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Second Bachelor

polycounter lvl 11
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joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
I'm seriously considering going back to school and getting a second bachelor. I was wondering what everyone's thought's were. Would it be a waste of time? I have a degree in Game Art but can't see using it professionally, only as a hobby. Would it make more sense to get a masters instead? Any opinions or advice would be very helpful. Thanks. :)

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  • aesir
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    aesir polycounter lvl 18
    1. Are you rich?
    2. It's odd that you don't mention what degree you would want to get. Or are you cool with just 'any' bachelors degree.
    3. What do you want a masters in?
    4. What job are you seeking.
  • oXYnary
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    oXYnary polycounter lvl 18
    There is such a degree as Game Art? Are you sure its not a BA with a focus in Interactive/Digital Art? As per if its a true accredited degree.. If you enjoyed it, why not seek a masters in a DA (Digital Arts). NYA has some good programs in that as well as places like CalArts.

    It wont make you any more hireable, but it will open up academic teaching.

    The biggest downfall though, is your adding bills unto bills.
  • Kevin Albers
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    Kevin Albers polycounter lvl 18
    In general, getting a masters is probably better than getting a second bachelor's degree. It all depends on what you want to do with your life and career though.
  • Jeremy Lindstrom
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    Jeremy Lindstrom polycounter lvl 18
    In general, getting a masters is probably better than getting a second bachelor's degree. It all depends on what you want to do with your life and career though.
    :thumbup:

    Yeah, agreed if you wanted to get a bachelors in something like IT management or the like as a fall back career then I could see but if you are doing art, art is art. A masters would open up teaching but as said previously wouldn't make you any more marketable. It's all about portfolio, portfolio, portfolio on the art side of the careers.
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    My degree is in Computer Science, but I don't know much about the science of computers!

    I have an interest in Marine Biology and the Japanese language.

    I'm not rich or anything so it would be more debt, but it could be worth it if I could get a good job.
  • Junkie_XL
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    Junkie_XL polycounter lvl 14
    I think the institution of college and its value is different than what it used to be. Diplomas are handed out like water. It isn't like our parents generation where a degree was more rare to see on a resume.

    I think you'd be better off going to a tech school if you're looking to acquire skills in a different field if you just want a job doing something and making decent money. It's cheaper and you'll land something faster. I think people are hiring in today's market looking for people with skills, not a pretty piece of paper that says "degree".

    Then while working at whatever it is you choose to do you can continue your hobby in the meantime doing game stuff if you wish.

    Here is an interesting video that is related...

    [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nl_24uSPedM[/ame]
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    I don't mind working on my portfolio, it's just that game market might be to unstable for me to pursue it professionally.
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    Well after watching that video it seems I should try and get a master's degree.
  • aesir
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    aesir polycounter lvl 18
    well, certainly don't go unless it's a step on the path to a specific goal. A required step.
  • Junkie_XL
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    Junkie_XL polycounter lvl 14
    joe gracey wrote: »
    Well after watching that video it seems I should try and get a master's degree.

    Yeah I can't speak for the masters or its value. I just went into the thread here thinking you still wanted to do game art and if you didn't have a lot of money, a tech school might land you something IT related since comp science is your thing (or something else)...then you can work on the portfolio for games in your spare time.
  • Jesse Moody
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    Jesse Moody polycounter lvl 18
    Wait you have a degree in computer science? So programming but you want to do art. Well that is an issue in itself. If you went to school for computer programming and wanted to do art well that was a bit off target.

    Programmers make more dough too...
  • Mark Dygert
    If the first one didn't get you much...
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    Wait you have a degree in computer science? So programming but you want to do art. Well that is an issue in itself. If you went to school for computer programming and wanted to do art well that was a bit off target.

    Programmers make more dough too...

    It's not programming, it's Game Art and Design. I don't know why it's called Computer Science. lol
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    Vig wrote: »
    If the first one didn't get you much...

    I'm going to take that as don't get a second bachelor. :)
  • notman
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    notman polycounter lvl 18
    Yeah, I have a Computer Science degree and it has NOTHING to do with art. Maybe that's how your school passed it off as something Financial Aid would cover.

    Anyway, it's never a bad thing to have more degrees, but I think only you can really decide what the right choice is. I do think you need to really stop and think about your interests/goals. If it's marine biology, then do that and stop pursuing something you don't want to do as a career. Just make sure there is a market for it where you are, or be ready to move.
  • TomDunne
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    TomDunne polycounter lvl 18
    I have a bachelors degree in digital design and a masters degree in design.

    In terms of getting jobs and the like, the masters degree isn't particularly helpful - as with most creative fields, your portfolio is more important than your resume. If my company had to choose between an applicant with a bachelors and a knockout portfolio and one with a masters and average work, we'd hire the first guy 100% of the time.

