Should unemployed grads sue their universities?
I've been thinking lately about the problem of the glut of unemployed college graduates.
The Marxist non-solution is yet another bail-out: to forgive student loan debt.
However, this does not address the real problem.
Universities are viewed, rightly or wrongly, as the gateway to better jobs.
Students and their families go into ridiculous debt based on this implied promise.
Yet, when at university, students do not receive the training needed to succeed in the business world.
Instead, they are indoctrinated in the ways of anti-business agitation.
Soon, if it hasn't happened already, employers will begin to realize that hiring anyone with a non-tech degree or *any* Ivy League degree is risking hiring an anti-business agitator.
Google has already stated that they prefer hiring people who have not attended college because they are more intellectually curious.
At what point should unemployed grads sue their universities for fraud?
Your thoughts are welcome.
The Marxist non-solution is yet another bail-out: to forgive student loan debt.
However, this does not address the real problem.
Universities are viewed, rightly or wrongly, as the gateway to better jobs.
Students and their families go into ridiculous debt based on this implied promise.
Yet, when at university, students do not receive the training needed to succeed in the business world.
Instead, they are indoctrinated in the ways of anti-business agitation.
Soon, if it hasn't happened already, employers will begin to realize that hiring anyone with a non-tech degree or *any* Ivy League degree is risking hiring an anti-business agitator.
Google has already stated that they prefer hiring people who have not attended college because they are more intellectually curious.
At what point should unemployed grads sue their universities for fraud?
Your thoughts are welcome.
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So, while it might not appear that I got my money worth for the time I was at school.. I would totally disagree.. I managed to do a lot more than just study computer science.. Also, along the way I met a lot of my future co-workers. Also, despite my serious hatred of the math pre-recs at the time.. I have found being able to pull some fairly unskilled numeric analysis out once in a while is a handy thing. In the long run I was less annoyed with the Math requirements than I ever was with the non math requirements..
So, should a graduate that cannot find a job be able to hold the university responsible? No.. You only get out of a university education what you put into it. Interestingly enough cash is probably the least important input into the system. No one who has spent 4 years studying a throw away degree should expect that finding work with that will be easy. Secondly they should really do the math when they are blowing 60k on acquiring a degree that will get them a job that pays 35k.. They should expect to have a hard time managing the loan payments. Meanwhile the folks who went into *hard* majors and had to spend 4 years working their asses off still have to deal with some less than awesome pay when they are getting started, but they will hit mid-career pay rates a lot sooner, and they will be a lot higher..
caveat emptor, no?
Sucks, doesn't it?
The best we can hope for is to stop the redistribution from continuing.
+1
Universities are businesses. Universities are rewarded by having large student populations paying high tuition – NOT on the number of students who actually learn something useful.
Their presidents, administrators, and faculty are paid fat salaries from the money students spend taking classes. In order to charge higher tuition, the schools need to get everyone on board with student loans – that way the student is responsible for paying back the loan rather then the university.
No one at the university is paid based on how well students actually acquire useful knowledge. Grades are given more freely in order to make the student feel good about themselves rather then to reflect that learning occurred, because if you flunk someone he will drop out and thus stop paying the tuition.
Bwahaha!
I am dino!
Hear me roar!
Obnoxious, aint I?
Hm, wonder if you'll catch that in time to edit.
In 1971 I was honorably discharged corporal promoted under meritorious conditions. That looked great on resumes. I also finished college under the GI bill.
In 1982, being in the service gave me five extra points used on some kind of scale for the Bama DOC to send me to the corrections academy in Selma next door to where state troopers are trained.
Now I'm retired with time on my hands to blab too much.
If you get a federal student loan, most colleges put you through a series of steps to make sure you know your responsibilities, including a meeting with the finance department in a class-like setting laying out how important it is that you don’t ask for more money than you need. Attendance at a meeting of this type is mandatory before you can get your loan approved. Before the government took over student loans, banks just passed out loans like candy to any student that provided a co-signer.(Bank of America was one of the worst!) We were heading for another financial bubble-collapse. Now, students are made fully aware, there is no way to get out paying a loan back. So, while I wish we all had enough money in our pockets to send all our children to college, the truth is, we enabled our lil darlings every which way we could to take out loans they couldn’t repay, putting our homes, savings accounts, and retirement funds on the line. Well, them, not me. My kids were too independent and prudent to put me through what I saw many our friends and neighbors going through. Bless their lil hearts.
You will do well.
I have not taken a loan out because I am not interested in taking money that isn't mine to then have to pay it back with 24% interest. It doesn't seem realistic for feasible to me, I am fairly young but I am not stupid. The moment I considered taking out a student loan (with every intention of paying it back) my school told me I would need to take a debt management class prior to accepting the loan because interest rates are skyrocketing and students are unable to manage their money. The term 'debt management' was enough to scare me off and I hung up the phone. So, I will continue to pay as I go.
What right thinking businessman *wants* to hire an agitator?
Yes, yes, YES!!!
"then I wonder how much work they put into their education"
I have seen this first hand and agree.
My issue is that a clear majority of these disinterested people are going on the tax payer dime.
They get out, are unemployable, default on their loan, and we as the taxpayer are on the hook for it.
I was very close with the math department at the one of the state schools in CT.
The profs had to teach remedial math, like fractions - at university level - financed by tax payer backed student loans - to disinterested students who believed that a better job awaited.
I'm not interested in standing up for the disinterested, I'm interested in stopping the system that gives them *our money* to go learn fractions because a mythical better job awaits on the horizon.
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