Summary Of Charles Murray Are Too Many People Going To College

1586 Words7 Pages

Many people claim that in today's world, everyone needs a B.A. for a job, leading to more people attending college; which Charles Murray argues in his essay, “Are Too Many People Going to College?” He also discusses how core knowledge shouldn't stop at 8th grade, but be continued into high school. Making a point that people are forcing students to go to college, to get the education they should have had in high school, to get them to earn a B.A. I see where Murray is coming from, and I agree with him that in many schools we need to continue core knowledge past 8th grade. In my time at high school though, I didn't notice a lack in that, we had a writing class that could help us compose a story, a ton of math classes to choose from, and also …show more content…

Unless you are like one of my friends who were able to take a year off and work at her family restaurant. There is another reason I believe why college admissions have increased. Universities have started to work toward being more and more accepting of all genders, cultures, races, sexuality, etc. Which will make more people apply. As everyone knows, college wasn't always like this. My grandma and mom were born in eras where women didn’t go to college but instead were stay home moms. Talking to my grandma she doesn’t regret going to college, as her era was when most women don’t get a higher education and instead be a stay at home moms or get part-time jobs. In my mom’s era, more women started to go to college, as it was becoming more acceptable for women to get a higher education. And the numbers keep growing each decade. The increase in women attending college has been researched. The article “Women’s college enrollment gains leave men behind” by Paw Research Center did research on the increase of women attending college. They show that in 1994, 63% of high school females and 61% of high school males were enrolling in college. In 2012, women increased to 71% but the men stayed at 61%. The reason for these large gender gaps is that barriers for women in the working field have lowered and allowed college education benefits to increase for women. As many campuses offer scholarships to young women and clubs they can feel welcomed in. Although many universities aren’t fully there, the support for POC (people of color) coming to college has been increasing. More clubs are forming where they can feel heard and welcomed, campuses also put on more events that support heritage. As the article “Women’s college enrollment gains leave men behind” states that in 1994, 48% of African American women went to college, until 2012, it increased to 69%. Central Michigan, for