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Do most people not use their degrees?
Interestingly, 38.6\% said they weren’t using their degree in their current profession. And 16.6\% said they’d dropped out of college before obtaining their degree. We hear a lot about millennials who struggle in the job market.
Does a college degree really matter?
2) Finding a Job and Remaining Employed Let’s face it, a college degree holds a higher prestige than a high school diploma, and many people seem to appreciate those who’ve made the effort and graduated. According to a 2016 study by Georgetown University, the majority of the jobs still go to bachelor’s degree graduates.
Does degree matter to employers?
That diploma you’ve worked so hard to get isn’t worth as much as you might think. In fact, your college degree doesn’t matter to employers (in a lot of cases). While they are required in certain fields, college degrees have become sort of a prerequisite for jobs. That means, more people are attending college.
What is the most educated generation?
Millennials
Millennials are the most educated generation in U.S. history, but student debt and new models of education are making them reconsider the value of a traditional four-year degree. WSJ Noted.
Here’s some interesting new datafrom Jaison Abel and Richard Dietz of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The vast majority of U.S. college grads, they find, work in jobs that aren’t strictly related to their degrees: Support our journalism. Subscribe today
Are college students happy with their degrees?
Despite an inability to find work in their chosen academic fields, 64 percent of employees say they are happy with the degree they pursued and 61 percent said that they still believe they can find their dream job. Just over one-third of the college-educated workers wished they had picked a different college major.
Is a college degree necessary?
Plus, people who earn a college degree have better lives than the people who do not. But sending groups of people to college without any other intervention has unintended consequences: It increases competition enough to substantially erode the power of a college degree in the labor market.
How many college graduates are underemployed?
First, a significant number of college grads appear to be underemployed: In 2010, only 62 percent of U.S. college graduates had a job that required a college degree. Second, the authors estimated that just 27 percent of college grads had a job that was closely related to their major.