College education is most definitely valuable for everyone because then they will have the urge to do many great things and also will have a lot of memorable experiences, while learning as well. Having a college degree leaves so many doors open to choose from, but is rough because one doesn’t know which one is the right decision. There can be great things that can help one in the future and through your life-experiences and if one takes the wrong door than your scale just goes down from exciting and enjoyable life to stressful and questionable decisions that isn’t fun to deal with. There are pros and cons in attending college, like how expensive college is, but right now we will stick with the important information about why going to college …show more content…
“But from almost an individual’s perspective, college is a no-brainier. It’s the most reliable ticket to the middle class and beyond. Those who question the value of college land to be those with the luxury of knowing their own children will be able to attend it.” That quote was from the article The Upshot, by Leonhardt; he is saying that if one don’t go to college your crazy because it's getting one prepared for adulthood, when one get's a job, create a family and many other life changing experiences along the way, especially paying for taxes. This will also have a good influence on one as one grows up. In my interview with Mary Ann Sandoval, who is not an author, but a mom, who stated that “College can find your career path and one would be able to focus more and get work done that is needed to be completed.” She has gone through a roller coaster ride that she just couldn't keep track of, but will always be a hard working person who never gave …show more content…
Which explains why college isn’t really for everyone, especially some jobs don’t need a college degree, but the catch is that one doesn’t earn a lot of money. For that reason, “Attending college is unequivocally not the right decision on purely economic grounds, underemployed college graduates doing jobs historically performed by those with much less education,” (Vedder 78) wrote an article about why college isn't for