Tangible resources: 567 warehouses ,including 414 in the United States and Puerto Rico, 77 in Canada, 32 in Mexico, 21 in the UK, 9in Japan 6 in Taiwan and 1in Australia. Merchandise inventories $5405M Cash and cash equivalents $3157M.…
Women’s role in the church is continually debated. Scripture points to the idea that woman can be deacons and elders in the church. God created men and women equal and they should be treated as equals on earth. Therefore, women can be leaders in the church if that is what God has called them to do.…
In todays society, having a college education is one of the single most important factors when applying for a job. Employers expect at the minimum for applicants to have an Associates degree. However, many employers prefer hiring individuals who have obtained a bachelors degree or higher. In “Are Too Many People Going to College?”, Charles Murray discusses the importance of Americans sharing the same basic core knowledge (223). Having a college degree makes an individual more money than an individual who just has a high school diploma. It provides people with a wide variety of opportunity regarding career paths and educational experiences. Those who obtain a college degree often times have a more secure future regarding their job and if they decide to advance to a different job. With a degree individuals have the will power to move a different job without worrying about not meeting certain job requirements. Lastly, having a college degree secures an individual…
Times have changed from the mid-1900s. Career life is more difficult to settle into if one does not present with an education. Life as we know it is getting harder, “This generation is difficult but future generations will have an endless line of competition… this will only get more and more competitive as the years pass on(careerbuilder.com).” In this quote, it is brought to the readers’ attention that future generations will have it harder than previous generations. Remembering Gwen Noah, she too explained that her degree did not mean much to the employers she was hired by, but just one generation later, which her daughter where brought into, it was completely different. Noah encourages young people in today’s’ society to get a college education to pursue their long term goals. The Los Angeles Times throws the truth with a bang, and instead of covering it subtly, they have it out there for everyone to recognize the truth. The truth is, education is valued much more than it used to be valued years ago; it will continue to rise in value as long as the demands are met and people raise the…
Today, our society has changed the option of a college degree to a necessity. More and more parents and high schools are pressuring students to believe the only way to succeed is to obtain a college degree. Sending unprepared…
Is college the only way to success? If the answer is yes, so why Bill Gates and Steve Jobs are college dropouts and millions of graduated students with degrees from four-year higher education institutions cannot find jobs. Today, a college education does not guarantee you anything. It is not an automatic ticket to get a good job as people believe. These issues are viewed more sharpen via two writers’ point of views Mike Rose and Caroline Bird. Based on their essays, Rose with “Blue-Collar Brilliance” and Bird with “College is a Waste of Time and Money”, both suggest college is not the only way to succeed and that society mistakenly overvalues a college education. It is time to rethink the idea about college.…
And many of those who took out loans will drop out of college stated in the article by The Economist: “It does not help that nearly a third of those who take out such loans eventually drop out of college; they must still repay their debts” (Is College Worth It). This statistic means that students will have a huge burden of debts when they drop out of college. Without their degrees, they will have a hard time paying back their loans. Students would be better off if they had applied for a job after high school. Also, a survey states that: “… only half of graduates feel prepared for a job in their field, and only 39% of managers feel that students are ready for the workforce” (Is College Worth It). This shows that even though they have a degree for their field many of them are not ready for the real world. They need more on hand experiences and even possibly part time jobs to get them to be used to the working experiences. According to an article, “Well-Prepared in Their Own Eyes” by Scott Jaschik, employers prefers well rounded employees even if they have a degree in their field. Employers felt more confident in their skills if they had real world work experiences and not just lectures from colleges. Because managers think recent graduates lack the skills they need, it means they will have a hard time…
Today’s society has put a confusing spin on the need for higher education. Are we, as students, looking to simply walk out of the doors of a university and into a guaranteed job opportunity, or are we forgetting what the value of an education means? It seems to me that the lines between the definition of getting a degree and getting an education are very blurry. Another factor affecting our views on education is that society has changed; the downturn of today’s economy has affected many people’s choices, especially when it comes to choosing what path they choose for their future. Employers today are changing what they value: job experience or an education. Both of these choices will contribute differently to society. Also, the high cost of going to college will have you asking yourself, is the amount of money worth it, or a better question, am I worth it? We need to ask ourselves, what are you working for? Are you working for a degree to gain employment, or are you working for an education that gives you the many tools to becoming a vital citizen? All of these factors: the loose definition of what education means, our ever-changing society, and the rising cost of tuition, has forced students to re-think their futures as possible graduates. I would argue, to better our struggling economy, we need to be working to better ourselves in the larger sense of our education.…
