Some perspectives from the fine arts if anyone who lands on this page is interested. Arguably, our degrees are the least practical of all:
This site spells it out best, and has been making waves. They are spot-on:
http://bfamfaphd.com/Related, on the academization of art: "Universities to Artists: Get a Doctorate?"
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/daniel-grant/mfa-degrees_b_868903.html"Job security is a relatively new concept in the ancient field of art, reflecting the increasing hold higher education has over the arts...baccalaureates and Master's degrees in fine art have become the union cards for artists since the second half of the 20th century, offering equal parts general education (on the undergraduate level) or critical theory (on the Master's side) and studio classes. Over the past 50-plus years, the Master's of Fine Arts, or MFA, has been described as a "terminal degree" -- that is, the end-point in an artist's formal education -- but some people are taking the view that this end-point comes too soon. A movement may be afoot to create doctoral programs in studio arts."
"Debating an MFA? The Lowdown on Art School Risks and Returns"
http://www.blouinartinfo.com/news/story/989814/debating-an-mfa-the-lowdown-on-art-school-risks-and-returns"If you studied art as an undergraduate, you probably didn’t know that much about who your teachers were, but astute grad students tend to be more concerned about the people who mentor them...The majority of those who teach art are not stars, and many of them wield more power at school than in the world at large."
"What Can You Really Do With a Degree in the Arts?"
http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2014/11/what-can-you-really-do-with-a-degree-in-the-arts/382300/?single_page=true"a degree in the arts only very rarely leads to a career in the arts"
"Don't Go to Art School"
https://medium.com/i-m-h-o/dont-go-to-art-school-138c5efd45e9The author creates fantasy art, not contemporary art - fantasy does well outside contemporary art institutions and education, not so well within them. He recommends:
"The $10k Ultimate Art Education
$500 - Buy an annual subscription to The Gnomon Workshop and watch every single video they have.
$404.95 - Buy Glenn Vilppu’s Anatomy Lectures and watch all of them.
$190 - Buy all of these books and read them cover to cover.
$1040 ($20/week x 52 weeks) - Weekly figure drawing sessions. Look up nearby colleges and art groups and find a weekly session to attend.
$2500 - Sign up for a SmART School Mentorship when you feel ready to get one-on-one guidance to push your abilities.
$2400 - Sign up for four classes from CGMA. Get taught by professionals in the industry on exactly the skills you want to learn.
Free - Watch all of these keynotes
http://www.jonathanfields.com/the-7-keynote-mba/Free - Study other things for free. Suggested topics: business, history, philosophy, English, literature, marketing, and anything else you might be interested in
http://academicearth.org/$500 - Throughout the year, use at least this much money to visit museums in your area. And not just art museums. All museums.
Free - Create accountability. One of the great advantages to attending a school is the comradery [sic]. So use the internet to create your own. Go join a forum where you can give and receive critique on the work you’re developing. There are many different ones out there that can suit whatever flavor you prefer.
The rest - Materials. Buy yourself some good art materials to create with. Whether digital or traditional. Don’t skimp."
At the end of the day, you decide what to do with your degree(s), and how you feel about the time and $ you invested in them. My BFA in painting took me to the art I make and where I make it now, and has led to many places and projects along the way - I wouldn't change a thing.