    A masters degree can open up other opportunities, however. If you get a masters degree in your initial field (art, design, whatever), that will usually qualify you to teach at a university. Some schools are okay with talented instructors who just have bachelors degrees, but post-graduates are much more common. You can also consider a masters degree in a branching field that might help you grow your career in your initial industry. I'm actually thinking of going back for an MBA in marketing, to make transitioning into a director role a little easier (that and I loves me some college learnin')

    If you want to do something completely different from game art, then a second bachelors degree seems like the way to go, but only if the other field requires skills or certifications that you can't get otherwise. You mentioned studying Japanese - that's the kind of field I'd consider getting formal education in, as it's very hard to learn that kind of skill on your own, and having a related diploma can help you with related careers, since you wouldn't necessarily be able to provide a portfolio of your ability to speak or read a foreign language :)

    What you mentioned about the instability in the game industry is exactly what happened to me about ten years ago. I was in school doing art when the only game shop in town got closed down in Sierra's Black Monday layoffs - they published a solid game, got axed to save money for corporate, and had to move hundreds of miles away to remain in the game industry. I know that's what most Polycounters here are faced with at some point in their career, but I just wasn't cut out for that kind of thing after seeing it happen to someone I knew.
  • bounchfx
    I went to school for Game Art & Design as well at an Ai and my degree is in 'Fine Arts'. kinda think they should maybe standardize what degree they are giving people for the 'same' course.
  • d00kie
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    d00kie polycounter lvl 17
    ha! i'm in the same boat as the OP. This thread has definitely given me some answers I was wondering about. Kudos for all the timely replies!
  • JacqueChoi
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    JacqueChoi polycounter
    I have a Bachelors Degree in Fine Arts (Illustration - Life Drawing)

    And although it hasn't been very practical, it did give me the ability to work in countries that require a degree to support obtaining a VISA (quite notably, it opened the opportunity for me to work in the USA, or overseas).

    You may not want to ever relocate for work, which is totally fine, but it's also a bit of leverage and security in a very unstable profession.
  • JasonLavoie
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    JasonLavoie polycounter lvl 18
    Vig wrote: »
    If the first one didn't get you much...

    x2
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    Thank you everyone for your quick reply's. Polycount has been very helpful to me, and not just with art.

    I have some of big decisions to make so I'm glad I have a lot of professional opinions to help me!

    I am liking the idea of learning a new language. It seems like it will give me more opportunity for work what with being able to work in a another country, all though I'm not sure if there is work knowing another language! haha.

    Like whats been said already, I just need to go with what feels right.
  • Ferg
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    Ferg polycounter lvl 17
    you dont need a bachelor's to learn another language...
  • Disco Stu
    Id say for japanese youd most likely need some serious studys ferg.
  • Ferg
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    Ferg polycounter lvl 17
    so take some classes on the side... I know a couple people that just took japanese classes at the community college on the side for a couple years, then went and lived in japan. Trying to become fluent with a language in college is a waste of time IMO... get good enough that you can get by with it, then make the move. You learn a lot faster living in the culture where it's the native language. Not saying it's easy, but you certainly don't need a 4 year degree.
  • Disco Stu
    True that. Cold water technique works wonders. And being a child also works wonders
    when learning a language.
  • teaandcigarettes
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    teaandcigarettes polycounter lvl 12
    If you already have a degree then you can get a job in Japan as an English teacher and live happily in the land of the rising sun, singing songs of your people. That shouldn't be too hard from what I've heard and you don't have to know Japanese prior to going there, as far as I know.

    Other sources say that Japanese are a racist bunch, ready to burn any gaijin in sight before they get a chance to corrupt their race. ...and they eat strawberry sandwiches. Barbarians.


    But, after hearing so many contradicting things, I'm pretty sure that going there just to confirm if they have any dragons must be worth it.

    No, scrap that. Japanese girls alone are enough to put this country on my "top 10 places I have to see before I rot"
  • lefix
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    lefix polycounter lvl 11
    i've been in the same boat. started a second bachelor degree. mostly because a master wasn't offered. never finished the second one tho. i was offered a job in games during my second year.
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    Ferg wrote: »
    so take some classes on the side... I know a couple people that just took japanese classes at the community college on the side for a couple years, then went and lived in japan. Trying to become fluent with a language in college is a waste of time IMO... get good enough that you can get by with it, then make the move. You learn a lot faster living in the culture where it's the native language. Not saying it's easy, but you certainly don't need a 4 year degree.

    I completely agree with you. I'm going the night class route until I can get my butt over there. I do like the idea of teaching English in Japan too. I'm sure the pay sucks, but who cares. I will learn the language much much faster than being here.

    Then when I'm fluent with it, I can look for a better job, heck maybe one in the game industry! I'm sure the government or bigger business need someone who can speak both too.
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    lefix wrote: »
    i've been in the same boat. started a second bachelor degree. mostly because a master wasn't offered. never finished the second one tho. i was offered a job in games during my second year.

