K
Kootenay Hunter
Guest
Secondary education in the states is a big business....like massively huge.
Now if you business's clients can get guaranteed gov't loans to access your product....sweet...and you can charge 10's of thousands of dollars for something that most or world receives at a fraction of the price? Even better.
Like most things, when businesses get too big and predatory, the mile high castle of cards starts to fall down.
I have a degree, but I endeavored to start saving in highschool and worked every summer since I was 14, also took a co-op option during university which, extended my degree by one year, but allowed me to gain 20mo experience in my field and helped pay for the following terms. Not trying to toot my own horn, just saying that it was a planned event and I just didn't follow the obligatory 'must go to college now.....I'll figure it out when I get there" type of mentality which does get very expensive very quick. If you don't have a goal in mind which will get you a job, don't bother going. If you want to 'learn' new things...libraries and books are much cheaper
I agree with above, highschool is woefully inadequate and does not prepare kids for life. While I understand it's supposed to spark interest and expose kids to different fields, it's very narrow minded and somewhat designed to 'feed' the university system for those that can get there. Life skills, which seem to be ever increasingly lacking, are more important: finance, health, get a job, read, write, math, converse, research, observe, etc.
Now if you business's clients can get guaranteed gov't loans to access your product....sweet...and you can charge 10's of thousands of dollars for something that most or world receives at a fraction of the price? Even better.
Like most things, when businesses get too big and predatory, the mile high castle of cards starts to fall down.
I have a degree, but I endeavored to start saving in highschool and worked every summer since I was 14, also took a co-op option during university which, extended my degree by one year, but allowed me to gain 20mo experience in my field and helped pay for the following terms. Not trying to toot my own horn, just saying that it was a planned event and I just didn't follow the obligatory 'must go to college now.....I'll figure it out when I get there" type of mentality which does get very expensive very quick. If you don't have a goal in mind which will get you a job, don't bother going. If you want to 'learn' new things...libraries and books are much cheaper
I agree with above, highschool is woefully inadequate and does not prepare kids for life. While I understand it's supposed to spark interest and expose kids to different fields, it's very narrow minded and somewhat designed to 'feed' the university system for those that can get there. Life skills, which seem to be ever increasingly lacking, are more important: finance, health, get a job, read, write, math, converse, research, observe, etc.
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