Home Mobile Archives Reader Blogs Register Login

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

“A College Degree Is Nothing More Than A Ticket To Compete”

That’s a lesson one college graduate learned the hard way, but it’s something I wish more college-bound students knew going in.

...[a] degree is a piece of paper. It’s not some magical entity that grants the holder immediate and undeniable success. This claim is not to suggest that a college education is worthless, I’m only suggesting that a college degree is nothing more than a ticket to compete. It puts you in the running for a better future, but it provides no guarantees.

That was not what my friends and I thought we signed up for. We thought college would be the answer to our problems. Once we had our degrees, we would be coasting down easy street with fifty thousand dollar starting salaries at every turn. But when our graduation dates arrived, what we imagined would happen wasn’t anywhere near what actually happened.

I can vouch for being sold on the idea that a college degree was a ticket to a life big-salaries and high-power jobs as a kid.  All though high school, which was just a few years ago for me, we were drilled on going to college.  If we didn’t go to college we couldn’t get ahead.  We were even told that if we didn’t go to college immediately after high school that chances are we’d never go and we’d be stuck as janitors our whole life.

But that isn’t true.  In fact, some of the most successful people I know who are my age didn’t go to college.  Or they didn’t go to college until they had already started their careers, at which point they were just attending to get the specific training they needed.  Some of the least successful of my friends, however, are those who went to college, got some generic degree and are now struggling to pay of student loans while trying to find a job.

Which isn’t to say that college is pointless.  It isn’t.  For a lot of careers (doctor, lawyer, engineer, etc.) going to college right out of high school is a necessity.  But blindly pushing every single kid in high school to go on to college with some vague assurances about guaranteed career success afterwards is not only foolish, it’s cruel to those being pushed.

Comments

Avatar for Pal2Pal

This is a subject dear to my heart. I was in college in the sixties and dropped out when I had my first child. Then several years later, I decided to return and finish up getting my degree. Before I had even finished the first semester of my 2nd go-round, I got a promotion on my job and my career path was set. Experience and good job performance became my viable commodity, not a piece of paper.

My son started college right after high school and failed miserably. He was ADHD and couldn’t find the self-discipline necessary to do the work. Twice again, while in his twenties, he registered for classes and then dropped out before finishing a single semester. Then at 37, he came to me and said, “I’m tired of working for people half as smart and with no life experience, I’ve got to get a degree in order to compete.” With maturity, he evaluated what he really loved to do, what his fantasy career would be, and did a complete about face and went back to school, graduated with a 3.9 GPA, Dean’s List, the whole nine yards. He makes about half the money he was making in his dead end job, but I’ve never seen him happier.

Pal2Pal on August 15, 2007 at 01:21 pm
Rob
Rob
17408 comments
Send a private message

That’s about on par with my experiences, Pal.

By the way, I approved your log-in last night.  Not sure if you were having problems, but it should be working now.


When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.

-- Thomas Jefferson

Rob’s recently listened-to songs:

robport.gif border=0

Rob on August 15, 2007 at 01:40 pm

I think that the travesty is the quantity of students who choose psychology, history, political science, recreation, etc. and then wonder why they can’t get a job with only a bachelor’s degree.

Many of the good degrees really do have countless $50k offers, assuming that you got good grades and have good enough communication skills to convince someone to hire you.  Most students just don’t want to do the kind of work that a business or engineering degree requires.

electnixon on August 15, 2007 at 03:14 pm

Most students just don’t want to do the kind of work that a business or engineering degree requires.

I suspect that a lot of that has to do with the poor education they got in the primary school years.


The Supreme Court is a bunch of black robed tyrants

docdave on August 15, 2007 at 03:25 pm

Actually I thought it was a ticket to keg parties and student loans smile


Check out:
Goon’s North Dakota Red Neck
Goon’s World

goon on August 15, 2007 at 07:30 pm

LOL, Goon ...  I have to agree with you and my first year away at college was just that.
red face


flag002.gif washC.gif

Anna on August 15, 2007 at 08:01 pm
Page 1 of 1        

Post a Comment


Before commenting, please recite:

Grant me the serenity to ignore the trolls,
the courage to debate with honest opponents,
and the wisdom to know the difference.

Name   
Email   
URL   
Human?
  
 

Upload Image    

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Note: Notifications will only be sent to confirmed email addresses.