    *shakes fist* :D
  • Snacuum
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    Snacuum polycounter lvl 9
    Just as a slight segue here: If you don't want to do art and you don't want to do programming, and you want to make games... is there "A" qualification of worth out there for you?
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    Snacuum wrote: »
    Just as a slight segue here: If you don't want to do art and you don't want to do programming, and you want to make games... is there "A" qualification of worth out there for you?

    I'm not saying I don't want to make games, I would absolutely love to make games. I'm worried about the unstable environment that is the games industry. It's hard for me to think that I could be let go with very little notice one day or have to take a huge salary cut just to keep my job.

    With my situation right now, I could spend the next year working on my portfolio and then start applying for jobs in 2010. But, who's to say once I land a job, I won't lose it within six months or a year? That uncertainty is hard for me to deal with. Maybe if I was single it would easier for me.

    Maybe being a game artist isn't my calling in life. There are still a lot of other things that make me happy and give me worth. And besides, I can always help fund a start up game company or learn Japanese and help translate games. There are lots of ways of working in the game industry.

    I wouldn't say that I don't want to work in games though. :)
  • Jeremy Wright
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    Jeremy Wright polycounter lvl 17
    joe gracey wrote: »
    It's hard for me to think that I could be let go with very little notice one day or have to take a huge salary cut just to keep my job.

    This could happen in any number of job fields. Pursue a career doing what you love and what you're good at.

    I would recommend the Master's over a Bachelor's in some unrelated field, unless your intent is to totally switch job markets (i.e. from forensic scientist to chef). Getting a second bachelor's in a supportive or parrallel field can be a good thing (having a bachelor's in construction and getting a second in architecture), but I would still recommend the Masters.

    It's different from undergraduate, so be prepared, but if you're worried about job security, teaching would be opened up to you, and that's a fairly stable market (it would be even better if our economy wasn't in the tank and states were having to tighten their belts).

    Best of luck.

    I am 9 credits away from my masters in Architecure and Construction Visualization (I have a bachelor's in Architectural Engineering Technology). I went for it because I want to teach, and figured I might could even get some work teaching nightclasses while I have my current job.
  • notman
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    notman polycounter lvl 18
    Win the lottery. Problem solved.
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    This is the hard part for me right now. For some reason I have this notion stuck in my head that because I went to school to be a game artist, and I have a mountain of debt in hopes of becoming a game artist, that I should not do anything else besides game art.

    Many people have told me that it's not unusual for someone to switch careers two or three times in their life, but who knows if they were still happy in their new careers.

    So I guess I feel kind of guilty or I feel like I have failed if I don't finish off what I started to do. A lot of personal issues really. It does feel good type them out here and read everyone's response's.
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    notman wrote: »
    Win the lottery. Problem solved.

    If I win I'm splitting it with you. :)
  • Jeremy Wright
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    Jeremy Wright polycounter lvl 17
    joe gracey wrote: »
    So I guess I feel kind of guilty or I feel like I have failed if I don't finish off what I started to do.

    I have a friend who went to school for photography (and was always good at it); she works in a barbeque restaurant....and she's a vegetarian. She says she makes better money at the restaurant.

    You are not your job.
  • Snacuum
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    Snacuum polycounter lvl 9
    joe gracey wrote: »
    I'm not saying I don't want to make games

    Actually I was was not directly questioning anyone, I was questioning a hypothetical. I wanted to know if anybody knows of or recommends qualifications that would bolster your chances if you were going for design or something less directly connected to art or programming.

    You know, not just the stock standard "experience" that we all need to get we're not being hired to get it in the first place.
  • Andreas
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    Andreas polycounter lvl 11
    joe gracey wrote: »
    I have an interest in Marine Biology and the Japanese language.

    Job on a whaling boat. Problem sorted. Plus you get to harpoon greenpeace hippies all day.

    check out japanesepod101.com , the free language mp3's helped me a bunch.

    Oh, and go with a Masters. I agree with you on the industry being too unstable to offer a viable career option.
  • toren3d
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    @ Snacuum - yeah that would be interesting to know. It seems experience is the thing to have.

    @ Blenderhead - You make some strong points, thanks!

    @ toren3d - great lyrics lol
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    8FtSpider wrote: »
    I have a friend who went to school for photography (and was always good at it); she works in a barbeque restaurant....and she's a vegetarian. She says she makes better money at the restaurant.

    You are not your job.

    I need to get over that for sure.
  • lefix
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    lefix polycounter lvl 11
    well, i guess you can always pursue your game art career while working in another job. theres plenty of mods and indie game projects out there to work on until you eventually get a paying job. in fact the company i am working at now was originally just a small group of people working on an indie game until we got some investors and started hiring people and became more commercial.
  • Snacuum
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    Snacuum polycounter lvl 9
    "well, i guess you can always pursue your game art career while working in another job."

