Who suggested tertiary education was a bad thing? No one on this thread that I have noticed. In fact the discussion has been mainly about deploring the way the obsession with degrees has closed down so many alternative ways into the professions that opened them up to people of all kinds of background and formal education - or the lack of it.
The obsession with degrees and the downgrading of other kinds of qualifications has led to many subjects which gave an excellent technical training for all kinds of work,and that were respected by employers but were described as Diplomas or Certificates being upgraded to degrees and the content changed to the disadvantage of students in order to give it the 'academic' weight it needed to be called a degree. This could often disadvantage students, who excelled in practical work but not written.
My DD did a degree in acting. It was a diploma course upgraded to a degree so that students could, then, get their fees paid and a grant. The course she did was not a degree level course. After 2 1/2 years of entirely practical training in acting they were all expcted to write a dissertation in their last year, having done no written work at all until that point, in order to justify the degree. Many students, after nearly 3 years without any academic study, struggled to even define a topic, let alone write and research it and write a dissertation of about 5,000 words.
I have just looked at that particular college's prospectus and nothing has changed in the 25 years since DD graduated.
Looking at Chewbacca's list, these are just the kind of subjects that used to award diplomas and certificates that were as respected as any of these degrees are.
The main reason these subjects became degrees is the one why courses like my DD acting course became a degree. At the time it happened the government only paid fees and maintenance grants for degree courses and if all these excellent courses were to be able to recruit students, students studying skills urgently required by industry in many cases was if the students could study on the same financial terms as university students - and that meant changing the courses to make them into degrees.
What words annoy you when used wrong or people don't know the meaning of?
What fashion items remind you of your parents?
What’s a household item that reminds you of your grandma’s house?


If you look at that you might then be able to find something closer to you but along those lines.
