Disadvantages Of Higher Education

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Education has changed tremendously in the past 100 years. From surviving off of an eighth grade education back in the early 1900’s to not being able to find a job with a college degree in 2016. Our advancements as a leading country has lead America to be one of the main leaders of research and knowledge. But with knowledge comes advantages and disadvantages. College graduates are not able to find jobs, high school students are not able to change career paths, and unemployed people settle for jobs that they are overqualified for. The changes in higher education have negative effects on the authority that learning communities hold due to overpriced education, an overabundance of learning communities, and the increase of college degrees. The influx of education has negatively affected the price of college. Gene Block, a writer for Time magazine, gave an example that “[t]wenty years ago, tuition at UCLA was $1,624 (or $2,564 in today’s dollars). This year tuition is …show more content…

First world countries are being educated on (INSERT EXAMPLE) and third world countries are being educated on (INSERT EXAMPLE). In first world countries there has been a lot of debate on how higher education should be structured. For example, in Ivar Bleiklie’s research on “Organizing Higher Education In A Learning Society”, he concludes that there are two main ways to organize higher education: hierarchy and organic. Higher education through a hierarchal lense would be holding institutions to the same set of regulations and rules and the institutions that meet all or most standards would be held to the highest regard. Another factor would be the level of degrees the institution offers. For example, an institution that only offers bachelor level education would have less authority than an institution that offers doctoral degrees. These institutions may or may not have educated some of the people with the most authority within a specific learning community

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