenty of opportunities to get scholarships that will pay for all 4 years but with certain criteria: you usually just have to work in an underserved area for 1-2 years. I definitely think that the career is worth it, especially if you’re interested in a surgical-type profession without wanting to spend 10+ years in medical school and residency.

    • @Qwasieee_P
      @Qwasieee_P Год назад

      I mean 1-2 is still experience you can write in your resume. Good thing education is free in my country lol.

    • @wolfworks7339
      @wolfworks7339 Год назад +1

      Free dental school in exchange for a guaranteed job? Is there even a downside to this? XD

  • @FullmetalScientist
    @FullmetalScientist Год назад +41

    My two cents on the STEM PhD category. I think the overview you gave was pretty broad and missed a few things. Yes, there might not be a need for a graduate level degree for these fields. But typically you can come in as a more senior level or higher pay grade that could take longer to achieve with a BS+exp. Additionally, PhDs in these fields are trained to be researchers so the job prospects can vary quite heavily. Aside from academia, PhDs can pursue industry R&D jobs, National lab positions, build startups, do consulting, or managerial roles. I think many people underestimate the versatility of the problem solving and project management skill set one develops after a very focused period of doing research for a PhD.

    • @Iphie2019
      @Iphie2019 Год назад +9

      I completely agree with your comment. I am currently getting a PhD in Quantitative Biomedical Science and what prompted me to get it is cos I work in R&D as an epidemiologist. It was clear that a PHD will be most beneficial to my career success.

    • @blessedswimmer
      @blessedswimmer Год назад +2

      Agree wholeheartedly with the previous comment. I would echo, as someone pursuing a PhD in a science field, that the landscape is very broad with respect to the job fields my skills are applicable to, and there is a wide salary range depending on the interest. I’ve seen people go into everything from academia, to direct officer rank in the military, to R&D. Most recently I’ve seen a few colleagues parlay their science PhDs into 6 figure tech jobs! A lot of people getting a science PhD pick up coding in at least one language to deal with all the data being generated. That transferable skill is great for folks wanting to go into something like data science or software engineering.

  • @michaelhilton1753
    @michaelhilton1753 Год назад +9

    Some PhD programs actually pay for your schooling, chemistry for example. You won’t accumulate debt in most hard sciences.

    • @mariosblago94
      @mariosblago94 7 месяцев назад +1

      Most do. It's literally the whole point of a PhD. If you have to pay to work for the school, run... get your PhD anywhere else.

  • @depiction3435
    @depiction3435 20 дней назад +1

    I've been in the Hedge Fund industry for 19 years now, and I run my own fund now. If you are thinking of getting into anything quant or hedge fund related, make sure you can pass the various tests that different parts of the industry give. Quant funds essentially give IQ tests, and I can't tell you how many PhDs fail these. I've had a few that just cry and go into a full blown panic attack once they fail, and no wonder considering they spent a good portion of their life doing something that is basically useless to them, or that they then have to settle for less. I will say that I've seen some very smart BS degrees just walk into an interview and out perform the PhDs. We hired one guy right out of school who has a BS in stats, and who just smoked the competition, and within two years had both his CFA and FRM. If you can't perform at the highest level, or you're not certain, do yourself a favor and go into engineering or something.

    • @ShaneHummus
      @ShaneHummus  20 дней назад

      Pretty cool that hedge fund managers watch my videos. Appreciate the comment!

  • @Biggamehunna
    @Biggamehunna Год назад +19

    The problem with Clinical Psychology is not how long the schooling is, and people being unaware of that. The problem is how difficult it is to get into these programs. I dropped the idea of doing this because of the low odds of getting into one of these programs in Canada. I was going to get honours, do extra undergrad research, volunteer, do it all. But even if I did I was going to be one of hundreds or even thousands vying for the same 6-12 spots per program with a yearly intake.

    • @pnutbutta1234567
      @pnutbutta1234567 Год назад

      This usually applies if you are trying to get into a fairly new or highly specialized sub set or one of the popular brand name schools like McGill. Cast a wider a net.

    • @Biggamehunna
      @Biggamehunna Год назад +1

      @@pnutbutta1234567 As far as I know this is for every accredited clinical psychology program in Canada. Private, non-accredited programs are easier but then you have to pay way more and need to seek accreditation after your program

    • @pnutbutta1234567
      @pnutbutta1234567 Год назад

      @@Biggamehunna I imagine you a re talking about CPA accredited programs, if so, then I know for a fact that Saskatchewan and Manitoba had openings. . .like I said, cast a wider net.

