Personally I am at the point where I am questioning what I am being taught, as I have a number of years in industry already, Some of the subjects go into earning potential, things I know from experience are largely crap, they teach as if everyone will be a success, something which is not the case for the majority. Same as schools really for they also create an unrealistic illusion regarding the world of learning to live by one's own means.
I am wondering three years in, if my desire for a BA is worth it, when it is I can already work to BA level and that only due to my experience and pure interest in my art.
My history of most of my skills is self taught, I learn by poking around and see how things work and from there study literature relevant to the job in hand, I am self taught in most of my skills, but my initial interest in a degree was because I wished to learn how to manipulate hot metals so I may qualify myself as a metalsmith as hot metals was the hole in my knowledge.
But the degree course I am on is predominantly academic not craft, so I lose interest, not that I can't do it, but because I have no interest in the definitions of art, it's history and those who were reported to be good at it, guff to my mind and of no relevance to my plans.
This evening I talked with another of what my interest is and there the passion I feel for what inspires me to create I believe was evident to that another. The result of which I think I have bought an independant investor who is interested in my creations should I desire funding that is not bank awarded, the route to destruction I know too well.
Added to that, I have my past skills to employ, those of repairing whatever piques my interest, streams of income as they say, far better than all eggs in one basket but as an artist, I will not let my skills of the past pass by for to do so and rely on a new idea only is suicide for a new business in any time let alone the difficult times that are with us now.