College grads still aren’t finding “college jobs.”

segunda-feira, maio 25, 2015 David Barradas 0 Comments

1.Much of higher education consists of learning to make yourself look good. It's an essential skill, but you might as well learn something else while you're there too.

Chris Guillebeau

2.Some people get an education without going to college; the rest get it after they get out.

Mark Twain



I am not so pessimistic

i don't know if the extra money you make for having a college degree is enough to pay for the huge cost of attending one of the best. That i don't know.

but i know how companies and corporations think: If you need to compete for a place in a good college, you take tests, you are interviewed, you compete with thousand of the smart kids in the world so corporations use the college grades as a hiring method.

If you came from a good college you are ok. 


As a bonus for attending a good college you become friends with people who are going to held the best jobs.
i don't think you learn a lot in College, you were already the best and you are still the best when you exit.

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College a waste of time and money for kids, FT

Here is what's wrong with college.
First, and foremost, it's too expensive. To send a kid to college you need from $200,000 to $400,000. That's insane. There's no way the incremental advantage they get from having a diploma will ever pay back that amount. Perhaps for the first time the opportunity cost (a phrase I remember from Economics 101) of college does not equal the extra profits generated by the degree.
Second, I don't believe in a balanced education. Most colleges require students to take a smattering of art, maths, sciences and so forth. Taking 10 courses a year on wildly different topics, with enormous homework responsibilities, not to mention droning, boring professors for at least eight of the 10, is the surest formula for creating complete non-interest and inability to remember anything in any of the topics covered. What a waste of $400,000.
And third, there are far better uses of time. One reader asked what her kid should be doing instead of college. Here are some of my responses:
1. Working - not just a labour or service job, but there are internet-content jobs out there. I have high school and college kids working for me who are making over $50,000 a year from writing gigs on the internet. Scour Craigslist for opportunities, your favourite blogs, or websites related to your favourite interests. Companies are dying for good content. Create your own blog, get yourself noticed, build relationships with other content companies and communities.
2. Take half the fee for one semester, give it to your kid, and tell him or her to start a business. Not every youngster has entrepreneurial sensibilities, but it's always worth trying once. The cost for starting a business is next to zero, so it's a viable alternative. What business should they start? For one thing, now that Facebook and MySpace have open development platforms, try out a few applications for these platforms; for a few hundred dollars you can outsource development of these applications to India, and get your friends to start trying them. Make sure they are viral (that is, a message should appear "click here to get all your friends to try XYZ") and see which ones are a success. I mention Facebook and MySpace because every kid is familiar with these sites and comfortable with the subtleties, and it's this comfort that can create the best businesses.
3. Spend a year trying to become good at one thing. Whatever your child's greatest interest is, whether cooking, chess, writing, maths, there are so many resources on the internet available for learning that college is almost the last place a kid should go to pursue a passion. Intense immersion in a favourite topic is the surest way to become an expert in that field.

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