This is so nice |
Not OP but I love this and so feel it. Thank you! |
| Because community colleges are not in your top 100. |
No. I'm using numbers that someone above threw out. Read. Please. And do everyone a favor and read these posts in context. Of course I'm not suggesting that the 101st college is bad and will do nothing. It's a way to get the idea across of competitive vs non-competitive colleges. If you weren't so defensive you'd understand that. |
This is nice but can we ever discuss in a real, honest way of whether or not we should be sending a certain number of kids to a certain level of university that costs a certain amount of $? Or will it just continue to be "you're mean" to suggest that college isn't for everyone....and that those people are probably not the most academically gifted people? |
this is baloney. i graduated high school in 1982 and even then the average/below average kids were all going to college. i am not sure if i know a single kid from my class that **didn't** go to college. |
Actually according to data I easily found using something called Google, the % of college bound hs graduates increased significantly from 1995-2000. Prior to that it was marginally increasing linearly. And 2010 was a huge jump. So maybe you lived in a highly educated echo chamber. |
I’m not the poster you’re quoting but you must have lived in a very UC neighborhood for that to be true, or you’re just trolling. I graduated in the late 90s in a truly MC/LMC area. Maybe 25% of my class went to a 4 yr school, another quarter went to community college (and most never finished). The rest went to the military or vocational schools or worked retail/service jobs. |
| Why are any of you engaging in this nonsense post? Smdh. |
Guess what you just did. Guess you went to a top infinity college? |
There is so much more to the college experience than just academics. |
| Because the college has his major, the # of students will never exceed 5K, he loves the school and its support of his religion, and he already has a successful internship while in college and a job offer for after graduation, all with no debt. |
Sure, but it’s always “those people,” right? Those other people should consider whether college is good for them. Those other people whose kids got a 2.8 GPA, or didn’t take APs, or scored 1200 on the SAT. Not YOUR kid. YOUR kid will make the most of their education, and will just HAPPEN to also benefit from four years of extra maturity, social connections, safe independence building, and a safe ring on the income ladder. I have one of those kids. I am also myself over educated at a string of elite institutions. I expect you don’t actually think of my kid as one if “those people” because he goes to school with your kids, is on student government and band and track with them. But he is. He is just who you are “just wondering” whether should go to college like your kids. Maybe delve into the research, OP? Get curious. Read a little. You’ll find that college outcomes have little to do with the institution itself and everything to do with the socioeconomic stats of the family. So. Your question isn’t why kids go to non-selective colleges. It’s why poor and working class kids go to college. |
+1 and having the degree, from anywhere, gives you more options than not having it. FWIW, I have a lot of electricians in my family. Most of them also went to college. It was encouraged by their electrician fathers. And my grandfather was a Midwestern farmer but also went to college back in the 1920's, returning to the farm with more knowledge to improve his business. Absolutely students should not run up a lot of debt for college (regardless of how good a HS student they are). So a lower ranked school that gives a lot of merit or is a regional public school might be the better choice. |
In hindsight, my son would have preferred this. Many of his friends are going to an SEC school. |