Synthesis Essay College

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Standing on the edge of a platform ninety feet up in the air, I’m scared. But once I push off, I’m soaring on a zip line, flying through the air, exhilarated. Taking that step off of the platform was one of the hardest things I’ve done, but once I took the step off the platform, I wouldn’t take it back for the world. It’s just like college; I’m set on going, but our society today weighs the risks and the rewards- whether or not college is worth attending. On the other hand, while there are legitimate drawbacks to obtaining a college degree, the fact remains that a college education sees most people to go further in life than those without.
With a higher education, usually comes a higher financial income. There are plenty of ways to cut down …show more content…

If not financially, in experience. While some Americans didn’t believe that college was worth the money, “86 percent of college graduates still felt the investment was good” (Source D). Though they may not have felt college was worth the money entirely, college teaches people more than their major. It teaches them about life. One learns social skills in college. One learns time-management in college. One learns how to fend for himself in college. One experiences things in college that they may not have been exposed to otherwise. While some may turn to the fact that Steve Jobs (Apple), Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook), or Bill Gates (Microsoft) were all college dropouts as reasoning for why “time sitting in class is better spent elsewhere” (Source D), one considering the dilemma should recall that they were geniuses-or they had an idea and were completely prepared to go and make it happen. There are incredibly successful college graduates that people forget to mention, and nobody even considers the “people who didn’t finish college and are not at… a wildly successful adventure” (Source D). Even still, for each person to reach success, it requires an enormous amount of

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