Summary Of Blind Future By Caroline Bird

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Blind Future
Caroline Bird strongly believes college is not needed to have a fulfilling life, nor is college intended for the masses, although she has attained a college education herself. Some of Bird’s main arguments in her essay, “College is a Waste of Time and Money” (a short essay), are: college is not for everyone; after college there is no guaranteed future; and students are overall unhappy while attending college. Granted, some of Bird’s arguments towards college being an unnecessary task to venture for most of the population ring some truth, but have also become dated in today’s day and age.
Caroline Bird was born on April 15, 1915, in New York City. Her father is a crusading newspaper editor, this is where Bird got her influence …show more content…

Describing college as an expectation in today’s society, after high school the expected route is to attend a university to then attain a higher level of education to put towards a career the young adult may want to do for the rest of their lives. She implies that society expectations push young adults towards going to college because it is, “good for them, like eating spinach,” (Bird Par 13) when she states that it is, “systematically damaging 18-year-olds by insisting that their proper place is in college,” (Bird Par 9). In other words she states that young adults are not able to truly determine what they want to do next in life when their head’s are clouded with the pressures from society, family, and friends to go in a certain path after high school. She does make a point in that what she is saying does ring true even today. As this school year comes to a close, seniors are asked by their friends, family, and teachers, “Where are you going to college?” So the expectation for young adults after high school is still to go to college. Although, it is not uncommon for people to take a year off before going to college, or to go straight into the workforce in this day and age compared to the expectations of when Bird was living in.
Another argument Bird makes is that after graduating college, there is no guaranteed future. “The outlook isn’t much better for students majoring in other psychic-pay