College Degree And Income Potential

You are here: Home / Development / College Degree And Income Potential

Everyone “knows” that college graduates make more money than people without a college degree.  So, if you take everyone with a college degree and put them in bucket A, and put everyone without a college degree in bucket B, the average wage of bucket A will be higher than B.

So, does that mean you should get a college degree in order to get higher income? Does getting a college degree actually help you earn more money? No. It doesn’t.

Photo by JOHN TOWNER on Unsplash

The real thing that will help you earn more is acquiring valuable skills.  Many people acquire skills in college, so it isn’t surprising that college graduates on average make more money.  However, if you put everyone who has valuable skills in one bucket and everyone without valuable skills in another, you’d find the skilled bucket has a much higher average income than the non-skilled.  Further, you’d find that there were some people with great skills and no degree and others with a degree and no skills.

My point is that focusing on getting a degree is pretty pointless.  I was looking through some old papers with my grandmother a few years ago.  She showed me my great grandfather’s diploma from seminary and his license to practice law in Kansas. I asked about the diploma from his law degree and found that he didn’t have one.  He was in law school and someone dared him to take the bar exam.  He took the dare and passed. He had already acquired the skills necessary to become a lawyer and it was those skills that were important–not how long he spent in college. Interestingly enough, he wouldn’t have been able to do that today. Kansas is one of the states that won’t let you even take the bar exam if you don’t have a law degree. I think this is a problem. We’ve made the focus on getting a degree instead of on acquiring skills.

Our educational institutions have a vital part to play in educating. However, I think it is detrimental to focus so much on whether or not someone gets a degree because it makes the degree what is important instead of the skill set.

Right now our colleges are full of kids who are there to get a degree–not necessarily skills. They are focusing on the wrong thing and it is an extreme source of frustration for teachers. How would you like to deal with students all day where a good percentage of them are just trying to do the minimum possible to get a piece of paper that says they graduated?  I wouldn’t like it and I know at least a few teachers who are looking at different careers because they only see things getting worse and worse.

According to the government statistics, the percentage of students graduating with an engineering degree peaked in the mid-80’s and has been on a decline until a recent slight uptick. In fact, the percentage of students graduating in engineering in 2014-2015 is only 65% of what it was in 1985-1986–and that represents an improvement from prior years. Science is facing the same thing with an overall decline from the early 70’s but a very slight uptick in recent years. There has been a steady increase in “other fields” which includes things like journalism, law, communication, architecture, etc.

I’m not trying to say that journalism isn’t worth studying, but when it comes to making a living, the skills you acquire studying journalism for four years are not in high enough demand to pay well. On the other hand, I regularly talk to people who say they can’t find good software engineers and they are willing to hire smart people regardless of whether or not they have a degree.

Reader Interactions

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Circle of Life thumbnail

Circle of Life

Welcome to the DeeperBlue.com Photo Of The Week. This week’s photo is: Every week we bring you some of the best underwater photography we’ve seen from both amateurs and professionals alike.  You can get your photos featured by tagging us on social media (Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter) as well as using the hashtag #DeeperBluePhoto.  Finally,…
Read More
Tweaks to U.S. Christmas Trees Could Help Them Survive Climate Change thumbnail

Tweaks to U.S. Christmas Trees Could Help Them Survive Climate Change

Mounting pressure from extreme weather events and lethal diseases—both exacerbated by climate change—threatens to assail U.S. Christmas tree–growing regions and slash production. To help defend these cherished trees and the farms that raise them, researchers are mapping conifer genomes and exploiting the natural characteristics of species that grow outside the U.S. to identify and breed…
Read More
Scientists Discover a Simple Way To Improve Medication Efficacy: Listen to Your Favorite Song thumbnail

Scientists Discover a Simple Way To Improve Medication Efficacy: Listen to Your Favorite Song

Researchers at Michigan State University found that music-listening interventions can enhance the effectiveness of medicines, particularly in reducing chemotherapy-induced nausea. Future studies may investigate the neurochemical basis for this effect by measuring serotonin levels, potentially leading to nonpharmacological interventions complementing traditional medicine.Researchers at Michigan State University have discovered that not only is listening to a
Read More
100 GB package: the price drops to €10.99/month with this Free Mobile promo thumbnail

100 GB package: the price drops to €10.99/month with this Free Mobile promo

Pour son dixième anniversaire, Free Mobile lance une promo exceptionnelle sur sa Série Free. Du 10 au 18 janvier 2022, l’opérateur propose 100 Go de data pour seulement 10,99€/mois pendant un an. C’est l’occasion d’économiser sans vous priver tout en profitant de l’un des meilleurs réseaux mobiles actuels en France métropolitaine.Économisez et profitez des derniers…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share