  • @bradymack
    @bradymack Год назад +6

    Do NOT go into pharmacy. Ten years ago it was a viable career, but most jobs are in the retail sector. Due to low staffing and an increasing number of tasks needed to be done, pharmacy is a dumpster fire right now. Signed: a former pharmacist.

  • @bjjacksonii508
    @bjjacksonii508 Год назад +26

    Could you go in depth a little about the science phd and explain those differences such as biology, chemistry, biochemistry, physics, and geology with their flexibility if you haven’t already?

  • @CHiCguitar
    @CHiCguitar Год назад +7

    Pharmacy student here. My school's class size has decreased by almost half in the last 5 years or so. I think they're working on it from my perspective. It's definitely not as easy to get in as it was even 5 years ago.

  • @trevonmuhammad7830
    @trevonmuhammad7830 Год назад +7

    I think you may need to do more research on educational doctorates. There is a diversity of educational doctorates beyond teaching; ranging from creating curriculum, superintended or director of any teaching, learning, and educational companies that are public private or non-for profit. You can also become a tech specialist, dean, president, vp, or even a chancellor. And all make well over 6 figures.

  • @jwc3104
    @jwc3104 3 месяца назад +2

    Engineering PhD’s could be really good for couple of reasons 1) usually tuition is free and you are paid some stipend. 2) can land 6fig jobs right out of the program, if you plan it early.

  • @codyfarlow
    @codyfarlow Год назад +4

    You should really break these down more. College Professor is a career not a PhD program. In engineering a PhD can be detrimental or expected depending on the field. Even within the same degree (ex: computer engineering) you may require a graduate degree to obtain jobs (ex chip design). A doctorate is considered a terminal degree which does not include a JD. There are also more industry focused programs now like the doctorate of engineering. The subspecialties will have a major impact as well. Doctorates get highly specific.

    • @codyfarlow
      @codyfarlow Год назад +1

      Also, optometry is a specialty for an MD so I have no idea why you separated the two.

    • @commentfiend
      @commentfiend 6 месяцев назад

      That's opthalmology, not an optometrist or an optician. The order of those is MD + residency training, doctor of optometry, optician which is more of a technician ​@@codyfarlow

    • @codyfarlow
      @codyfarlow 6 месяцев назад

      @@commentfiend thank you for the correction.

  • @KuroiXHF
    @KuroiXHF 7 месяцев назад +2

    I think I missed stats/biostatistics/data science. Not sure how that would fall. It's ok. There is a ton of material to cover.
    I do have to say I love how you read comments and allow yourself to be humbled from others. We can only have so much experience and can only get so much knowledge from sources.

  • @Biomeducated
    @Biomeducated Год назад +4

    PhD program in about 4.5 years for me (Belgium).
    Cool to see I've made it to B tier in the US. :p
    Also, didn't know you are a pharmacist!

  • @Nectarine998
    @Nectarine998 Год назад +3

    Going to one of the top rated pharmacy schools in the country next year, yay! I worry a little about the lack of job growth but since I am not going into this just for an easy 6-figure income, but rather because I love pharmaceuticals. I'm planning on clinical and specializing into Pediatrics. I'm so excited!

  • @kat.ex3909
    @kat.ex3909 Год назад +5

    I applaud anyone who wanted to further to doctorate cuz like I don’t think many want to go to school for that long.

  • @tristanbeyer8351
    @tristanbeyer8351 Год назад +3

    Hi Shane,
    I think your part on the doctorate in ed is a bit misleading -- not intentionally, of course! From my understanding, almost all people who get doctorates in education are either going into administration or becoming a professor. Maybe professor is C tier, and if it was just for high school teaching it would not be above c tier, but administration ranges from principal to superintendent of a school district. Those guys can in some cases make even more than doctors, so you might adjust your rankings based on this information.

  • @notequalto5179
    @notequalto5179 Год назад +3

    I started with a bachelor's degree in information science and am doing my doctoral degree in Psychology. I started with a higher pay job and taught me how to work with data and tech. This helped my psych PhD program greatly.

    • @carinatorres9139
      @carinatorres9139 3 месяца назад

      im interested in learning more about this. sounds interesting!

  • @glitcharcing
    @glitcharcing 14 дней назад

    lol I’m so confused by the college professor entry for a doctoral degree before i quickly realized this is actually a tier list for jobs that require doctoral degree

  • @moiseshernandez6241
    @moiseshernandez6241 Год назад +8

    Getting my PhD in Clinical Psychology at the moment. Would love if you could separate PhD in Clinical Psychology from PsyDs. PsyDs are very likely not funded at all, whereas Ph.D. are likely to be funded at least for the first two years.

