Today I learned that contrary to popular belief, college graduation continues to provide an economic advantage to people, while the net cost of college has actually been decreasing. "Just 20% of midcareer jobs with salaries of at least $45,000 go to workers without a college degree." Meanwhile, "after subtracting grants and scholarships for tuition and fees and adding other costs, the typical net cost of attending public college has been flat or falling since 2015."
I've been obsessively reading the back catalog of EdResearch for Action reports, which I love, because I want to engage with research evidence, but as a caveman practitioner, it's hard to make room in my life to totally stay abreast of scholarly literature, particularly across a wide range of topics in education.
https://lnkd.in/d23nnr9i
Small-scale, human-centered designer who cares about large-scale, systems-level change
4 months ago
Ben Daley I'm more intrigued by the reform model to PLAN, ACT and then ride off into the sunset on a CYCLE. So we're no longer required to DO or STUDY?