Son of mary asked:
besides this reason …..
a person who has graduated college has demonstrated that they are hard workers who have the discipline to achieve long term goals. A college graduate also, in general, has a better skill set to offer. They have learned language skills(oral and written), mathematical skills, logic skills, and interpersonal skills that are typically more polished and advanced than someone who has just finished high school. There are of course exceptions to the rule for who would be better to hire.
besides this reason …..
a person who has graduated college has demonstrated that they are hard workers who have the discipline to achieve long term goals. A college graduate also, in general, has a better skill set to offer. They have learned language skills(oral and written), mathematical skills, logic skills, and interpersonal skills that are typically more polished and advanced than someone who has just finished high school. There are of course exceptions to the rule for who would be better to hire.
I need one more reason.. write it like that ^^^^^^ pls
Jackson

February 22nd, 2010 at 10:20 pm
Brian
They have had a chance to explore their options, so that by the time they are hired they have a better sense of what they want to do in life.
February 24th, 2010 at 6:53 pm
Noah
A skill you pick up in college that will serve you beyond is the method of thinking for yourself in such a confident way that you won’t be stifled by self-uncertainties or embarrassment or the inward fear that you don’t really know what you’re talking about. In a college classroom, you have to know what you’re talking about because your grade will suffer otherwise. The college classroom is a great preparation for this. There’s no joy like the one that you arrived at a conclusion by yourself, not by some other person, even some expert in the field, who after all has no more natural intellectual power than do you
February 25th, 2010 at 7:02 pm
Miguel
Attending college will help you in the job market. Many companies aren’t interested in hiring people without a college degree, which is why more and more people are going to college. Pretty soon, more companies will want more college education and a 4-year degree will be the new high school diploma in terms of what gets a person hired.
February 28th, 2010 at 12:36 am
Gianna
A college degree has an almost guaranteed financial payoff both in immediate and lifetime earnings. A high school graduate may start earning sooner, but he will likely hit a glass ceiling early in his life and at a low salary. A college graduate may hit a glass ceiling, but his earnings are likely to peak much later and higher than the high school graduate.
March 1st, 2010 at 3:43 pm
Gavin
In the 1970s and 1980s, the United States went through economic restructuring. Businesses generally now rely on inexpensive foreign labor for a majority of their manufacturing and low-skilled to medium-skilled labor that a high school graduate could provide. As an objective economics student, I will not say whether this is good or bad, but I will say that now the United States is more in the skilled labor market that usually requires a college degree.
March 4th, 2010 at 8:23 pm
Mollie
because of money