    • @leeroy9713
      @leeroy9713 Год назад

      what do you mean by “funded”?

    • @moehern
      @moehern Год назад +1

      @@leeroy9713 for PhD's particularly at institutions that do research, tuition is very often waived for PhD students and they get paid a stipend every semester to help cover living expenses

    • @Laura-Yu
      @Laura-Yu Год назад

      You think he’d do that when he literally clumped all the science majors together? Lol

    • @moehern
      @moehern Год назад

      @@Laura-Yu haha true. Did the best he could I guess!

  • @jessewfowler
    @jessewfowler Год назад +4

    Not sure you understood the assignment, bro.

  • @rbq19931
    @rbq19931 Год назад +11

    As someone currently getting a PhD in Political Science (Also have a masters in Econ), I would say that you should definitely NOT go into debt for any social science/humanities degree. Also, the school ranking matters quite a lot for finding a job as a professor.
    So, don’t go in debt and go to a top program in your field. Only then, a PhD might* be worth it.

    • @pnutbutta1234567
      @pnutbutta1234567 Год назад +2

      kinda, however, there's a been a shift over the last few years to publishing. If you go to or went to a lower ranked or even a mid-tier school, you can get around the ranking issue with published works and conference presentation.

  • @ShecalledmeKING
    @ShecalledmeKING 5 месяцев назад +1

    lol what Teacher do you know walking around with a Ed.D. Those who go that far usually are Principals, Curriculum Designers and superintendents. Well over 150K

  • @Kingz602
    @Kingz602 Год назад +3

    Make a video for specifically a PhD for in Economics and DBA (Business Administration)

  • @brianwskim
    @brianwskim Год назад +2

    I will say that as a physical therapist, I’ve noticed a lot of survivorship bias. not many people last more than 5 years, and job satisfaction metrics are skewed towards people who have stayed on past that point. In Australia, I’ve heard that 50% of us change careers within 5 years.

  • @harveyts3
    @harveyts3 Год назад +3

    I'm about 1/4 of the way through my doctorate in data analytics from a world renound university. I'm paying out of pocket but had to go into a lot of debt before my job got me to the place I am today after getting my master's. These things are all given and take. There is no real ROI for my doctorate. When I do the calculations, I might break even based on opportunity costs. I might even come out a little behind between now and 17 years post graduation. However when I leave industry I want to teach university after I retire and this is the way that is possible. Of course I will end up making more then I would if I live long enough but you need to have the goals that I have to make that make sense too.

  • @TheWorldTeacher
    @TheWorldTeacher Год назад +2

    doctor: a teacher, from Middle English (in the senses “learned person” and “Doctor of the Church”): via Old French, from the Latin “doctor” (“teacher”), from “docere” (“to teach”). Later, the word “doctor” was appropriated by the medical profession to denote a physician.
    Throughout the modern world, tertiary education institutions have been given the right to confer Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degrees by the government of their respective countries. This is a fundamentally-flawed system for the following two reasons:
    As has been proven beyond any semblance of doubt in Chapter 22 of this “A Final Instruction Sheet for Humanity”, non-monarchical governments have absolutely no authority whatsoever over the populace of their countries or nations. And even if a nation was ruled by a LEGITIMATE government (that is, a holy and righteous king), it is not within the purview of a national ruler to adjudicate which educational institutions are qualified to confer scholastic awards to its citizens. That function is best executed by a completely independent administrative body, established by recognized experts in a range of academic disciplines. The role of a national ruler is to protect the population and to ensure that the law (“dharma”, in Sanskrit) is enforced and promulgated. Furthermore, universities and colleges (especially in the Western world) have been increasingly promoting what is colloquially known as “leftism” (“adharma”, in Sanskrit), as well as bestowing post-graduate degrees upon those who would never have been able to even enter a university in previous centuries (not to mention a certain proportion of abject dunces, simply due to the fact that life in the West is relatively easy, and those dullards are able to spend several years of their lives in study, without needing to work for their livelihoods).
    Personally, I am extremely glad to not be counted amongst those imbeciles who have garnered a masters degree or a doctorate at a government-endorsed institute of “education”. As the current World Doctor Himself, I have witnessed that the calibre of the typical doctoral candidate is nowadays so appalling, that I would be loath to be the recipient of a PhD degree from any extant so-called “university/college”. Honestly, I would consider it to be a great DISHONOUR! Even the so-called “hard sciences”, such as physics, chemistry, mathematics, biology, and engineering, have become increasingly adulterated by adharma. For example, in Western academia (and by the time you are reading this Scripture, most all the schools of higher-learning in the East too) it is, in practice, impossible for an academic to assert the scientific fact that intelligence has a biological (that is, a genetic) component, and even if one was permitted to posit such a truism, it would be frowned upon to stress the fact that a person’s genome is the predominating factor in determining one’s intellectual capacity (not to mention bringing racial differences into the picture!). See also “philosophy”.
    P.S. Marcus Tullius Cicero, the Roman statesman and philosopher who first introduced the term “doctor” in his book, “De Oratore”, in 55 BC, used the word to describe denote a MORAL guide of the state. Cicero breaks down the term “docere” further and summarizes that “to teach” means to provide truth through rational argument and statement of facts. Therefore, according to this most authentic definition of the term, very few so-called “doctors” are, in fact, doctors, at least in the field of academic philosophy.

