As a little girl I always enjoyed going to school. School …show more content…
While I did have classes that were mandatory, the ones that weren’t are where I learned the most. I enjoyed playing my cello in orchestra, solving crimes in CSI, and fields trips to the creek with green team. Teachers hammered me with real world news, telling me to value my education because it is a gift, not a privilege. That’s what I think of whenever I think of college. I think about women in third world countries that could pay any amount of money to go to a simple math class: Yet in the U.S., people cut classes and generally don’t want to go to school. Everytime I think of those children who are shot for attending a class it motivates me to be as educated as I can because I am free …show more content…
On average students who go to college earn three times more money over a lifetime than people who stop at high school or below. They end up with higher hourly pay on average, and more skills that make them more valuable to employers. Those skills are important to have because technology is increasing in the work industry, and that means a decreasing job supply for people without degrees. So not only will you on average make more, but you will also be more hirable to employers. For me, I would rather invest my money into college, and end up earning it back with my higher paying