<p>The issue is that students must be much more selective on the disciplines they study. Unless you plan on graduate school (and the debt that may accompany it), then you basically can only major in a handful of subjects if you want to have a positive net present value return on your college investment.</p>
<p>The disciplines that come to mind are almost always hard skill sets. Engineering, accounting, finance (this can sometimes be a stretch), computer science, and MIS are ones that instantly come to mind. Then, you can consider majors like chemistry, math, and actuarial science that can also lead to jobs if you can find the right opportunities.</p>
<p>Unless you are willing to major in these areas (and maybe a couple that I forgot), then you are almost doomed to have a negative NPV if taking out any debt for your education–the returns simply are not available.</p>
<p>Taking out 100k in student loans for undergraduate like psychology, sociology, anthropology, biology, english, greek and roman studies, etc. that are all going to require advanced graduate school and potentially another 100-200k of loans and 2-5 years of foregone income are terrible financial decisions.</p>
<p>The only way you can study those areas without putting yourself in financial hardship for the rest of your life is to have close to full rides at both the undergraduate and graduate level. Otherwise, you just have to face the fact that you are making a poor financial decision–even if you do love the subject.</p>
<p>I think we will see an evolution within trade schools. They offer some of the greatest value when considering a cost-benefit analysis of time spent (2-3 years of school) and the demand for those services, paying at high hourly rates. Going to trade school for 2 years and then making $60k a year without debt and a guarantee of job placement will become more appealing as 4-year college value continues to diminish.</p>
<p>Point blank, too many people go to 4-year college. So many of my classmates are not fit to be in this environment. Making a 3.0 is not going to cut it.</p>
<p>However, if you make a 3.8+ and have internships and leaderships responsibilities during college, then one can almost always find a job if they choose the right major.</p>