Your Degree Is Not Useless — You're Just Using It Wrong
You spent four, five, sometimes six years of your life in lecture halls, cramming for exams, surviving group projects with people who never showed up and arguing with your department about carryover courses.
You finally crossed that stage, collected your certificate, and then, nothing.
The job didn't come. The money didn't follow. And now someone on Twitter is telling you your degree is a scam.
But do you know what nobody is saying clearly enough? Your degree is not the problem. You are just using it wrong.
The Certificate Is Not the Product, You Are
There is a widespread assumption that a degree is a transaction.
You pay the school, you attend the classes, they hand you a document and an employer somewhere hands you a salary in return.
That is not how it works and it has never worked that way.
Your degree is a foundation. It is proof that you can learn, endure structure, meet deadlines under pressure and engage with complex material.
What employers and clients are actually paying for is the person who built those skills, not the paper that says you did.
The moment you walk out of that graduation ceremony, you are the product. Your degree is just the origin story.
Let's Talk About the "Useless" Degrees
When the conversation of “useless” degrees comes up, the jab is usually directed at people who earned one in Arts and Humanities and sometimes, Education and Agriculture.
If you studied any of these courses — Philosophy, Theatre Arts, History, Linguistics, Sociology, Religious Studies, French, Fine and Applied Arts and many more I can’t mention here—- you have probably heard some version of"what are you going to do with that?" from a relative at a family gathering or from a stranger on the internet who did not.
The assumption is that these degrees lead nowhere. That assumption is lazy, and it is wrong.
A Philosophy graduate is trained to dismantle arguments, identify logical gaps and build airtight cases. That is exactly what a product strategist, a policy analyst, or a debate coach does every single day.
A Theatre Arts graduate understands character, audience, performance and storytelling which are the backbone of advertising, content creation, brand communication and even corporate training.
These are not comparisons being stretched. These are direct translations.
Your Degree Taught You How to Think. The Industry Is Secondary
A Linguistics graduate does not just know grammar rules. They understand how language shapes meaning, how people process information and how communication breaks down.
That is a goldmine for UX writing, translation services, speech therapy, publishing, and digital marketing.
A History graduate has spent years learning how to research deeply, construct arguments from evidence and write with clarity.
These are the exact skills that go into investigative journalism, archival work, museum curation, documentary research and long-form content strategy.
Sociology and Religious Studies graduates understand how communities are organised, what motivates human behaviour and how belief systems shape societies.
That knowledge is directly applicable to social work, NGO programme design, community development, public relations, and ethnographic research for brands trying to understand African consumers.
The degree teaches you howto think. What you think about is far more flexible than your department ever let on.
You Have to Build the Bridge Yourself
The graduates who are winning are not necessarily the ones with the best grades or the most prestigious departments. They are the ones who understood that a degree is a starting point, not a destination.
They left school and immediately started asking a different question, not "who will hire me for what I studied?" but "where can what I know actually be applied?"
A Fine Arts graduate who builds a portfolio and learns basic design tools can work with creative agencies, fashion labels or media companies.
A French graduate who pairs their language skills with content creation can serve international organisations, tourism companies or translation firms.
A Theatre Arts graduate who steps into corporate training or event production is not abandoning their degree. They are deploying it intelligently.
This is what building the bridge yourself looks like. It means identifying the core skills your degree gave you, finding the industries that need those skills even if they do not advertise for your course title and creating visible proof that you can do the work.
Stop Waiting for Your Degree to Speak for Itself
No degree speaks for itself. Not law, not medicine, not engineering and certainly not History or Philosophy.
Every professional has to contextualise their education, show what they have done with it and demonstrate why it matters to the person sitting across from them.
The graduates rewriting the script are not doing it by abandoning what they studied. They are doing it by taking their education seriously enough to actually use it, creatively, deliberately, and without waiting for someone else to show them how.
Your degree gave you the vocabulary and the framework. The audacity to use it differently was always going to be on you.
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