by Jill Barshay, Hechinger Report
Data released from the statistics division of the U.S. Department of Education earlier this month points out that a college education can still be a lever of social mobility. Even college graduates whose parents had never attended any college at all were still working at the same rates and earning the same salaries, on average, as their peers with better-educated parents. Consider students who graduated from college with a four-year bachelor’s degree during the 2007-08 academic year. Five years later, in 2012, the majority of these young college graduates had full-time jobs. For those whose parents had never attended any college, often referred to as “first-generation” students, 57 percent were working full time and earning $45,000 a year, on average. For those who had at least one parent who had attended some college, 58 percent were working full time and earning $43,000.
http://hechingerreport.org/new-research-offers-hope-first-generation-college-grads/
Share on Facebookfrom Educational Technology http://people.uis.edu/rschr1/et/?p=37301
No comments:
Post a Comment