Sure You Should Go to College?
You're a good student, so you should go to college,
right? After all, you'll be much better educated
and you'll end up with a better career, right? Only
losers don't go to college, right?
Not necessarily.
Even if you can get into a prestigious college,
you may be wiser to skip college at least for a
while, and instead, start your own business, talk
your way into a cool job, land an apprenticeship,
join the military, complete a short
career-preparation program, or do an
adventure-filled time-out year. At the end of this
article, I'll show you how to maximize your chances
of succeeding at all of those.
But you might ask, "Why not go to college
first?"
One obvious answer is the money. At the sort of
public university that readers of this article are
likely to attend, the sticker price for four years
of tuition, room, board, and other standard
expenses averages $60,000, and at a similar private
institution, $150,000. And the average student
takes not four years, but 5.2 years to get their
bachelor's degree. Remember too that especially if
your family is middle income, much of your
financial aid will be loan, not grant. That means
you must pay it backplus interest.
But you say, "I keep hearing that college
graduates earn much more over their lifetimes than
non-graduates." That's one of the misleading
statistics that colleges foist on you. Of course,
college graduates, on average, earn more. But
that's in part because the pool of the
college-bound is brighter, more motivated, and have
more family connections than the non-college bound.
You could lock the college-bound in a closet for
four years and they'll earn more. Yes, college adds
value to your marketability, but for the right
person, the alternative ways to spend your college
years described in this article can add as much or
more.
You might also argue, "But college isn't just
about preparing for a career. It's about becoming
more educated. "In theory, you're absolutely right.
But because of the way colleges are run, much of
what you learn in college is of little value to
most students: professors' idiosyncratic theories,
unproven models, impenetrable literature, etc,
often taught in auditorium-sized classes by
professors hired and rewarded on how much research
they crank out, not on how well they teach. Many
students graduate from college feeling their
academic experience has not lived up to the hype in
the brochure that the college used to get them to
enroll.
Remember, in deciding to go to college, you're
giving up at least four of the most productive
years of your life. As a young person, you don't
realize how valuable four years are. Chances are,
as a teenager, you feel like you'll live forever.
But ask any person over 60 how much money they'd
give for an extra four years of energetic,
productive life. It's usually quite a lot.
Who probably should go to college
Students who enjoy school-based learning.
Professors can usually keep their jobs even if
they're bad teachers. So, to get a good education,
you must make the significant effort to discover
who the good instructors are and often beg your way
into one of those desired professors' classes. You
also have to be motivated enough to show up at
class even though in most university classes, the
professor won't notice or care that you're not
there. Few professors take attendance. To get a
really valuable education, you have to be willing
to ask questions of the professor in class, and in
private sessions. All this requires an unusually
motivated student.
Students who do school better than they do life.
Some people don't do life well. They can ace school
exams but lack the common sense to realize they
should have dumped that jerk months ago or lack the
restraint to avoid maxing out their credit
card.
Or they're fine when told exactly what to do:
"Show up MWF 10-11, read the textbook, pages
202-317, write a term paper on the Doppelganger in
19th Century English Literature, but struggle in
the less structured real world.
Or they make a poor impression on
peoplethey're shy, obnoxious, or
unattractive. Alas, in this society, looks
count.
People who do better at school than at life are
wise to go to collegetheir education and the
sheepskin will partly compensate for their
real-world limitations.
Who should consider saying no to
college?
People who are impressive to others and are
burned out on school. Over my lifetime, I've gotten
to know hundreds of successful people. For some of
them, a degree, especially a degree from a
prestigious college, was key to their success. But
other people succeeded without degrees, usually
because they were impressive people: smart
self-starters who were likeable so others were
willing to do things for themlike hire them
even though they didn't have a college degree. Such
people also often started their own successful
business.
Many little-known people have succeeded without
college, but there are also many famous ones, for
example, Jesse Ventura, Madonna, Malcolm X, Steven
Spielberg, William Faulkner, Bill Gates, Eleanor
Roosevelt, Leonardo DiCaprio, Maya Angelou, Barbra
Streisand, Michael Dell, Jane Austen, PBS's Nina
Totenberg, Walter Cronkite, Ted Turner, Bob Dylan,
Pulp Fiction director Quentin Tarentino, cookie
maker Debbie Fields, Dreamworks co-founder David
Geffen, former Israeli president David Ben Gurion,
oil billionaire John D. Rockefeller, Warren Beatty,
Woody Allen, famed anthropologist Richard Leakey,
astronaut and senator John Glenn, McDonald's
founder Ray Kroc, Dustin Hoffman, Buckminster
Fuller, Alexander Graham Bell, Wendy's Founder Dave
Thomas, Walt Disney, Rosie O'Donnell, Thomas
Edison, Blockbuster Video founder and owner of the
Miami Dolphins Wayne Huizenga, NBC mogul David
Sarnoff, Ernest Hemingway, Sally Field, architect
Frank Lloyd Wright, Steve Jobs, Coco Chanel, Roots
author Alex Haley, chef Wolfgang Puck, Robert
Redford, John D. Rockefeller, satirist H.L Mencken,
Thomas Edison, the Wright brothers, and seven
presidents from Washington to Truman. ABC-TV's
Peter Jennings dropped out of high school!
