If you would like an article for a starting point, see here. I recommend drilling into the Thiel interview.
I doubt many of us would argue about the financial utility of incurring massive amounts of debt to get a master's in race and genders studies. I've run into people recently pursuing their master's in race and gender studies.
Is the traditional college education increasingly becoming more of a liability than a benefit?
In-state community colleges rates are very affordable. It would seem 2yrs in college inexpensively would benefit quite a few people. I seem to recall that it was those that went onto their masters at private schools that would rack up the 100k+ debts, and where it was critical that the degree was one directly tied to financial benefit.
USA Today reported in 2005 that 57% of college students were women.
I doubt many of us would argue about the financial utility of incurring massive amounts of debt to get a master's in race and genders studies. I've run into people recently pursuing their master's in race and gender studies.
Is the traditional college education increasingly becoming more of a liability than a benefit?
In-state community colleges rates are very affordable. It would seem 2yrs in college inexpensively would benefit quite a few people. I seem to recall that it was those that went onto their masters at private schools that would rack up the 100k+ debts, and where it was critical that the degree was one directly tied to financial benefit.
USA Today reported in 2005 that 57% of college students were women.