Yes i do.
I can't stress this enough: As someone who taught in a university the one thing YOU as a parent must stress on your kids is that college is only going to teach them the basics and much of what they are learning a million other people are out there doing for free, learning on their own, because they have a passion for it. If whatever it is they are learning about isn't a passion then it's all going to be for naught. And the unfortunate part of that is that the schools COMPLETELY forget to mention that this is a BUSINESS first and the art end of it is 10% of what they will be doing with their lives. So the schools will focus on the wrong 10% cause that's what schools do.
Start your daughter now thinking about this like an entrepreneur. An entrepreneur heading into the worst job climate we've seen since the depression and into a field crowed with amateurs funding their businesses off of the fruits of other paying careers who are so happy to have a creative outlet from their boring day jobs.
http://www.amazon.com/Best-Business-Practices-Photographers-Second/dp/1435454294/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1322763829&sr=8-1
Think like a business person first and a movie maker, photographer or whatever second. That's not living the dream but it is the only way to survive and not drive yourself mad.
The college myth of career in the arts goes something like this:
-Learn how to take pretty pictures
-?
-Profit!
If you want a sobering look into what the business end of it looks like today:
(will post link from POTN here later, can't get to it atm)
Also it's not just photographers. The simple truth is that we've automated and technologized so much of our world that we simply don't need as many people doing laborious tasks any more and that means there are more people looking into the academic, arts, white collar business and other non laborious careers.
Any time you see that some formerly expensive area of work has been democratized, recognize that means that professionals are out on their asses.
http://www.petapixel.com/2011/11/29/cnn-lays-off-photojournalists-citing-the-accessibility-of-quality-cameras/
Only those who are thinking with their head and not relying on old business models are going to be able to survive.
Edited by Sam Posten - 12/1/11 at 11:24am