hastalavista
Elite Member
- Joined
- May 16, 2005
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- California
<sigh> The sad thing is that these threads usually degrade into a personal, "my education is better than your education" free-for-all.
I'll stand by my prior post:
Is a college degree necessary for an individual to be a competent appraiser (commercial or residential)? I've said "no"; I don't believe it is necessary for a specific individual.
Does the requirement of a college degree for licensing purposes add to the professional stature of our industry? Yes, it does (and not everyone will agree to this, I concede).
The question (in my mind) is, does the college degree requirement and its benefit to the profession as a whole, outweigh whatever detriment that requirement causes to the individual new entrant into the profession?
I think the benefit to the profession as a whole outweighs the detriment to the potential new entrant..
And I see no detriment if an alternative is created that can be used in lieu of the degree for existing licensed professionals; especially if that alternative is heavily weighted on experience and technical competency (no need to take English Literature 301).
So, it doesn't matter what our education levels are: based on our license-level, I'm just as qualified as you and you are just as qualified as me.
But if you are not licensed and you want to join the profession, then a college degree is not an unreasonable standard... one which we benefit from as a group.
(for what it is worth, I was a D or C student in high school English and grammar.... until they threw me out.
)
I'll stand by my prior post:
Is a college degree necessary for an individual to be a competent appraiser (commercial or residential)? I've said "no"; I don't believe it is necessary for a specific individual.
Does the requirement of a college degree for licensing purposes add to the professional stature of our industry? Yes, it does (and not everyone will agree to this, I concede).
The question (in my mind) is, does the college degree requirement and its benefit to the profession as a whole, outweigh whatever detriment that requirement causes to the individual new entrant into the profession?
I think the benefit to the profession as a whole outweighs the detriment to the potential new entrant..
And I see no detriment if an alternative is created that can be used in lieu of the degree for existing licensed professionals; especially if that alternative is heavily weighted on experience and technical competency (no need to take English Literature 301).
So, it doesn't matter what our education levels are: based on our license-level, I'm just as qualified as you and you are just as qualified as me.
But if you are not licensed and you want to join the profession, then a college degree is not an unreasonable standard... one which we benefit from as a group.
(for what it is worth, I was a D or C student in high school English and grammar.... until they threw me out.
