Argumentative Essay: Is College Still Worth It?

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Is College still worth it? The expenses of college outweigh the benefits college offers after graduating with a degree. There should be better or more efficient methods of solving this major problem.
“Student debt has surged to 1.3 trillion, and millions of Americans have fallen behind on student-loan payments.” (source #1) College is important but going into debt trying to just have a good paying job and achieve a career isn’t worth it. As a senior in high school college should be the #1 goal for majority of students. Including students that are seniors in high school who’s the first to go to college out of the family. But, the expenses are just too much. Why should citizens be in debt to just be able to have an education? It isn’t fair …show more content…

For seniors they have after school programs, work and responsibility around the house. So, trying to focus on school will be difficult while juggling everything else. Like TaTy’Terria Gray for example. She lived in Topeka, Kan “—She was a blur of motion—leading the school step-dance team, working long hours after school at a beauty products store, mentoring younger students and caring for her siblings. She had little time last fall to study for the ACT college admission test.” (source #7) After she scored below the threshold for an admission at local universities she was crushed. The dreams of her being the first in her family to go to college and becoming a gynecologist was fading. It’s also stressful for young people with college-educated parents because the path to higher education can be harder. As seniors in high school they would want to make their parents proud of them. Be the best they can be. There are options to help young students out with test scores and writing assistance. But, people like TaTy’Terria and working-class students they don’t have the money for test prep or essay help. Alternatives to better education is joining the military, working $13 an hour at a local factory or getting a cheaper and faster trade-school certificate. “Students who are not exposed to a college-going culture have trouble even imagining themselves at a university, beyond, perhaps, a community college close to home,” said Robert D. Putnam, a public policy professor at Harvard (source #7). For students like TaTy living in a small town and going to a college is pure luck. Hartocollis said “About half of Topeka High’s senior class went to college in 2014, according to the latest state data. And more than 60 percent of the 1,800 students are low-income. Only half the senior class of about 400 took the ACT college admission test in the 2015-16 school year, and only 30

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