by pup55 » Fri 10 Sep 2010, 09:00:44
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ith the unemployment SO much lower for college grads, then it certainly seems it must be worth SOMETHING.
Yes, the stats are quite clear, the so-called "average" college graduate tends to earn more money, be unemployed less, and in general, over his or her life be better off economically than the "average" non-college-grad.
Of course there are individual exceptions to everything and we all know a lot of college grads that ended up pretty miserable, just as we all know a lot of overachieving high school dropouts that somehow got to the end of the bell curve...
You come into life with a tool kit. I am talking about problem solving ability, critical thinking, common sense, as it were, and also social intelligence, stuff like persuasive ability that is useful economically, and also determination/"drive" if you will.....Different people have different combinations...
You also are born into the world within a certain culture, and with a certain set of economic circumstances...
You would like to think that if you have a full tool box, an abundance of those qualities, you would be pretty likely to get ahead in our society whether you went to college or not. But I am here to say that on average, even if you have a full tool box, if you somehow found yourself born to a single mom in a double wide in Appalachia, the odds of you being better off economically compared to a dimwit who happened to be born to a wealthy family in the Hamptons are significantly lower..... Can college equalize some of this? Yes, I believe it can. But part of this is not content-driven inasmuch as it is socialization-driven....you hang around a lot of college kids, and pretty soon you act and think in a certain way that is desirable in the workforce.
But if you don't care too much about economics, since it is not 100% correlated to happiness, maybe trade school is just as good, as long as you're happy. Hard to put a price tag on happiness. "Getting Ahead" is a western concept. Maybe that idea has run its course too.