Quote from oldtime:
you fail to evalutate the proper value of that education.
in the old days it was just a place to make connections
your father's friends and my father's friends
like I said, I worked in the computer industry
and whenever a kid came in with a computer science degree from some university and thought he was hot shit he got laughed at.
Like the boss (Ross Perot) said, "By the time they printed it in the textbook you learned it from it was already obsolete."
The funny thing was, anybody that was a pilot in the South Vietnamese Army got an automatic job, no questions asked.
Traditionally economists have used comparisons between lifetime earnings for high school versus college graduates as a way of evaluating the "value of [a] college education." Do you have something, other than anecdotes, that might be better?