My Life Story
Went to music school, majored in sound recording technology, graduated.
started working with a labor management company (hired body for corporate shows, things like that, pushing around gear, heavy lifting, setting up truss, nothing fun or glamourous). First thing I ever worked was a Toyota show at Comisky.
meanwhile worked as extra crew member for 1200 seat performing arts center mostly as an A2 that kind of thing, got involved with a post studio downtown where he let me "intern" for free, and started working at a private recording studio in the suburbs, while freelance recording on my own.
as time went on, I sort of got offered the assistant position at the post studio, stopped working the corporate crew stuff, and then took over as the house audio engineer at the performing arts center, while continuing to work at the studio.
Now I can say that I've got to work with and run sound for some really big names, assisted some great engineers (and run my own sessions), got an assistant engineer credit on an album on the Billboard Jazz charts, worked a gig for MetroMobile (one of the biggest mobile recording companies), and worked on various nationally run TV/radio commercials, including for the Superbowl.
And coolest of all of course, now I work in Product Development for Shure.
I guess my point is, NONE of that would have happened if I hadn't gone to school.
To be sure, nothing is a replacement for real world hands-on experience, and EVEYRONE should work in live sound for a little bit (great for your troubleshooting chops), but the world is changing a bit, and the days of having to scrub the lead engineers car for a year before he lets you in the studio are over. Plus you can always buy a home recording rig for pretty cheap and start your own studio in your bedroom.
Sorry for the gross self-serving rant above, but I believe in education, and wanted to show how it worked for me. That doesn't mean I know more that someone who has been in the business for 30 years and came up the old fasioned way (I definetly don't), but I think doing it the "academic" way is a viable option now.