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Timothy Patrick's avatar

Thank you for this piece, Casey. This has been something I’ve been thinking about for a long time, and it’s got me reflecting on how we might need to disentangle two things we’ve conflated: college as a place to learn skills and college as the place where young people figure out who they are. The price tag becomes impossible to justify when we’re talking about 18-year-olds who are just starting to ask the big questions about life being thrust into making decisions about the entire trajectory of their careers.

One alternative that I think deserves another look was floated during Pete Buttigieg’s 2020 presidential campaign: a national service program that would give young people options beyond military service or expensive education. The idea was to create opportunities in areas like community health, conservation, and infrastructure alongside traditional military routes. At the time, the only conversation I heard about it was people laughing and calling it out of touch, but I think it was ahead of its time.

It addresses the problem of what kids can do to buy some time before they figure out what they want and who they are. It would give young people a chance to grow up, contribute to their communities, and explore without the pressure to make the “right” choice while committing to six figures of debt or a military career that by definition isn’t for everyone.

The current system completely ignores the kids who know college is out of reach and know military isn’t right for them. They can end up without the kinds of networks and relationships you described as one of college’s intangible benefits, left only with whatever connections they happen to make at jobs they land without a degree.

And perhaps this national service idea could also educate the students in some of the areas we most desperately need better understanding: media literacy, civics, and emotional intelligence. As a supervisor in charge of hiring, I can tell you that someone who had just a year learning basic life skills is a lot more valuable than someone who spent four years studying a subject that may or may not align with the job requirements.

A national service option could fill that gap. I hope Mr. Buttigieg is still keeping that idea in his pocket if he’s considering a 2028 run.

Suzannah Calvery's avatar

As someone who’s been committed to education for most of my career and just resigned from a role as Dean of instruction and faculty at a small private university - these are all factors in my decision not to seek reemployment in the field right now. We’re watching a significant cultural (as well as supply and demand) shift and an industry that appears unwilling to think strategically about the sustainability of its product.

As a parent of a teen just entering high school, most of our conversations about higher education are focused on the wide variety of options and how to discern which might make the most sense when it comes time to decide in a few years. This generation already thinks about traditional college very differently than my generation did, and it will hopefully serve them well.

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