I’m considering applying for a job at the British Foreign Office. I’m British but currently live and work in France. I have the french equivalent of a Higher National Diploma in “Trilingual International Managing Assistant”. Unfortunately this is not equivalent to a university degree. I do however have 4 years work experience as an International Assistant in a renowned french business school.
I read in the Times recently that the Foreign Office accept entry level candidates into certain roles. I am therefore going to apply for one of these jobs: tasks that include checking visa applications and being general secretaries.
What i wanted to know is; were i to ever get this job, and work very hard at it, would promotion to a higher role, one that ‘requires’ a degree, be a total impossibility?
Why is that studying English Literature for 3 years and getting a degree qualifies somebody to a position that another person is alot more experienced and adapted to?
Might i add; my current job consists of sorting out Visa applications for students, helping them to apply for Cartes de Séjour (Green Cards), I also have alot of contact with their countries’ embassies in France, and French embassies abroad.
I’m quadrilingual (English, French, Spanish and Russian). Keen. 23 years old.
I just never saw the benefit in University (other than amassing an enormous debt).
I’m tearing my hair out with worry that although many working people tell me that experience is more important than education, any career advancement may be halted because I jumped on the working bandwagon too early.

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