Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Why pay to learn?

This intriguing perspective from The New Yorker highlights the importance of learning beyond high school at a higher educational institution. While college is often deemed important for building careers and climbing the social ladder, it is useful to consider other reasons to continue learning beyond 12th grade. After all, a bachelor's degree is a hefty financial investment with lasting consequences for those of us who still carry loans.

So why shell out for four years of tuition, books, and rent instead of holding down a steady full-time job? And, more so, why choose an elite private college instead of a much more reasonably priced public university? Louis Menand argues here that there are two positives to higher learning at a high cost: one, college exposes students to material they otherwise wouldn't have absorbed, thereby making them into more informed, empowered citizens, regardless of their career field; and two, college socializes us to be on the same page when it comes to certain established norms and ways of thinking. And from that base spring independent thought and innovation, both of which move us further as a society.

Hopefully Menand's arguments will help us justify spending thousands of dollars on a degree. After all, life's about making ends meet, but it's also about a lot more than that. Why not learn how to think, critique, and challenge yourself as a creative individual while you're at it?

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