Teenage years are very stressful
for many different reasons. For me I found myself constantly wanting to pull my
hair out especially when it came to college. That may be a little bit over
dramatic but the reality of the situation is that there was a lot to take into
consideration when thinking about college. As if the cost wasn’t enough to send
you over the edge, reports and articles started coming out about how a college
degree did not guarantee you a job and things like that. There are a few
reasons that really make you wonder, “What’s the point in even going to
college?”
What
most college students lack when up against other job candidates, who have been
previously employed, is one word: experience. That is what sets “us” apart from “them”. Yes, you may be
doing internships and such but that can only get you so far.
Financiallypoor.com says it perfectly: “It’s hard to land a job without
experience, but you can’t get experience until you land a job.” That’s
precisely one of the problems. How are we as college students going beat out
people who have been in the field for 5, 10, maybe even 15 years? The fact of
the matter is we probably won’t. Not only are we not gaining experience, but
also lots of college grads don’t think college even really prepares them for a
job. And that goes beyond just the experience.
In a poll done by the Time magazine it shows that 74% of
college grads say that college gave them intellectual growth. 69% said that
college gave them maturity. And only 55% said that college prepares them for a
job. Well at least college teaches us something right? Wrong. We need to demand
more from our institutions of learning and the faculty who teach there. In an
article for the New York Times written by Gary Gutting he says” They (students) see most of
their courses as intrinsically “boring,” of value only if they provide training
relevant to future employment or if the teacher has a pleasing (amusing,
exciting, “relevant”) way of presenting the material.” He then states that professors expect this and in turn
give B’s or higher for at it’s best “adequate” work. We need to be challenged.
We as students need to buck up and learn that college isn’t just about partying
and having a good time. I’m not saying don’t have a life but people need to
realize that in as short as four years maybe less (depending on what year you
are) you will be on your own…also known as adulthood. We are setting ourselves
up for failure by not showing up to class everyday ready to learn and not
putting as much effort as possible into completing assignments and studying.
This by no means is all on us though. Professors need to expect us to be ready
for class and to study and to penalize those who don’t. If they would rather
party all night and not give time to their assignments and studying so be it,
and let it affect their grade. Don’t clump everyone in the same group and
assume that that is everyone’s prerogative when they start college.
Now that I have finished all my ranting and raving, I’ll
bring a more optimistic viewpoint to this topic. College in it’s own way
actually does somewhat prepare us for being apart of a workforce. In an article
by College Parents of America it states that college teaches us deadlines and
being on time matters, there is a limited number of sick days and personal
days, we have to have good communication skills, and such. So if and when we do get a job we will
have been taught the very basics about what to expect when dealing with bosses
and fellow employees. Not only is it doing that, but some big-time schools are
making it possible for people who wouldn’t normally be able to go there get
some form of schooling from that institution.
In
the article “The Crisis in Higher Education” by Nicholas Carr he says “This
fall, many of the country's leading universities, including MIT, Harvard,
Stanford, and Princeton, are offering free classes over the Net, and more than
a million people around the world have signed up to take them.” This was news
to me. With some college degrees adding up to around $100,000 this is a great
way to get a college education without spending all of you and your parent’s
cash flow.
College is definitely being put under the microscope,
as it should be. It has its flaws like the lack of experience your receive,
complete un-preparation for jobs, and it’s decreasing un-rigorous curriculum.
But it does have its positives like how to deal with very basics scenarios and
norms of having a job and it is making it easier for financially unstable
people to get a degree. Hopefully as time goes on these kinks with college will
get ironed out but for the time being we should try to soak up as much helpful
information we can so that we at least leave college with something.
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