300k A Year Without A College Degree

Par : King Maurico Symons
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8231161652
  • EAN9798231161652
  • Date de parution05/06/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurWalzone Press

Résumé

After decades of growth, college enrollment among new students is dropping. For these forward thinking young people, rejecting the traditional college experience doesn't mean rejecting education?-?it means rejecting crippling debt. According to recent statistics, about 44 million people in the United States owe student loans worth over $1.45 trillion dollars. The most amusing thing about this is that most of the people who took out these loans, spend a huge part of their lives, if not the rest of their lives, paying off the debt.
This is largely due to the fact that some are unable to get jobs after college, while some just get jobs that can barely pay the bills. Many young people would consider financial independence the first milestone of adulthood, leaving them with a hard choice to make?-?college or career? Undergraduate tuition has grown by more than four times over the years, and today two in three students who earn their bachelor's degree go into debt over it.
Not to mention the average cost of an advanced degree, like law or medicine, which has grown by more than eight times. Faced with this prospect, many college- age individuals are embracing alternative education routes and in fact many of today's fastest growing careers don't necessarily require a degree at all.
After decades of growth, college enrollment among new students is dropping. For these forward thinking young people, rejecting the traditional college experience doesn't mean rejecting education?-?it means rejecting crippling debt. According to recent statistics, about 44 million people in the United States owe student loans worth over $1.45 trillion dollars. The most amusing thing about this is that most of the people who took out these loans, spend a huge part of their lives, if not the rest of their lives, paying off the debt.
This is largely due to the fact that some are unable to get jobs after college, while some just get jobs that can barely pay the bills. Many young people would consider financial independence the first milestone of adulthood, leaving them with a hard choice to make?-?college or career? Undergraduate tuition has grown by more than four times over the years, and today two in three students who earn their bachelor's degree go into debt over it.
Not to mention the average cost of an advanced degree, like law or medicine, which has grown by more than eight times. Faced with this prospect, many college- age individuals are embracing alternative education routes and in fact many of today's fastest growing careers don't necessarily require a degree at all.