Is school worth it for the learning? How about for the little piece of paper I get at the end?
In the comment section of this post, “Doug S.” gives the most salient analysis I have seen. After stating, “the job of a university professor is to do research and bring in grant money for said research, not to teach! Teaching is incidental,” he was asked why parents would pay upward of $40,000 annually for such a service. His parsimonious reply: “In most cases, it’s not the education that’s worth $40,000+. It’s the diploma. Earning a diploma demonstrates that you are willing to suffer in exchange for vague promises of future reward, which is a trait that employers value.”
In the comment section of this post, “Doug S.” gives the most salient analysis I have seen. After stating, “the job of a university professor is to do research and bring in grant money for said research, not to teach! Teaching is incidental,” he was asked why parents would pay upward of $40,000 annually for such a service. His parsimonious reply: “In most cases, it’s not the education that’s worth $40,000+. It’s the diploma. Earning a diploma demonstrates that you are willing to suffer in exchange for vague promises of future reward, which is a trait that employers value.”