  • @sethjared
    @sethjared Год назад +8

    Great video! It is unbelievable that more people don't do this simple supply/demand research before enrolling in college. Back in the 1990s the demand for lawyers was so high that you could get a cushy corporate job right out of law school. My Dad changed careers and graduated in 1991 and doubled his previous career's salary. The movie "The Firm" with Tom Cruise came out around that time. Being a lawyer was hot! Cut to 2022, not so much. But it's always changing as the economy changes so it's super important to be aware of these trends.

    • @TheMorhaGroup
      @TheMorhaGroup Год назад +2

      the pursuit of education should not be boiled down to "supply and demand". you assume degrees only exist to get you a job and that is your first mistake.

    • @pnutbutta1234567
      @pnutbutta1234567 Год назад +1

      @@TheMorhaGroup That's exactly what they exist for😁

    • @TheMorhaGroup
      @TheMorhaGroup Год назад

      @@pnutbutta1234567 and that isn't true which is the point of my comment

    • @pnutbutta1234567
      @pnutbutta1234567 Год назад +1

      @@TheMorhaGroup and it is true which is the point of my comment

    • @joelmatus9442
      @joelmatus9442 Год назад

      @@TheMorhaGroup are you joking man. That's the main reason people do higher education for better job prospects.

  • @crabcrab2024
    @crabcrab2024 Год назад +1

    You distinguish between an acupuncturist and a chiropractor, but put all S PhDs together? What is wrong with you?

  • @cardsfan5100
    @cardsfan5100 Год назад +4

    A D of Ed is for those who want to go into administration (principal or above). Principals tend to not make less than $100,000/year.

    • @DNHarris
      @DNHarris Год назад

      Yes, I thought it was odd he assumed a EdD for primary/secondary teaching.. LUL, as a backup, maybe. If a EdD wanted to teach they would be well qualified to teach (or be an administrator) at the university level. An EdD is perfect for critical thinking skills required in top administrative positions in educational insitutions.
      Speaking of the DBA and PhD in Business Administration (or a PhD in Economics as someone else pointed out earlier), Shane made a huge miss by excluding this one. Businesses are becoming more aware of the need to have practitioner-scholars in leadership roles as global competition rises and navigating the social and political landscapes becomes more difficult. Businesses can benefit greatly when they have someone on payroll who has inductive, deductive, and abductive reasoning skills to apply to resolve their real world problems that affect their organization. Real world business application of research design, implementation, and dissemination is emphasized in any top-tier DBA or PhD Econ/Business program.

  • @ibmaui
    @ibmaui Год назад +6

    Thoughts on the DBA?

  • @matthewfontenot5157
    @matthewfontenot5157 7 месяцев назад +1

    I am sure there are classroom teachers out there with terminal degrees, but I do not know any personally. Most people with the EdD or PhD in education are in administration or higher ed. Also, I think the EdD is under appreciated. Lots of fields completely separate from K-12 and higher education offer the EdD. I have seen it tailored to business, nursing, audiology, dietetic, etc. students at different universities.

  • @glitcharcing
    @glitcharcing 14 дней назад

    Most doctoral degrees are funded unlike master’s programs, medical degrees, and juris doctoral degrees. The general advice is to not pursue a doctoral degree unless it is funded. Also when you looked up “psychologist” that only applied to clinical psychologists and therefore practitioners, not including researchers (within clinical as well as social, quant, and cognitive psych).

  • @ezekielesezobor7304
    @ezekielesezobor7304 Год назад +2

    Very informative content as always! Please can you do a video for Occupational Therapist (OTD)

  • @orpix34
    @orpix34 Год назад +3

    I think you’re overstating the difficulty and how selective becoming a college professor actually is. Yes, of course majors that don’t often lead to good jobs or jobs at all will have more people trying to become college professors, but there are many many universities out there and some of them NEED professors. Even if you can’t get a gig at a university immediately, it is a piece of cake to get one at a community college even with a Master’s and work your way up.

