College freshmen who just arrived on campus have heard, from parents and politicians alike, that college exists mainly for the sake of work.
An overwhelming majority of first-year students tell pollsters that getting a better job is a major reason for going to college.
Across 25 years of teaching at five universities in three states, I have heard students consistently call school their “job.” Given the cost of attending a four-year college, it’s reasonable that they want assurance their degrees will lead to higher earnings.
But the expectation that college will help them land a job has led too many students to approach college like a job in its own right: a series of grim tasks that, once completed, qualifies them to perform grimmer but better-paid tasks until retirement.
That’s a shame, because this mentality leaves no room for what college should primarily be about: not work, but leisure.
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