    I must be a completely broken man since I seem to have such trouble doing this. People working hard on making games while the have an unrelated 9-5? In my country I am considered unemployed even though a work some casual time every week. I need to be full time to get out of the benefits system. Yet that combined with my hackneyed 'attempts' to do folio work every day makes me feel beaten. I must seem incredibly lazy to you guys, but man I feel tired. I wonder if any of the hippys back in the day felt like that and weren't just lazy...
  • t4paN
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    t4paN polycounter lvl 10
    joe gracey wrote: »
    My degree is in Computer Science, but I don't know much about the science of computers!

    I have an interest in Marine Biology and the Japanese language.

    I'm not rich or anything so it would be more debt, but it could be worth it if I could get a good job.

    Marine Biology is a fucking great job if you do it like in the movies, you know on some sunny beach and saving sick dolphins and whales and shit... But I'm guessing it's gotta be a lot of grind much like everything else, in real life.

    I wouldn't feel comfortable advising anyone what to do with their lives though, I guess this is something you need to sort out for yourself.
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    Snacuum wrote: »
    "well, i guess you can always pursue your game art career while working in another job."

    I must be a completely broken man since I seem to have such trouble doing this. People working hard on making games while the have an unrelated 9-5? In my country I am considered unemployed even though a work some casual time every week. I need to be full time to get out of the benefits system. Yet that combined with my hackneyed 'attempts' to do folio work every day makes me feel beaten. I must seem incredibly lazy to you guys, but man I feel tired. I wonder if any of the hippys back in the day felt like that and weren't just lazy...

    I'm beginning to think it's more about being happy with where you are. If you're happy right now and don't want to change then what's wrong with that. Just because other people are doing things differently, doesn't make it better. If you want more out of life but are just sitting around twiddling your thumbs, then there's something wrong.
  • Snacuum
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    Snacuum polycounter lvl 9
    joe gracey wrote: »
    I'm beginning to think it's more about being happy with where you are. If you're happy right now and don't want to change then what's wrong with that. Just because other people are doing things differently, doesn't make it better. If you want more out of life but are just sitting around twiddling your thumbs, then there's something wrong.

    well... right now I'm not making games, so I'm not happy. But then I start up max and photoshop... after a few hours, still not happy.

    only thing that seems to make me happy is playing games, mmmmmm that's good happy. But it don't pay the bills.
  • danshewan
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    danshewan polycounter lvl 8
    8FtSpider wrote: »
    This could happen in any number of job fields. Pursue a career doing what you love and what you're good at.

    Amen to that. I used to work in advertising sales, and you'll never see a more insecure bunch of people than sales guys. Miss a target? You're gone. Didn't beat last month's numbers? Better beat it this month, or you're gone. The new (younger) guy beat your last two months' targets combined in his first two weeks? Better straighten up and fly right, or guess what? You're gone.

    Job security is a myth, in any field.
  • joe gracey
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    joe gracey polycounter lvl 11
    Snacuum wrote: »
    well... right now I'm not making games, so I'm not happy. But then I start up max and photoshop... after a few hours, still not happy.

    only thing that seems to make me happy is playing games, mmmmmm that's good happy. But it don't pay the bills.

    I guess there is a happy medium then. haha
  • CounterSeal
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    CounterSeal polycounter lvl 10
    I was in the same boat as the OP for at least 7 months, up until just last week. I was seriously considering going back to college or joining the Air Force. I worked on one environment piece and revamped the entire layout of my portfolio website over the summer after I got laid off from my first industry job ever because the studio closed.

    After that, I was beginning to lose hope on my dreams of being a professional artist. However, something inside of me just couldn't let go of that dream, and hopefully never will. I worked on my artwork periodically, and yes, there were countless times where I simply didn't feel motivated to do so. It happens all the time, so don't feel like you're failing or being lazy, because it is natural to feel that way, especially under this relatively harsh industry/economical climate.

    The simple truth is that I knew I wasn't going to be completely happy doing anything else as a career. I sucked it up and got a crappy job (QA) and worked to pay the bills, and at the same time worked on my portfolio in my spare time. I sacrificed a lot, but eventually, I achieved my goal to become a 3D Artist at this point in my career.

    But that's not it. Realistically, I good portfolio may not be enough today. Combined with your attitude, personality, portfolio and shear luck, you should always be making friends and contacts in the industry. Keep in contact with your current connections and don't just contact them about job searching. Actually keep in touch and make friends. That's what it's all about.
  • Gannon
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    Gannon interpolator
    tl;dr other posts. Really tired. Full Sail University offers a Game Art bachelors and Computer Animation degree, I got the CA one. Loved the experience but it's not your typical school.
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