Higher Education: What They Don’t Tell You Steve Jobs. Henry Ford. Steven Spielberg. What do these three distinguished men have in common? They are prime examples of men who were offered high paying jobs without the need for a college degree. However, Ford and Jobs are not used to show how college isn’t for everyone, but rather to show that colleges must change in order to better suit the needs of students. In today’s society, higher education systems continue to treat students as a cost item while educating them in the cheapest way possible with only 16.4% of students left feeling satisfied with what they learned (Nemko 2008). Although people may disagree, not everyone is cut out for college; not to mention, the cost and time spent during four years is not worth the measly …show more content…
Additionally, students are left with a devastated self-esteem, a Mount Everest of debt, and a job they could have obtained without a degree. What many individuals are not aware of is that colleges aren’t held liable to produce effective, successful students. Instead, they are rewarded with ever-greater taxpayer-funded student loans, which allow colleges to raise tuitions even higher. On the other hand, individuals who plan on attending college are expected to earn one million dollars more than high school graduates over the course of their lifetimes, with more depending on their degree (Bond 2015). However, the amount of money will seize to cover the cost of their loan debt. Meanwhile, high school graduates have the benefit of a four-year head start to work and they are blissfully free from any student debt. Around 15% of graduate and professional school students graduate with a six-figure student loan debt (Bond 2015). Students left with such debt often are left with diminished prospect of their