You've struggled your way to average grades. Are
you one of those students who managed to struggle
your way to a B in math but didn't really
understand many of the concepts? Did you find
yourself clamoring for the Cliff's Notes as you
plowed your way through not understanding Hamlet,
yet somehow by studying hard, managed to eke out a
B in the course? And when you took the SAT, you
scored under 950?
Here are some truths that the
collegeswhich are businesses and want your
moneydon't want you to know:
Of every 100 freshmen with the above profile,
fewer than 25 at so-called four-year colleges will
earn their bachelor's degree, even when given six
years!
Such students' time on campus is often a
non-stop assault to their self-esteem, from that
first class when they're already confused, to the
final exam, when they experience that terror that
most of us have experienced when we know we'll do
badly.
Even if such students defy the odds and
graduate, they often fare poorly in the job market.
There is an oversupply of bachelor's degree
holders. Even many strong students struggle to find
a decent job. Plenty of college degree holders are
folding sweaters at the Gap for $10 an hour,
driving a cab, or hawking real estate. Marginal
students have an even harder time.
Students who are mainly going to college to
figure out what they want to be when they grow up.
College is a poor place to do that. Too often, you
choose a major because the introductory class was
fascinating and you did well in it. That doesn't
predict you'd enjoy and do well in the major.
Worse, most majors have little to do with careers.
Most college graduates end up in careers having
nothing to do with their major.
It's better to figure out what you want to be
when you grow up by exploring your high school's
career center, seeing a career counselor, or using
a family connection to get you a better job than
you could get on the open market.
Maximizing Success
Okay, so perhaps you'll consider an alternative
to college, but how do you maximize your chances of
success in that alternative. These strategies will
put you ahead of the competition.
A Time-Out Year. A year filled with
out-of-school adventures can help you find career
clarity and increase your motivation to work hard
at college. For example Lex Leeming spent a year
building a log cabin on a ranch in Wyoming, helped
a documentary film maker in upstate New York,
served an apprenticeship in a dive shop in
Micronesia, and worked as a gardener on the Italian
island of Elba. "When I came back, I was totally
psyched for my studies."
Worried if you take a year off, you won't go
back to school? A Princeton Review poll found that
55% of students who took time off reported getting
better college grades afterwards and 57% said the
experience eased their job searches.
Perhaps the most cost-effective way to set up a
Time-Out year is to find options in such books as
The Princeton Review's Taking Time Off, The
Uncollege Alternative, The Back Door Guide to
Short-Term Job Adventures, and the out-of-print,
misleadingly titled, but wonderful Summer Options
for Teenagers. Also, you might check out services
that put together a custom time-out year for you at
WhereYouHeaded.com, The Center for Interim
Programs, and LeapNow.org.
Talking your way into a cool job. People can get
much of what they want just by asking for it. If
someone says no, ask someone else, and someone
else, and someone else. Learn to shrug your
shoulders at rejection. Even extremely capable
people are rejected much more often than they are
accepted. The good news is that you only need one
job. Career counselor Tom Jackson describes a
successful job search as NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO,
NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO,
NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO,
YES.
So, think of a cool job that doesn't absolutely,
positively require college. Then call people in the
field, yes strangers, and say something like, "I'll
be graduating high school soon and would love to
learn (insert jobcinematography, for
example). I'm willing to work my way up from the
bottom. Might you know someone who could use
someone like me? I imagine someone gave you your
first break. I'm looking for someone to give me
mine."
If you can't think of a job that excites you,
you might consult my book, Cool Careers for
Dummies. It contains insider profiles of over 500
cool careers, including many that don't require
college. Or scan the index of your Yellow
Pagesit contains thousands of job categories.
Then call all the phone numbers in a job category
that excites you.
While many employers will turn you down, if you
make enough phone calls, someone will give you a
shot. Before taking the position, ask enough
questions to help you assess if the position will
likely be dead-end or a career launchpad.
