There are several arguments that arise when it comes to the topic of how college impacts our lives. Many people believe that it is a waste of time and others think it may help them get further in life. While both arguments have pros and cons supporting their views, going to school doesn't mean you will advance more than others in life.
“Colleges Prepare People for Life” by Freeman Hrabowski, is an informative essay about how college is a crucial step for the preparation of a successful future job opportunity as well as future life. Hrabowski is the current president of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County and has been in that role since 1992. “In 2012, President Obama named him chair of President’s Advisory Commission on Education excellence of African Americans” (Hrabowski, 2013, p. 259). This quote goes to show the amount of knowledge and respect Hrabowski has earned throughout his life by proving himself and his ideas to others. Although college is a crucial step for the preparation of a successful future job opportunity as well as one’s overall wellbeing of life; some might disagree that college is the key to success. From this essay, messages within the text will be made known by analyzing the real meaning behind Hbrabowski’s words. As well as reasoning, as to why a college education is essential to one’s overall quality of life.
College is a place for higher education. Many people go there for further study every year. Meanwhile, plenty of people skip college or drop out of college. Sort of people believe college is not worth because it cost too much. Most people think college is worth because you will able to get a good job when you holding a degree. Yes, because being a college graduate can help you gain more than the money you spent to pay for college.
Even excluding success in the job market, a college education seems to simply make people happier, due the psychic income earned when accomplishing their degree. I believe this last fact alone gives proof that college is a good thing. But many people, it seems, think differently.
The College Board is a non-profit organization composed of more than 5,900 schools, colleges, universities and other educational programs. College Board provides widely-known resources, tools and services to students, parents, and colleges on topics such as college prep, admissions, and financial aid. How College Shapes Lives is based off information found in the report, Education Pays 2013: The Benefits of Higher Education for Individuals and Society. This report is an in-depth database describing the difference in earnings, lifestyles, and behavior patterns that correlate to a person’s higher education level. How College Shapes Lives further examines how an individual can benefit from higher education and how society as a whole benefits from it. How College Shapes Lives was written by Sandy Baum, Charles Kurose and Jennifer Ma.
In the article “Colleges Prepare People for Life”, Freeman A. Hrabowski III explains how college can reap the benefit for someone. I agree with “Colleges Prepare People for Life” because I personally think that college can take you far in life. College can help someone career and job wise, help prepare them for not only jobs, but also life, and is always an option for anyone with any kind of financial plan. First off, college is extremely important when it comes to getting a job. Hrabowski states “Many economists and educators point to data showing the fastest growing job categories require at least a college degree.
The Case Against College, a paper written by Linda Lee, talks about the disadvantages of college, and how she doesn’t believe that college is worth it. She provides many good points pertaining to why she believes college isn’t worth it, such as providing statistics of the amount of people who get bachelor degrees or higher. She explains that as her son was going to college, she soon asked herself if he was really getting $1,000 a week's worth of education. Although Linda Lee has many good points, I would have to disagree with her about how college isn’t necessary. College shouldn’t just be seen as going to learn, it is also a big experience.
Author Charles Murray writes in “Are Too Many People Going to College”, that college in some ways is unnecessary due to the core knowledge we learn growing up. College is where you become a “cultivated human being” not where you become layers or doctors.
College isn’t for everyone. Although there are ups and downs in college, education always matters and is never a waste. College can prepare you for a variety of careers for not only do you obtain a degree, but you learn first hand skills that you might have never used otherwise.
The debate over whether college is worth it has been a topic of discussion for decades. Going to college is worth it for a variety of reasons. People who go to college and get degrees on average have higher employment rates, larger salaries and get more benefits than high school graduates. People who go to college also have better interpersonal skills and are better prepared for society. Most jobs today require a college degree and jobs that don’t require it, in order to move up the ladder in the company you may need a college degree. It is true that you don’t need to go to college in order to become successful and wealthy. Some people will say that billionaires such as Bill Gates and Marc Zuckerberg dropped out of college so they don’t need
A 2017 research article reported that people who go to college make more money, have more opportunities for jobs, make connections with more people, and live a healthier and happier life than those with a high-school diploma. Although there are those who argue that college is not suited for everybody, and that is it a waste of time, money and effort, it is very much worth it because of the positive outcome, success and happiness.
In the article, “Is College Worth It?” By NPR they talk about what college does to the students after college, and they go on to say that college is a waste of time and money. In addition, the Ted Talk video by Adam Carroll, in the video he he explains the changing economic realities of college, and how college funds are hurting students and parents. They both highlight that college is a waste of time and it hurts students more than helping them.
In their seminal piece, How College Affects Students, Pascarella & Terrenzeni (1991), states that “students’ grades are probably the single most revealing indicator of his or her successful adjustment to the intellectual demands of a particular college’s course of study" (388). Grades are significantly influenced by study habits, motivation, organization, and level of effort as seen in (Capella, Wagner & Kusmierz, 1982; Culler & Holahan, 1980; Astin, 1971b, 1975b). Grades tend to “reflect not only requisite intellectual skills but also desirable personal work and attitudes” (Pascarella, et. al, 388). There is evidence to support grades of undergraduates success will lead to the student earning a bachelor’s degree and future graduate degrees.
Imagine telling that to a student who just finished four years of hard, grueling, expensive work; or, even worse, a parent who paid for their child to finish that same grueling work. But, in some ways, that statement can’t be any further from the truth. College can prepare a student for life in so many more ways than for a career. However, in the way that college is supposed to prepare soon-to-be-productive students, that statement could be right on. As a student myself, I’ve found college to be a little bit of both. I often find myself asking, "How will this help me later in life?" But, then again, college gives me more control over my life
13.10 Describe the impact of a college education in young people’s lives, and discuss the problem of dropping out.
Going into college is one of the most important phases, for most of the students; college life decides how they are going to be for the rest of their life. And for many going into college are one of the most exciting times and many of the students look forward to it, it is the most exciting period for any students. Coming into college each student have their own view on how to spend their time in college some are there to study some to have fun and some for the sake of their parents.