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Questioning College: Is Higher Ed Worth It?

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Two decades ago, a four-year college degree was widely regarded as the key to boosting incomes. However, recent years have witnessed a paradigm shift in conventional wisdom about the value of a college education. Over half say college isn’t worth the cost, compared with 40% a decade ago. Are the skeptics right? What’s the average return? Who is it working for, and who isn’t it?

Two prominent perspectives on the value of a college education appear to be in stark contrast, making it challenging to reconcile them. On one hand, there's the belief that opportunities for those without a college degree are dwindling, and the relative worth of obtaining a degree is on the rise. On the other hand, there's the concern that the U.S. workforce is now oversaturated with graduates burdened by debt and grappling with underemployment.

For expert insight, guest host Mene Ukueberuwa (Wall Street Journal editorial page writer) was joined by Preston Cooper, who researches the costs and benefits of higher education and how policy can improve students’ success beyond college graduation.

Preston Cooper is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity.

Follow Preston Cooper on X (formerly known as Twitter): https://twitter.com/PrestonCooper93

Related reading:

Check out Preston's latest piece, "Should the government write off uncollectible student loans?": https://blog.freopp.org/should-the-government-write-off-uncollectible-student-loans/

Preston's author page at FREOPP: https://blog.freopp.org/author/preston-cooper/

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39 episodes

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Hmmm there seems to be a problem fetching this series right now. Last successful fetch was on April 24, 2024 15:32 (3M ago)

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Manage episode 394669787 series 3548909
Content provided by Manhattan Institute. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Manhattan Institute or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Two decades ago, a four-year college degree was widely regarded as the key to boosting incomes. However, recent years have witnessed a paradigm shift in conventional wisdom about the value of a college education. Over half say college isn’t worth the cost, compared with 40% a decade ago. Are the skeptics right? What’s the average return? Who is it working for, and who isn’t it?

Two prominent perspectives on the value of a college education appear to be in stark contrast, making it challenging to reconcile them. On one hand, there's the belief that opportunities for those without a college degree are dwindling, and the relative worth of obtaining a degree is on the rise. On the other hand, there's the concern that the U.S. workforce is now oversaturated with graduates burdened by debt and grappling with underemployment.

For expert insight, guest host Mene Ukueberuwa (Wall Street Journal editorial page writer) was joined by Preston Cooper, who researches the costs and benefits of higher education and how policy can improve students’ success beyond college graduation.

Preston Cooper is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity.

Follow Preston Cooper on X (formerly known as Twitter): https://twitter.com/PrestonCooper93

Related reading:

Check out Preston's latest piece, "Should the government write off uncollectible student loans?": https://blog.freopp.org/should-the-government-write-off-uncollectible-student-loans/

Preston's author page at FREOPP: https://blog.freopp.org/author/preston-cooper/

  continue reading

39 episodes

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