    • @Laura-Yu
      @Laura-Yu Год назад

      I think you’re mixing up professor versus instructor. It’s much easier to become an instructor while educational institutions are much more selective with professors

  • @correyretzloff6421
    @correyretzloff6421 Год назад +2

    Where does a Doctorate of Business Administration (DBA) rank?

  • @laurentruong
    @laurentruong Год назад +3

    AI/ML engineers “typically” need a PhD, still hard to get into the field with just a masters.

  • @mrcharlesjohnson
    @mrcharlesjohnson Год назад +2

    As a pharmacist, I’d say you put the pharmacist profession too high. You are correct about the schools. However, those jobs other than retail are hard to break into, AND getting a residency is super competitive.
    I’d say C-tier at best.

    • @harmanthind8936
      @harmanthind8936 10 часов назад

      The profession is definitely a high B or low A tier. There are so many things you can do with a PharmD, and it's not as difficult as you say it is to break into another field unless you're just lazy or an NPC

  • @onmas909
    @onmas909 Год назад +3

    2:18 Hi Shane. I was wondering what the PhDs are that are oversaturated?

  • @BlessingsfromBridget
    @BlessingsfromBridget Год назад +2

    I’ve seen job listings on Indeed for jobs that require a PhD in computer science that pay $400,000. I’m going for a BS in computer science right now. This pay makes me wonder if I should go for a PhD but you can make good money with just a BS in computer science anyway. I would like to go for an MS in computational linguistics (computer science + linguistics) after this degree

    • @pnutbutta1234567
      @pnutbutta1234567 Год назад +2

      @BlessingsfromBridget i'd take that with a grain of salt. look at the company that is offering that, where are thy located and how many other similar postings can you find. you can get a little over of 200k if you are in some of the tech hubs like CA, WA or NY -but typically those places have higher costs of living so your take home would be considerably less than say making a 120 grand and living in Iowa

  • @chrisdavis6264
    @chrisdavis6264 Год назад +1

    You forgot to add Doctorate of Business Administration!
    Please do a video on DBA and/or PhD of Business Administration

  • @dleesnuts
    @dleesnuts Год назад +1

    Some of these are crazy to me. No one gets a terminal degree in art to be an artist. The same can be said for musicians and teachers. There are broader administrative roles that having a doctorate can help with. I feel like you didn't put much research into the humanities based fields.

  • @dave4413
    @dave4413 Год назад +3

    Hi Shane, would you mind making a video of best majors to do if you are interested in Sport. I’m aware of sports science not being the best degree but looking at other careers that have the possibility to work alongside sport. E.g. data science. Thanks😊

  • @dominicryangabriel7930
    @dominicryangabriel7930 Год назад +3

    DBA?

  • @brandonsinger4857
    @brandonsinger4857 7 месяцев назад

    I dont know if you will update this for 2024 but you should touch on DNP (Doctor of Nurse Practice)
    the DNP essentially allows a seasoned and experienced nurse to "specialize" in a similar way to a physician. For example you can become a FMNP (family medicine nurse practitioner), a PMHNP (psychiatric/mental health NP), CRNA (certified registered nurse of anesthesia) and so many more!

  • @JamesJoyce12
    @JamesJoyce12 Месяц назад

    why a pharmacy PhD when you can do 90% of pharmacy without a PhD?

  • @Xh-xg2ll
    @Xh-xg2ll Год назад

    Hello, Shane! Could you please make a video on pharmacology? Would really appreciate it. Thank you.

  • @user-ug1ki8wu5z
    @user-ug1ki8wu5z Год назад

    Just jump into the PsyD Clinical Psych. Program. Indeed, most PsyDs do not provide as many scholarships as PhDs. But PsyDs provide more practicums than PhDs, which are priceless and beneficial when it comes to finding careers. Most people who graduated from our program receive much more pay than those listed on websites. So it really depends on who you met during those practicums, the internship, and what you're looking for.
    Besides, psychology is separated into various portions (Clinical psych, Counseling psych, Neuropsych...etc.), and their pay differs.
    However, since the growth of needs in these related careers has dramatically increased, it makes both PhDs and PsyDs even more challenging to enter. According to my admissions counselor, they received about 400-600 applicants each year from 2010 to 2019, while they accepted about 60 to 70 individuals for each cohort. However, the number of applicants increased started from 2020. They have more than 1,000, but the class is getting smaller than before, making it more competitive.
    Really highly recommend for those who want to join clinical psych deeply think about what you/they want to do before applying and what model do you want to participate in (Ph.D. and PsyD. are in different models). If you are NOT SURE about what you would like to do in the psychological field, please DO NOT apply to the psychological programs, especially the doctorates...

