Medusa

Is Higher Education Worth It?

7 Strategies to succeed with online education degree

<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;"><span style&equals;"line-height&colon; 1&period;5em&semi;">This has been a topic of debate for quite some time now&period;  Some freshly graduated students struggle to find work within their field of study&comma; working at the same coffee shops or department stores that kept them stable while attending school&comma; others accept jobs that they are overqualified for&comma; Hoping that the position will last them until they find something more worthwhile&comma; leaving them to question if the <&sol;span>student loan debt<span style&equals;"line-height&colon; 1&period;5em&semi;"> they have tallied up is actually worth it&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">Well is it&quest; That answer&comma; according to a new set of income statistics&comma; is <em>yes<&sol;em>&period;  A 4 year college degree has never been as valuable as it is now&period;  The pay gap between those with a degree and those without is at an all-time high&period; College graduates between the ages of 25 and 32 who are working a full time position earn nearly &dollar;18&comma;000 more per year than those who only finished High school according to research made by the Pew Research Center&period;  The number of students graduating from a college level is dropping every year&comma; and it is directly affecting the pay scale&period; If there were more qualified individuals entering the workforce with a college education&comma; the gap between those individuals and those who only have a high school diploma would shrink&period; The fact that the gap in pay is still growing means that we still aren&&num;8217&semi;t producing enough graduates&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">But a 4 year degree doesn’t always mean success&period;  Arts and humanities degrees seem to be much more varied in pay than&comma; say engineering degrees which even the least lucrative can generate a return of &dollar;500&comma;000 over a span of 20 years&period;  A graduate with an engineering degree from an Ivy League school could expect to be 1&period;1 million dollars better off in a 20 year span than an individual who never pursued a degree at all&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">Since 1983&comma; the cost of attending a university has nearly risen to 5 times the rate of inflation and the salaries of those who graduate have stayed the same for most of the last 10 years&period;  Student debt is stopping many people from buying a house&comma; vehicles&comma; starting businesses&comma; and even having children&period;  Nearly one third of the people taking on student loans&comma; drop out of school&period; Our job market doesn’t help things either&period; College graduates are suffering from the economy’s weak and unbalanced growth&period; The average hourly wage for a graduate is around &dollar;32&period;60&comma; which over the last decade has only seen a 1&percnt; increase&period; What’s worse is that the average wage for everyone else has dropped to around &percnt;16&period;50&comma; a decrease of about 5&percnt;&period; The numbers don’t lie&period; It is clearly evident that it is more valuable to have a college education when entering the work force&period; Only time will tell how long the benefit of higher education will outweigh the cost of the education itself&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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