Education and Skills

Why the college dropout myth can hurt your prospects

Harvard Business School students cheer during their graduation ceremonies in Boston, Massachusetts following Harvard University's 358th Commencement June 4, 2009.  REUTERS/Brian Snyder   (UNITED STATES EDUCATION) - RTR24AAY

College dropouts are more likely to be unemployed. Image: REUTERS/Brian Snyder

Mike Colagrossi
Writer, Big Think
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More often than not, a successful college dropout is the exception and not the rule. The majority of America's roughly 34 million college dropouts are more likely to be unemployed, in debt, defaulting on their loans, and impoverished.

The star-studded casts of the billionaire's boys club, touting the likes of Michael Dell, Bill Gates, and Steve Jobs, are exceptional and the rarest of cases. These men were going to get to these places with or without college.

The college dropout myth has a sliver of truth to it: Individuals with outlier intelligence, wild imaginations, determination, and an exceptional work ethic are most likely going to become successful. But this still doesn't accurately paint the full picture.

Many of these drop-out innovators and businessmen had these skills before college. They knew how to learn and self-educate themselves. Some of them started their own businesses in their teen years and knew how to manage their time and finances. Many also benefited from a highly connected network of family and friends.

Majority of college dropouts unemployed

 Unemployed workers
Image: Archives New Zealand via Flickr

Let's look at someone like Bill Gates. Here's just a snippet of his early life. Gates was enrolled at a private preparatory school when he was 13. During the eighth grade, he was able to spend time and learn how to program on a General Electric computer. He wrote his first program at this time. This was during the 1960s when the general public, for the most part, was oblivious to computing technologies.

His father was also a partner in the Preston Gates & Ellis law firm, and his mother was on the board of directors for both First Interstate BancSystem and the United Way. All of these factors definitely led to him having a headstart in a lot of areas. But that still doesn't account for everything: There are many rich people who've never amounted to anything.

The reality is that the next college dropout musing about hitting the big time with lackluster grades, poor work ethic, and shoddy prospects will not be the next one to make the Forbes list. They're most likely going to be joining the ranks of over 34 million Americans above the age of 25 with some college credits with no degree.

Someone in this group is 70% more likely to be unemployed and over four times more likely to default on their loans. On average, this group also earns 32% less than college graduates. Far from tipping the scales of outrageous wealth, college dropouts are barely getting by.

An analysis of the Forbes list will tell you everything you need to know about the benefits of higher education.

Have you read?

Overall, roughly 20% of the U.S. workforce started college but dropped out. That demographic makes up less than 10% of the Forbes list. Roughly 30% of adults aged 25 or older have four year degrees. Contrast that to the Forbes list, and you'll find that nearly 50% of those represented on the Forbes list clock in at having at least a bachelor's degree or higher. Less than 1% of the population in the workforce graduated from a prestigious Ivy League school. An elite education background accounts for 25% of those on the Forbes List.

Bachelor's Degree Completion Rates in US Colleges, 2004-2016. Image: AEI

Leaders either have elite education or are exceptional

Another study looked into 11,745 of the richest and most powerful people which included U.S. leaders, CEOs, executives, federal judges, multi-millionaires, billionaires, politicians, and other business leaders around the globe.

They examined how many people graduated from elite schools, which in their definition was one of the eight Ivy League schools with the addition of top national state universities and other high-ranking U.S. colleges.

The researchers found that 94% of U.S. leaders attended college, and half of them attended an elite school. Almost everyone in Congress went to college, but the elite school attendance varied.

From Forbes's most powerful to World Economic Forum members, the results stayed steady, with the majority of college-educated eclipsing dropouts.

Now the most important piece of missing context that helps to perpetuates this dropout myth is the fact that these false narratives do not look into the background of these people. This "winging it" attitude for quitting college and chasing your proverbial dreams isn't the answer for the majority of people.

Now the educational path isn't going to be for all people. It is often overwrought with bureaucracy and stifles the true creative spirit for a great deal of leaders and higher achievers.

However, if you're a student who's thinking about dropping out, remember that most of these positions of success and power were earned through exceptional work by going through elite institutions or by extraordinary individuals conquering the system and shaping it through their own will.

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The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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