Starting your own business. Keep your business
extraordinarily simple. Simple businesses cost less
to start and much less can go wrong. And be
assured, people have made lots of money owning
amazingly simple businesses, for example, a small
chain of espresso carts in desirable locations such
as near a commuter train station.
Normally, it's safer not to try to come up with
a new ideayou then become a guinea pig.
Instead, copy an already successful formula. For
example, does a nearby burrito store always have a
line of customers out the front door? If so, open a
burrito store in a similar nearby area. You can
find extensive information and free coaching on
starting your business at the United States Small
Business Administration website. Click on "starting
your business."
Finding a good apprenticeship. There are over
800 careersmainly blue-collar, working with
your handsthat you can prepare for in an
apprenticeship. These programs are usually four
years long and consist mainly of on-the-job
training under an experienced supervisor, during
which you earn half the pay of your supervisor.
Practical classes supplement the on-the-job
training. For example, if you were in a biomedical
equipment technician apprenticeship, you'd take a
class on how to use math in that career. To find
your state's apprenticeship website, go to the
National Association of State and Territorial
Apprenticeship Directors and click on "links."
Joining the military. The military trains you
for over 200 careers, 92% of which, after your
few-year stint, can be pursued in civilian life,
everything from personnel recruiter to graphic
designer to x-ray technician. Before enlisting,
you'll take tests to identify careers you'd likely
succeed in, and then the military will usually
allow you to choose one of those careers. Links:
Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, and United States
Coast Guard.
Finding a good short vocational training
program. Depending on the career, these programs
can take as little as a few weeks (for example, to
become a phlebotomistsomeone who takes your
blood for medical tests), to two years (to become a
court reporter.) These programs prepare you for
careers ranging from agricultural equipment
repairer to stone mason. Your first stop should be
at the websites of your local community college(s).
Vocational programs at community colleges will
generally be inexpensive and accredited (approved
by an external review body.) Private
vocational/career colleges also exist. They often
offer quicker, more convenient training, but are
typically expensive. Be especially careful to
verify that a private career/vocational college is
accredited. To find out about vocational training
in your state, go to the Department of Education's
Office of Vocational and Adult Education.
Attend You U. No matter which of the above you
pursue, consider "enrolling" in what I call You
University. Just because you're not enrolling in
college doesn't mean you can't become an educated
person. In fact, you may become more educated, in a
more personalized way, more quickly by attending
"You U". You simply ask instructors at local
colleges, extension programs, or adult schools if
you can sit in on individual courses you find
interesting. Without having to worry about meeting
graduation requirements, you can take what you
want, and only do the assignments you find of
value. If a course isn't meeting your needs, you
can simply stop showing up.
Dealing with pressure
Chances are, once you start telling people
you're thinking about not going to college, you're
going to get pressure: "What? You're not going to
college?" or "Son, you're making a big
mistake."
The best way to counter such pressure is to have
a solid game plan that explains why, for you, the
road less traveled is a wiser one. For example,
"Mom, you know I've been going through the motions
in school. I just don't know why I need to learn
this stuff and I'm not really learning itI'm
cramming for tests and the day after, it's out the
other ear. If I go to college, I'm afraid I'll be
one of those millions of kids who goof off, waste a
year or two and lots of money and then drop out. At
least for now, I need to try another path. Maybe
later if I'm more motivated, I'll go back to
college, but for now, the Small Business
Administration is helping me develop a business
plan. And on the side, I'm going to audit a class
at the university on entrepreneurship and another
on philosophy, just for the heck of it. Mom, I
really want your support."
Odds are good that most people with half a brain
will recognize you as something special, something
better than the millions of sheep who plod off to
college.
Conclusion
If you're not sure whether you want to go to
college, apply. That buys you extra months to
contemplate your decision. Many colleges will even
defer your admission for a year, which will give
you risk-free time to try out an alternative to
college.
But whatever you decide, make your choice based
on what seems right for you rather than on what's
expected of you. So many people go through life
making decisions based on what other people will
think of them. Sad. Do what's right for you.
© 2007, Marty
Nemko
* * *
Marty
Nemko holds a PhD from the University of
California, Berkeley, and subsequently taught in
Berkeleys Graduate School of Education. He is
the worklife columnist in the Sunday San Francisco
Chronicle and is the producer and host of Work With
Marty Nemko, heard Sundays at 11 on 91.7 FM in
(NPR, San Francisco), and worldwide on
www.martynemko.com
.
400+ of his published writings are available free
on that website and is a co-editor of
Cool
Careers for Dummies.
and author of The All-in-One College Guide.
E-Mail.
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