The 3 Values of Continuing Your Education

You’re reading The 3 Values of Continuing Your Education, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’re enjoying this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

benefits of education

benefits of education

Sometimes it seems like higher education has become so ingrained in our culture that it’s simply a platitude to suggest anyone go back to school. That said, only 39.4 percent of Americans between the ages of 25 and 64 hold college degrees, meaning that the benefits of higher education must not be as apparent as we may think. Let’s examine three concrete benefits derived from continuing your education: higher pay, better work and greater happiness.

  1. Continuing Your Education Helps You Earn More Money

Let’s begin with what’s likely the most commonly cited benefit of pursuing higher education: making more money. But exactly how much more money are we talking about? Median wages at our baseline, a high school diploma, are $668 a week, or $34,736 a year. A bachelor’s degree raises those numbers to $1,101 a week, or $57,252 a year – an increase of almost 65 percent. A master’s degree improves things even further, bumping median weekly wages to $1,326 and annual wages to $68,952 – almost 99% percent over our baseline. It takes a high school graduate two days to earn what a master’s degree holder earns in one. Now that’s value!

  1. Continuing Your Education Can Get You a Better Job

Higher wages are a result of better job opportunities, which require greater educational attainment.

Let’s start at the bottom of the equation with unemployment. The unemployment rate at high school graduates is 6.0 percent. That’s nearly double the rate for bachelor’s degree holders, which is 3.5 percent, and more than double for master’s degree holders, which is about 2.8 percent. Without higher education, you’re twice as likely to not have a job, period. Indeed, it’s predicted that by 2018 almost two-thirds of all occupations in the United States will require a college degree.

Beyond winning you a job, higher education can get you more work. Underemployment, or being employed only part time when seeking full time work, is less frequently discussed than unemployment, but it is much more pervasive. Underemployment of high school graduates currently stands at 12.9 percent – more than twice the rate for holders of bachelor’s degrees, at 6.2 percent, and thrice that of master’s degree holders, at 4.2 percent.

Seventy-four percent of American adults believe a postsecondary degree is essential to getting a good job, but what do the people making hiring and promotion decisions think? The same! Companies themselves attest to this, a third of managers surveyed say they have sent workers to back to school for higher education, 81 percent of them even picking up part of the tab. That is a win-win!

  1. Continuing Your Education Can Make You Happier

Now this may be something you haven’t heard before, but higher education may not just be the key to more money and a better job, but to greater happiness. That’s a big statement that the numbers support: When examining well-being levels across American cities, researchers found that happiness has the closest relationship not with wages, unemployment or output, but with educational attainment, measured as the share of the population with a bachelor’s degree or higher. Similarly, educational attainment has been shown to boost happiness early in life and keep it that way, unlike income, which raises over time but does not increase happiness.

More money, a better job, greater happiness — you can have it all, and higher education is the way to start.

Roslyn Tate is an editor on the 2U Inc. website. A recent Goddard College MFA she enjoys helping people achieve their goals through academics and art. 2U partners with leading colleges and universities to offer online master’s degree programs to students around the world.

You’ve read The 3 Values of Continuing Your Education, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’ve enjoyed this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

http://ift.tt/1NtYNwE

It’s the moss… by SonjaL by SonjaL

Icelandic moss…

via 500px http://ift.tt/1MTvHqw

tulipnight: Foggy Morning by Børth Aadne Sætrenes …

via Sig Nordal, Jr. http://ift.tt/26oZuOi

Sunset @ Aajoba Hill by bankapure by bankapure

Captured this Sunset atop Aajoba Hill, Maharashtra, India.

http://www.bankapure.com

via 500px http://ift.tt/1UcNoTt

DSC_3137.jpg by GolfzzyZaa by GolfzzyZaa

look to the future

via 500px http://ift.tt/1VxWHyK

LACMA pays tribute to Prince with Purple Rain Room

Purple Rain Room tribute to Prince at LACMA

In memory of musician Prince, who died suddenly last week, LACMA has used purple lighting to turn the popular Rain Room installation into a tribute based on one of the musician’s most famous tracks. (more…)

http://ift.tt/1NtP49G

How Drawing Can Help Improve Your Memory, According to Research

If you need help jogging your memory, you might try your hand at drawing. A recent study found that we remember items better when we draw them rather than write them down.

Read more…

http://ift.tt/1YQt6hI

What’s Your Favorite Affordable Blender?

You probably don’t need a $400 Vitamix
to make the occasional smoothie or margarita, but you still don’t want to spend money on something that can’t chop ice cubes, or that’s going to break after six months. So we want to know, what affordable blender do you recommend?

Read more…

http://ift.tt/1YQncgI