Yes but who in private industry is demanding these community college degrees which are now free and provided by the government? The only reason 4-year community college degrees are de facto requirements and readily accepted is because they're so commonplace and subsidized. If there were less 4-year graduates, the demand would diminish at all the smallish businesses wanting bachelors and associates in business where they provide little to no value beyond just working for those few years anyway. Community college is junk, go to trade school or into a real profession and stop inflating entry-level job requirements at tax-payer expense.
_dczq|6 years ago
Or companies may shift their workforce into higher-educated countries.
==Community college is junk, go to trade school or into a real profession and stop inflating entry-level job requirements at tax-payer expense.==
The idea that 2 years of post high-school education is "junk" is alarming. What is a "real profession" and who gets to define it? Wouldn't all the new trade school graduates just inflate entry-level job requirements in those fields and decrease wages?
TheBeardKing|6 years ago
Sometimes community college is worse than junk, it's downright harmful. The most-recommended method in the US to get an engineering degree is to transfer 2 years of core credits from an easy community college to a harder engineeering school. That cheapens the quality of the degree, as the resulting degree is the same. I've done it - physics at engineering school and physics at community college is night and day.
Apart from that, unless you're going to get a teaching certificate or something else in STEM, the resulting degree would not be in demand from private industry if they weren't so commonplace. Those kids would've been better off working for those 4 years or learning a trade. But instead we have people pushing to fund those 4 years completely at taxpayer expense further inflating the problem.
edit: Hell yeah wages in trades would decrease, they need to. Have you not paid a plumber or electrician lately? The guys going into plumbing right out of high school are a lot smarter than the history majors working at Starbucks.