The Pros And Cons Of Going To College

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Another problem in this debate according to Tressie Mcmillan Cottom is that, “College is the domain of the relatively privileged, and will likely stay that way for the foreseeable future”. He isn’t wrong either. “As of 2012, over half of the U.S. population has “some college” or postsecondary education. That category includes everything from an auto-mechanics class at a for-profit college to a business degree from Harvard. Even with such a broadly conceived category, we are still talking about just half of all Americans.” He points out that cost isn’t the only reason that people aren’t applying to college. “It is also that going to college is complicated. It takes cultural and social, not just economic, capital. It means navigating advanced courses, standardized tests, forms. …show more content…
“ That is not directly related to college tuition, however, it does point out that reasons for not going to college aren’t just cost. It also is because of cultural impacts. Cottom says that if price was the only reason that students don’t go to college, then a heck of a lot more students would be going there. However, that isn’t the case. Things such as “cultural and social barriers imposed by unequal K–12 schooling, which puts a select few students on the college pathway at the expense of millions of others” or “Neither would it address the changing social milieu of higher education, in which the majority are now non-traditional students” are also major barriers for them. In terms of his papers, he defines non-traditional students as students who do not go straight to