Many students go to college with the sole intention to get their degree, become employed, and earn a higher salary. Students with these intentions tend to struggle more throughout their college years. Students go to college because they obtain skills and characteristics that employers find desirable. These skills and characteristics also allow them to function in society. Making the leap from high school classrooms to college campuses can be difficult for many students simply because college professors expect so much more inside and outside of the classroom. Students who go to college are expected to be self-sufficient from the day they get there. At the collegiate level, students should come to class ready to participate, engage in the course…
Every day the decision is being made to either construct a career or dropout. There are people out there who have never set foot in a college and are doing better than people with master’s degrees. But, those are the exceptions which are one out of a million…
In the United States two-thirds of high school graduates go to college but only twenty-seven percent of Americans have a bachelor's degree. Why is this? Many high schools in America stress the need for kids to go to college after graduation. America has it wrong though with trying to send everyone to college, when we should be trying to get people to go find their passion, and then strive to achieve that. College is not for everyone and convincing kids to go and rack up debt when they don’t even know what they want to be when they grow up will not help them.…
With the cost of tuition so high, many high school graduates are not able to continue on to higher education because of their financial standing. This forces many students to look closely at the benefits and disadvantages of college. The advantages of college include, but are not limited to; communication and writing, leadership, analytical, and social skills. They achieve communication, writing and analytical skills because college makes students problem solve and in order to pass classes, students must learn how to communicate what they are thinking in a proper manner. However, students also obtain social and leadership skills through meeting new people from different cultures and socializing with their peers. These advantages take real life application when the graduate goes to interviews and have to communicate with their future employer. Even though these advantages are amazing to bring to an interview, college also provides other opportunities such as internships which leads to individuals with college degrees having lower unemployment rates. “The employment rate for young adults with some college was higher than the rate for those who had completed high school (63.7 percent), which was, in turn, higher than the employment rate for those young adults who had not finished high school (46.6…
There are three types of Education in the U. S. Public-sector, which makes up 72% of higher education and approximately accommodates 18M students. There is Independent schools, which makes up 16% and accommodates 4M students and there is private-sector like DeVry, which makes up 12% and accommodates 3M students. According to Georgetown’s Center on Education and the Workforce, in 1973, only 28% of U.S. jobs required a college education. By 2008, that number had increased to 59%. Today, most good jobs do require a college education. This shows college education is critical to the well-being of our workforce and nation’s economic future.…
According to Workforce Development at Rutgers University, just 56 percent of the graduates among the students of the class of 2010 found a job. In the section “many with new college degree find the job market humbling”, Catherine Rampbell discusses that only half of the specialized jobs are taken by these new graduates, which means that specialized degrees may not be worth it after all. Furthermore, she discusses that the median salary for students who graduated from four-year colleges in 2009 and 2010 was $27,000 down from $30,000.…
America’s workforce is below average. Well, it does sound like a crazy statement but America’s job market is more gilded than we thought. With over 5.6 million job openings reported by both the Bureau of Labor Statistics and CNN.com, it has no signs of stopping. This is due to the persistent component that hasn’t been addressed, which, you guessed it, is our unskilled workers. Also known as the skills gap issue, many employers find it difficult to obtain enough workers that are qualified for their vacancies and leads to them losing potential profits. As a high school student, the American institutional instruction are no longer enough to prepare our young prospects, like myself, for future in-demand jobs. It’s adamant that American education still withholds the same standards and content taught in the past 20+ years, whilst our society continue to evolve.…