Don’t Let Your Kids Grow Up To Be Debt Slaves
by
Barbara Frank
Thriving in the
21st Century
Having finished
up 25 years of homeschooling my four children, I often speak to
homeschool support groups in order to encourage parents further
behind on the homeschooling road. Ive also written several
homeschool-related books which I sell at these events. My youngest
daughter, now 20, usually runs my book table so that I can answer
questions after my speech. As she handles the transactions, shes
surrounded by parents new to homeschooling who want to meet a homeschooled
young adult.
Many of these
parents ask my daughter where she goes to college. Shes a
tech school student majoring in criminal justice, and she also has
a part-time job with a police department as well as an internship
with the county sheriffs department. But when she responds
that she goes to a tech school, shes almost always asked which
college she plans to attend to earn her bachelors degree;
her response that she doesnt know if shell be going
on to a four-year college generally elicits some form of disapproval
from her questioners.
The fact is
that many police departments dont require their officers to
have a bachelors degree, so once she graduates with her associates
degree in criminal justice, she may be finished with her formal
education. But most homeschooling parents dont want to hear
this; they want to believe that all homeschooled grads go on to
earn college degrees.
This insistence
on college degrees in the homeschool community may be rooted in
the fact that when homeschooling first turned up on societys
radar, everyones main question seemed to be, How will
homeschooled kids do in college? Since the answer turned out
to be Very well indeed, college graduation has become
many peoples preferred benchmark to prove that homeschooling
works.
This push for
college among homeschooling parents mirrors society-in-generals
push for college in intensity, if not in purpose. These days, most
American kids are urged to go to college by their parents, their
relatives, their schools, their communities and even their president,
who said in his 2009
State of the Union speech:
we
will provide the support necessary for you to complete college
and meet a new goal: by 2020, America will once again have the
highest proportion of college graduates in the world.
This is ironic,
given that the U.S. governments own Department of Labor predicts
that the lions share of the jobs with the most openings from
now until 2018 will not require a college degree. Considering the
current state of our economy and the high unemployment rate in most
states, why cant these parents see that earning a college
degree is no longer the golden ticket it was once considered to
be? Yes, college grads still have a lower unemployment rate than
the general working population, but
its estimated that at least a third of them are working at
jobs that dont require a degree, and they have the skimpier
paychecks to prove it.
Then there
are all the students who didnt make it through college. Nationally
the
average four-year college graduation rate is less than 50 percent
(some colleges four-year graduation rates are in the single
digits). That leaves an awful lot of students who borrowed money
to go to college, didnt graduate and still owe the money,
whether or not they find a job in their degreeless condition.
In fact, the
amount of student loan debt owed by college dropouts and grads is
continually increasing. Total outstanding student loan debt in the
U.S. more
than quintupled over just the past 12 years: from $90 billion
in 1999 to $550 billion in 2011. To make matters worse, the use
of home equity loans to finance college educations (until the housing
bubble burst and home prices plummeted) followed by the dramatic
expansion of student loan programs caused the price of college to
skyrocket, so that young people are going into more and more debt
even as wages stagnate and sometimes decrease.
This explains
why so many young people have become debt slaves, if theyre
fortunate enough to find jobs that pay enough to cover their living
expenses and their college loan payments. Some
of these young people contemplate suicide when they realize
that theyll be spending their adult lives trying to pay back
these loans, the balances of which often double or triple as late
and missed payment fees accrue. Since these loans can no longer
be discharged in bankruptcy court, these kids truly are looking
at lifelong debt in many cases.
Is there hope?
Most definitely! But parents must be willing to think outside of
the box. One of my readers wrote to me recently, describing how
her teen daughters took classes at their local community college
to become LPNs (licensed practical nurses) as part of their homeschool
high school studies. Now, at ages 17 and 18, they both have good-paying
jobs that help them cover the costs of becoming RNs (registered
nurses). Nursing jobs are one of the high-growth job areas predicted
for the coming decade by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), so
these young women are off to a good start, and with zero student
loan debt.
Another young
woman, also homeschooled, recently described how
she obtained her bachelors degree in music at age 19 without
accruing any student debt. What she did is not uncommon, but
more parents with truly college-bound children (not all young people
are college material) need to become aware of these opportunities
instead of pressuring their kids to attending college because society
says so, and then encouraging them to borrow the money in order
to go. If theyre concerned about their childrens future,
they cant just assume that a college degree will guarantee
their financial security as adults, because times have changed.
Reprinted
with permission from Thriving
in the 21st Century.
October
25, 2011
Barbara
Franks [send
her mail] latest book is Thriving
in the 21st Century: Preparing Our Children for the New Economic
Reality (Cardamom Publishers, 2011). Visit her
website.
Copyright
© Barbara Frank
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