  • @gigiv769
    @gigiv769 Год назад +1

    I think an important aspect to incorporate into the ranking would be the opportunities for loan forgiveness programs.
    As a doctoral candidate in a PsyD clinical psychology program, I am only pursuing career options with loan forgiveness. it is actually very common through working at a VA, with the military and other non- profits. Furthermore, most of the PhD programs are fully funded and provide stipends.
    I was recently speaking about this with a friend who would like to go to law school but is not sure because of the debt he will incur- I was not able to relate given that I am not thinking about having to pay a lot of that debt back thanks to the various loan forgiveness options.
    The same is true for some of the other doctoral programs you mentioned and should be discussed.

  • @airiusadam2889
    @airiusadam2889 12 дней назад

    Wait till you see my PhD in League of Legends.
    I earn the Accreditation of Feeders and Trollers society, for having the highest rated mute bans, with the average KDA of -4.

  • @XXXmarquise
    @XXXmarquise Год назад

    I would like to suggest that maybe discussing more on the side of job satisfaction in relevance to the degree earned would help determine rankings. That as well as the general difficulty in earning the degree. Those would make certain people more or less inclined to pursue the degree, if they feel they would be fulfilled and happy in their career as well if the hard work they put into earning the degree was worth it.

  • @therese2523
    @therese2523 Год назад +1

    I would love to see you include Nurse Practitioner

  • @takuyamatsuda7214
    @takuyamatsuda7214 Год назад +3

    Good to know that a lot of veterinarians get depressed

  • @giovannierowe8847
    @giovannierowe8847 Год назад +2

    Doctor of Business Administration? It's good right?

  • @upsidedownheehoo
    @upsidedownheehoo Год назад +1

    Hello Shane, I’m thinking of becoming a psychologist but I live in Australia and I believe university is a lot different than in America, a lot better I’ve heard I’m wondering if you have any resources or suggestions for researching what I’m interested in, being a psychologist in Australia, thanks Shane great video as always :)

    • @TheInterficio
      @TheInterficio Год назад +1

      You've got the same bottle neck, it can potentially be tougher, since we tend to regulate Psychology a bit more, especially for the higher paying (i.E clinical psychologist) jobs. Youve got anywhere between 600-1200 people applying for Masters of Clinical Psychology, and around 20 slots per University.
      Its a great career, but you do need to make sure you get first class honours, and the big hurdle happens after you've already invested 4 years of study.

  • @omarpina9453
    @omarpina9453 Год назад

    Hey! Thank you for this! However, I think you missed Occupational Therapist Doctorate! It would be great if you can also give some info on that and compare it with a Physical Therapy Doctorate please and thank you!

  • @shelbychapa
    @shelbychapa 9 месяцев назад

    Wife is a vet, base pay is much higher now. 120k-150k plus bonuses.

  • @SpiceIsNice
    @SpiceIsNice Год назад +2

    I want to get a english degree. Do you think that's a good idea? (Keep I mind I want to be a english teacher for high schoolers.)

    • @XXXmarquise
      @XXXmarquise Год назад

      I wouldn't recommend going as far as a doctorate degree for any teaching jobs, because you can accomplish being an English teacher or high school teacher often with just a Bachelor or Master degree in the relevant subject.

  • @mgminthantaung1363
    @mgminthantaung1363 Год назад

    Wow bro. Love it. 💝🌟 Thank you very much

  • @Acoztwin
    @Acoztwin 2 месяца назад

    On your next video can you include DBAs?

  • @Basilisk4119
    @Basilisk4119 2 месяца назад

    Get a Phd and then write books about what you know; you'll be quids in

  • @informationsuperhighway101
    @informationsuperhighway101 Год назад +4

    did you get 15k results for lawyer bc you typed "lawer"

    • @informationsuperhighway101
      @informationsuperhighway101 Год назад

      i just punched it in and got 95k

    • @alienboogieman
      @alienboogieman Год назад +1

      He typed lawyer in the search bar look again.

    • @sender155
      @sender155 Год назад

      Interestingly enough, this would be a misleading search. I think more typically in the U.S., firms are looking to hire an "attorney", not a lawyer. The destinction being an attorney has a license to practice law and a lawyer has only passed law school, not necessarily the bar exam.

  • @ingsmiley
    @ingsmiley Год назад +4

    Nothing for the business majors 😮

  • @user-mz7kc8sp9p
    @user-mz7kc8sp9p 6 месяцев назад

    Hi shane , im moses and since last year I've been viewing your videos and am actually impressed. I've just completed high school and I would wish to pursue pharmaceutical science kindly enlighten me about it

  • @thatonegirl6880
    @thatonegirl6880 Год назад +1

    I make the same as a doctor in Physical Therapy and as a psychologist with my Masters degree.

