This paper is analysis written on the essay “Should Everyone Go to College” written by Stephanie Owen and Isabel Sawhill. This essay talks heavily about the differences between a bachelor’s degree and a high school diploma. When considering what a person wants to do for the rest of their life, the first option they might consider is whether they need to go to college to do so. Though people may think college is not for them, a college may be more than they think. Although critics argue college is expensive and time-consuming. The authors suggest alternative solutions for education that result in successful and satisfying careers. The higher the college degree, someone earns, the bigger chance he has to make more money. According to the authors …show more content…
The cost of college matters as well: the more someone has to pay to attend, the lower the net benefit of attending. Furthermore, we have to factor in the opportunity cost of college, measured as the foregone earnings a student gives up when he or she leaves or delays entering the workforce to attend school.” Using average earnings for 18- and 19-year-olds and 20- and 21-year-olds with high school degrees (including those working part-time or not at all), Michael Greenstone and Adam Looney of Brookings’ Hamilton Project calculate an opportunity cost of $54,000 for a four-year degree”. (Owen, Sawhill, 2013, p. 1) $54,000 may sound like a lot of money, but there are so many ways a person can pay for college. People can work their way through school, earn scholarships and grants, and if take out a loan. Now, of course, not everyone is blessed with the opportunity like Donald Trump who inherited a business from his wealthy father. Though he graduated with an economics degree Donald Trump has become a billionaire investing money and starting new businesses. Unfortunately, that what? Does not happen for everyone, so college is the next best step to take if someone wants to be …show more content…
Athletes get to participate in the sport they love as well as receive a free education. Let us say they reach the professional level and have the chance to get paid for the sport they do. It only lasts for so long. What are they going to do when it is over? People will tell them what: they should put the degree that they earned to use. If they are a sports management major who wants to work for a professional team they need to use football to their advantage they just played professionally for these years. They had the ability to meet all these different people and owners, go back and talk to them. Use those connections to get them a nice job. Maybe they want to go a different route and be an agent. Give a few agency companies some calls and get them a few college athletes entering the professional level who are looking for an agent. The importance of attending college cannot be stressed enough. Now, if they go and they are not doing very well and just decide it is not for them, cool. Nobody can fault them for trying. It just proves that college was not for them and lets society know that it is not for everyone. According to the authors of “Should Everyone Go to College?” “In this brief, we have corralled existing research to make the point that while on average the return to college is highly positive, there is a considerable spread in the value of