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darrenhydro's avatar

RE #4, I submit that while a decline in academic rigor is partly to blame for academic deficiencies of college students, that trend is more of a symptom than a cause.

We need to be asking, "Should these young people even be in college? If not, why are they there?" About years ago

A few years into their career, an experienced machinist, boat mechanic, electrician, or plumber can earn up to $100K per year. Yet 10 years after graduation, the average college graduate's earnings are just 2/3 of that (between $60-70K). The median is higher, which means that most people earn less than that (and a lot of them earn nothing).

In my opinion, the cause is big government & institutional greed. Government subsidies and guarantees tend to create bubbles, and I think you'd be hard pressed to find a college or university looking to "downsize" their enrollment or budget in the name of academic excellence.

In 2021, total college enrollment peaked at around 21 million. The US population was about 1/3 of its current size 100 years ago, but in 1920, college enrollment was about 600K. Total K-12 enrollment in 1920 was 21.5M.

Why do we have a K-shaped economy? Where are all of our tradespeople and factory workers? Why has federal student loan debt exploded from about $230 billion in 2000 to $1.65 TRILLION today? Why can't college graduates with good jobs afford starter homes?

For decades, the US government has been systematically impoverishing its citizens to the benefit of politicians and private interests. When are we going to start fighting back?

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