  • @sender155
    @sender155 Год назад +1

    I haven't seen much discussion on lawyer here. I have two points. I believe a J.D. should get a small boost as it is typically a 3 year program, much shorter than most of the other degrees. Additionally, I think the job search needs to encompass the term "attorney", not lawyer. My current understanding of distinction, as a law student and working in a law sector, is that an attorney is licensed and passed the bar exam whereas a lawyer has only passed law school. I recognize the focus on the entry level for the video, but I think a J.D. fits better into A tier with an asterisk similar to the "college professor" segment. Law salaries tend to be bimodial, where you can start at 200k in some fields, and start at 45k in others. Some law fields are absolutely S tier, but some are definitely C tier too.
    Side note, I think M.D goes to A tier for the time, money, and stress involved in getting started. Residency is no joke, and you are dirt broke for a good 4 years.
    TEM should be S tier, and I don't even think an argument is needed.

  • @anuragchakraborty8766
    @anuragchakraborty8766 Год назад +1

    PhD in Mechanical Engineering. Unemployed since 1 year.

  • @alicomparisons
    @alicomparisons Год назад

    Im french and studies to become dentists are 6 years long and they're free, but the average salary is around 100k euros (around 110k dollars) is becoming a dentist in french worth it ?

  • @kurtsalm2155
    @kurtsalm2155 Год назад +1

    I'm an architect with 45 years in the profession. The first professional degree is now Master of Architecture if your school has the so-called 4 + 2 program (instituted circa 1970). That program combines the Bachelor of Science in Architectural Studies (BSAS) with the Master of Architecture to qualify you for state licensure and full professional status. The BSAS degree, along with a nickel will get you a cup of Jack Squat in the job market. In other words, the master's is mandatory. Some schools still offer the 5-year Bachelor of Architecture degree (the only choice prior to 1970) which still qualifies for licensure. An optional one-year master's on top of that is available as "frosting on the cake", if you will.
    Doctorates in Architecture are rare and are not worth the cost, time and effort if the goal is professional practice because architecture is a DESIGN discipline, not RESEARCH intensive. If you want a life in academia, a doctorate might be helpful in that case. In contrast to other fields, architecture faculty usually do not have PhD's. The doctorate is not by any means required for professional practice and may even be a hindrance by labeling you as overqualified.

    • @graciethecat2181
      @graciethecat2181 Месяц назад +1

      Would you recommend becoming an architect? The architects I know are pretty disgruntled.

  • @aaronbarton227
    @aaronbarton227 Год назад +2

    Going for my MSc-Project Management and Operations at Southern New Hampshire University. Luckily, for me, I have the Post 9/11 GI Bill that is paid at 100%.
    Associate of Science in Business Administration at SMC
    Bachelor of Science in Hospitality Management w/minor in Meetings and Events Management at UNLV
    *Master of Science in Project Management and Operations at SNHU
    Note: *Pending

    • @pnutbutta1234567
      @pnutbutta1234567 Год назад

      @aaronbarton227 depending on if you want to work in project management, look at getting the PMP as soon as you can.

  • @Simple.Wordless
    @Simple.Wordless Год назад +2

    No DBA or DHA?

  • @marcelalopez311
    @marcelalopez311 Год назад

    I dont like the debt ratio used. MUST consider energy balance. The energy investment in a concert, vynils just goes to waste. The energy investment in a new building, house gives you back a home, etc.

    • @marcelalopez311
      @marcelalopez311 Год назад

      2) More educated persons in pharmacy means an improvement in population health! What's wrong with this guy!

  • @deondrej.jackson8129
    @deondrej.jackson8129 4 месяца назад

    People don’t get EdDs to be teachers. Especially not high school teacher…

  • @JV3Player
    @JV3Player Год назад +2

    I think when ranking degrees towards careers you can really categorize two pools of opportunities based upon undergraduate and graduate studies. Sounds like for most higher level medical professions you need a Doctoral. I'm wondering what the best medicine and medical undergraduate degrees would be?

    • @CHiCguitar
      @CHiCguitar Год назад

      There isn't very much in the field you can do with just a bachelors. There are plenty of technicians in every area that only require a high school diploma, though! I know Dental Hygiene is a BSDH program and Nursing is a BSN to specifically become an RN. Other health professions require a Masters, like PAs, Anesthesiologist's Assistants, Nurse Practitioners, Pathologist's Assistants and most research requires either a Masters or PhD.

