What about those kids for whom college is exactly what they need?
To further their education. To create opportunities. To open doors to worthwhile and important careers? To prepare them in highly technical fields?
It’s not all a scam.
Doctors, for example, have to learn a lot, and critical building blocks of that career require a college education.
I'm not against education, even 4-6-8 year degrees. Yes, I fully understand most professional-level careers demand 4-5-6-8 years of college.
My daughter is in the middle of obtaining a Bachelor's degree in the medical field. Most people in this field will pursue an Associates, very few have a Bachelors until recently when more and more began to pursue them. A Master's is rare in this field.
My wife and I are also funding this expense, we didn't want her to have the stress of paying for college on her. But we are not silent check writers. Yes, I call the University a few times a year and speak my mind about their courses they have required and I've never gotten an explanation about the first two semesters where we paid $1600 for the "meal card" and there was no possible way to obtain more than $1400 in benefit. Absolutely no way. I threatened to be present at the next Freshman-Parent Orientation and ask that very question. The next year the fee to SODEXO for students who lived in student housing on campus where the meal card is required was $1400. Imagine that.
Then there was the required 4-page paper explaining how beneficial the Netflix movie on Equality she was required to watch and report on... That along with 3-4 other courses we had to pay for that had zero to do with her degree.
It's amazing how NONE of the BS courses are even available while she is "in a program" that focuses 100% of her studies on the subject matter of her degree the last 5 semesters of school. It's also crazy how tuition for these 5 semesters has increased 25%.
BTW, I have worked in a field that requires a Bachelor's degree for 30 years. 30 years ago a college degree meant something. I know this is gonna hurt some feelings, but today, there's not nearly the respect for a college degree that there once was and there's a major reason behind that.
There's also a major reason why the Trades are getting some serious backing today. Big names who have real celebrity-type clout are pushing the trades and lots of people are taking note.
I work with tradesmen everyday. Most will compile an annual income close to mine or above it. Most pipe/structural welders, fitters, millwrights and multi-craft tradesmen will gross over $100k in taxable earnings in 2023 and many will have $30k+ in non-taxable per diem.