Tuition inflation is a problem, but so is grade inflation. I interview people with extremely high grade point averages, and they can't construct a coherent sentence. And they're trying to work in the word business! It truly makes me wonder what they're spending their money on, and why schools are turning them out unprepared.
Years ago in this country a lot of cities had technical high schools, but at least in my corner of it they've gone by the wayside. Kids studied academics half the day and learned a trade the other half. As juniors and seniors, they'd do on the job training in the community. When they graduated, the ones who really wanted to work had jobs waiting for them as printers, masons, plumbers, carpenters, electricians, etc. Good, honest work. Sure, the world has changed technically, but it still needs people to do the infrastructure work. Why not get them trained at a young age and quit pretending that everyone has to go to college.
If you're not pursing a niche degree requiring a definite skill, you're probably racking up a significant debt load that your earning capacity just might not support.
I definitely recommend trade/technical schools. What's a liberal arts degree going to get you these days? Seriously, when I got one all it got me was a foot in the door and the opportunity to sell myself. Does that even still hold true in this economy?
Colleges and universities certainly have their place. But I think the days of general studies are over. I loved history and sociology, but while I was studying that people were learning how to be accountants and actuaries and chemists and doctors and engineers.
Unless you're earning a degree in a field that absolutely demands you learn the material and master it, college just isn't all that it's cracked up to be. I can truly say that a college degree isn't all that great or significant, because I have one. I don't mean to demean anyone's accomplishments. I just think there was a time when too many people were unnecessarily pushed in the direction of college. Now that it's become such a costly beast that sends people out into the labor market already burdened with crushing debt, we should rethink that philosophy. Technical schools (especially in the computer fields) or two-year community colleges are a much better bet for most of us.
You can still watch the football and basketball games. You don't have to pay tuition to do that.
Years ago in this country a lot of cities had technical high schools, but at least in my corner of it they've gone by the wayside. Kids studied academics half the day and learned a trade the other half. As juniors and seniors, they'd do on the job training in the community. When they graduated, the ones who really wanted to work had jobs waiting for them as printers, masons, plumbers, carpenters, electricians, etc. Good, honest work. Sure, the world has changed technically, but it still needs people to do the infrastructure work. Why not get them trained at a young age and quit pretending that everyone has to go to college.
If you're not pursing a niche degree requiring a definite skill, you're probably racking up a significant debt load that your earning capacity just might not support.
I definitely recommend trade/technical schools. What's a liberal arts degree going to get you these days? Seriously, when I got one all it got me was a foot in the door and the opportunity to sell myself. Does that even still hold true in this economy?
Colleges and universities certainly have their place. But I think the days of general studies are over. I loved history and sociology, but while I was studying that people were learning how to be accountants and actuaries and chemists and doctors and engineers.
Unless you're earning a degree in a field that absolutely demands you learn the material and master it, college just isn't all that it's cracked up to be. I can truly say that a college degree isn't all that great or significant, because I have one. I don't mean to demean anyone's accomplishments. I just think there was a time when too many people were unnecessarily pushed in the direction of college. Now that it's become such a costly beast that sends people out into the labor market already burdened with crushing debt, we should rethink that philosophy. Technical schools (especially in the computer fields) or two-year community colleges are a much better bet for most of us.
You can still watch the football and basketball games. You don't have to pay tuition to do that.