Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft; Steve Jobs, the founder of Apple; Mark Zuckerberg, a co-founder of Facebook; Walt Disney, the founder of Walt Disney; and Hiroshi Yamauchi, the president of Nintendo, are all some of the most successful and admirable men in society. They all, however, share one common trait: being a dropout. Whether those men dropped out of high school or dropped out of college, it is clear that a diploma or a degree does not predict whether an individual will be successful in his or her life. Many factors contribute to the success of a person and not just his or her education status. While these are some of the more extreme cases, to the average Louisiana resident a college education is practically unobtainable. That is …show more content…
Colleges covet the rich and shun the poor. A college or university is more likely to accept an individual from a more wealthy background than that of a poorer status. This is due to the fact that those wealthier individuals are willingly to donate money to that specific institution, and the college or university does not have to offer scholarships to those who can afford to pay the tuition. This also leads back to the previous topic of the higher cost of college. Minority groups are statistically shown to have a lower income than that of the dominant group. The inequality between these two groups creates a greater influx of the dominant group attempting to attend a postsecondary school rather than the minority groups. Although colleges and universities claim to promote diversity within their institutions, they unintentionally promote inequality too. The higher cost of college makes the dream of attending college to someone in the minority group just that, a dream. Inequality may also discourage some from even striving to go to college. Louisiana actually has a vast amount of minority groups that attribute to its population, which is why earning a degree may be harder for the average Louisiana resident or make earning that degree slightly more