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Alex's avatar

Another aspect of this I will sometimes hear people argue: Griggs vs. Duke Power made it essentially illegal for companies to IQ test prospective employees. Therefore, companies require the expensive university degree signal to ensure a reasonably intelligent workforce.

As far as I know, the US military is still exempt from this requirement, and if you ace the ASVAB you might end up running a nuclear reactor on an aircraft carrier (which seems pretty high stakes!) without a college degree, whereas companies making the latest DoorDash clone require college degrees for people messing around with CSS files.

Increasingly, at least amongst companies in deep blue-tribe areas and industries, e.g. Silicon Valley, I also think the college degree requirement is a useful filter for the kind of cultural conformity being demanded at these places. If you can make it through an average four-year on-campus degree, you either weren't culturally red-tribe in the first place, or you quickly learned which opinions you couldn't express out loud without social censure, and will fit right in.

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Gary Arndt's avatar

I attended at top liberal arts college from 1987-1991. The annual cost of tuition + room/board at the time was about $16,000/year, which was considered expensive. Through grants, work study, summer jobs, and parent contributions, I had about $25,000 in debt when I graduated.

I managed to pay off my debt by the time I was 25.

Today, my alma mater costs $74k per year.

There is absolutely no way I could ever recommend anyone attend in good conscience today.

I am a big believe in Stein's Law: If something can't go on forever, it won't.

Academia has set itself up for collapse.

- Tuitions are unaffordable.

- More schools are publicly declaring themselves institutions of advocacy, not education.

- Grade inflation has devalued the educational outputs of a university.

- There are too many free or low cost alternatives available for someone to gain knowledge.

- Universities continue to focus more on underpaid post-docs for instruction, undermining the whole point of in person learning from the best in their field.

Prices keep going up, yet every other trend should be pushing for reducing costs.

In a world where knowledge is free, and seemingly given a value of zero, the ONLY value of a college education is that of a luxury brand.

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