Yes but how is a double undergraduate degree better than say one degree and a Masters in a different field. e.g. a LLB and then a Masters of Professional Accounting or a BCom and then a JD or LLM(Legal Practice)?
I think this issue is getting befuddled, and I'm partly to blame with my digressions so I've made an extra effort to read the posts more carefully.
The other point I've been trying to make is, does a double degree really give you wider scope of knowledge? Yes you are learning in a separate discipline (the relevance of one discipline to the other is irrelevant to what I'm saying), but there is a tradeoff. Because, as you say:
By doing a combined degree, it takes less time to get an extra degree. For example, I'm doing Comm/Sci and it takes just another yr on the standard 3 yrs for me to pick up another Sci degree.
obviously theres a cost of the decrease in time taken to complete the 2nd degree. The cost is credit points in both degrees. So you end up with a diluted degree.
The breadth of knowledge depends on your choice of subjects. I know of many double degree students who specialise very early on by taking postgrad and honours level subjects, and they have that opportunity because they have spent a bit more time at uni, and have a lot more electives at their disposal. This flexibility is very much valued by students, and by employers.
Yes thats all very well, but no matter what, if you do a 2nd undergraduate degree concurrently, you will sacrifice other commerce electives, or for subject heavy things like Accounting, core subjects and majors.
My question is do you think you end up with a broader knowledge and skill base after all, when you factor in the opportunity cost of the double undergraduate degree.
I don't know why you are being so adversarial about it, as I'm pretty much asking for opinions in addition to giving some of my thoughts.
- a more theoretical, general degree like Science and Arts, and a more applied, professional degree like Commerce. This allows general skills gained from the general degree to be applied in some commercial setting, eg actuarial software development.
Yes thats all very well, but in practice, I'm not sure that if you are hired as a Programmer, your company will also rely on your (very limited) Actuary knowledge for the technical components of the program. Most likely they will hire EXPERT Actuaries for the technical aspects of the code.
I just think there is an impression amongst many of us that a double undergraduate degree suddenly makes you an expert in 2 areas, and only those 2 ugrad degree grads are able to handle work that intersects the 2 areas. Its a bit of that "you need a LLB/MBBS to become a Coroner" mentality, which is of course false.