  • @thomaskim5008
    @thomaskim5008 Год назад +3

    He does not know what he is talking about

  • @justwatchvideos11
    @justwatchvideos11 4 месяца назад

    Look at him wearing glasses and not being able to see the flaw of rating optometry lower than physical therapy. 🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @BronacKon
    @BronacKon 7 месяцев назад

    The science doctorate is way off. You can get jobs at the BS level and you are not likely to go into debt because tuition is usually waived for private schools and in state rates are given for public universities. You also get teaching assistantships positions as first to second year students and research grants in later years. Essentially you are paid to go to grad school, albeit not well, but certainly enough to survive without taking out loans. It usually takes about 5 years to get a PhD, and you don't need to get a masters first.

  • @annebebee6764
    @annebebee6764 Год назад +1

    What about Doctor of Nursing Practice?

  • @johnaburus5803
    @johnaburus5803 Год назад

    Would love to see what you have to say about nursing Ph.Ds since they vary so widely

  • @mattyalpert
    @mattyalpert 7 месяцев назад

    Physical therapist and occupational therapist doctorates are equal to a masters. Except a different title of the degree and is very different than a PhD in rehabilitation science.
    The Ed.D is very off as well.

  • @lainawaina9972
    @lainawaina9972 9 месяцев назад

    Doctor of Education can make you a principal or college professor not just a teacher

  • @E.Nicole
    @E.Nicole Год назад +2

    The Doctorate of Education is NOT just for those interested in being a teacher. The Ed.D has some duality. You can still teach with that degree but it’s more so for administration in education. I’d like to see you do a better overview of that degree because what you said here was not an accurate overview.

    • @shahnjaylaconnors1476
      @shahnjaylaconnors1476 Год назад

      Yes, and some EdD's also teach on the college level.

    • @E.Nicole
      @E.Nicole Год назад

      @@shahnjaylaconnors1476 I didn’t say that was not possible. My comment implies that. Most doctoral degrees are a sure fire way to snag a faculty position in most disciplines, so that is a given. I work in higher Ed and I’m working on an Ed.D I’m speaking from personal experience and professional knowledge. I am a director of a student services unit and I do not serve in a faculty position at this time. Although I’ll probably take up some adjunct work in the future my end goal is not a faculty position, but to move into administration executive director, dean, VP etc. One can pursue many avenues with the Ed.D. Using the word “teaching or teacher” is more K-12 language and most K-12 employees are not getting Ed.Ds to teach on that level because it’s not necessary. K-12 folks usually use that degree to get out of the classroom and on the administrative side (superintendent, Director/management positions)-fact still remains the creator of the video was wrong and speaking from a place of inadequate research.

    • @Laura-Yu
      @Laura-Yu Год назад

      You’re complaining about that when he literally clumped all the science majors together?

    • @E.Nicole
      @E.Nicole Год назад

      @@Laura-Yu I corrected him because his statements were inaccurate. If it’s something YOU want to share about the science majors, have at it. As a higher Ed professional with almost ten years of experience, I did not hear anything wrong in how he presented the science majors.

  • @callous21
    @callous21 Год назад +1

    Pharmacists aren't hindered by residency like drs

  • @ninjaxpanda4070
    @ninjaxpanda4070 3 месяца назад

    You have a bias in favor of pharmacist, using your other criteria... job outlook and such, that should have been in the D tier at best.

  • @wjjwTheDemigod
    @wjjwTheDemigod Год назад

    Need a video on the 50 different type of pharmacist.

  • @Okology
    @Okology Год назад

    Great analysis

  • @jakoblindelof92
    @jakoblindelof92 17 дней назад

    I am sorry but need to be clear engineering is very saturated.

  • @shipmate3577
    @shipmate3577 Месяц назад

    DPA and DBA?

  • @MoReNo_T98
    @MoReNo_T98 6 месяцев назад

    Bra at least update the year for the quick fact of vet med. Is 4 years obsolete.

  • @jarepondio
    @jarepondio Год назад

    Good job 👏

  • @TheKristofdv
    @TheKristofdv 3 месяца назад

    This video is only for Americans: I was expecting a list of only PhD degrees in many different fields, yet you ranked only a few types of PhDs, but mainly professional degrees that we in Europe consider as Masters, or even Bachelors. Also, with the 'debt'-to-income ratio...

  • @Moneybandz925
    @Moneybandz925 Месяц назад

    Psychologist make way more than that

  • @icallmy12gnot12
    @icallmy12gnot12 Год назад +1

    Hey Shane, can you make a video on military contractors/ private soldiers as a career?