I graduated from high school as a C student. I was lazy, unmotivated, more interested in a number of other things. I took a job as a cashier at a wholesale club after I graduated. I took a half semester off doing that job, and decided to go to my local community college because that's what my parents and friends encouraged me to do. I kept the job getting only 10-15 hours a week, and in between semesters the hours jumped to 20-25 a week. My fiancee was just like me, and ended up doing the same thing I did. It took us 3 years to graduate from 2 year schools. I have a degree in business administration, and my fiancee has one in visual communication. She graduated in the fall of '09, and I graduated in the spring of '10.
Today? We both have our cashier jobs. We didn't make contacts, and our grades were as average as they were in high school. Plus the job market isn’t too friendly right now even if we did earn higher grades and contacts.
Sound sad? Well we're both REALLY big savers. I'm 22, she's 23, and in March we just bought a condo. We were able to get pell grants to cover a good chunk of our college costs so we weren't saddled with a lot of debt (Yes I took a handout. Please don't crucify me!). We still went 5 days a week which meant gas money, overpriced campus food, etc. If we hadn't had those 3 years slowing us down, we could have been more independent much sooner! We could have gotten more hours at work, and not wasted the time & money at college. In fact we now get 30-35 hours a week, have more responsibilities at our job, and got raises because we handled it just fine. That just happened last year. We likely would have gotten the bump in hours and pay if we were able to demonstrate how valuable we were right after high school.
Now we don't live a very luxurious lifestyle. But we pay the mortgage, the gas & electric, cable & internet, and groceries just fine. We're simple. We don't have a desire to travel, move into a mansion, buy an expensive sports car, etc. For us being 30+ hour a week cashiers fits our lifestyle just fine. It's definitely not the most glamorous job in the world, but we actually like the work more than most. We know how to talk to people, get along with our co-workers, and get respect from management.
It's worth noting though that Stossel admitted at the end of his program that the word, "scam", was just TV hype. He said college may indeed be the best fit for you. Maybe you got great grades in high school, have enough family money to pay for college and not be burdened with debt, land a professor who actually does teach you some skills, land a contact, and make it in life due to your college education. It does happen, and might be better than the alternative of just jumping into the workforce and hoping everything works out. But it’s a personal decision everybody has to make. Every individual is different and unique.
For me college was a waste of time & money. But I don’t suggest everybody follows the same path I took. My fiancee and I are ok with working in retail for the foreseeable future to get by fairly comfortably for the lifestyle we’re content with. You might say, “Content? Retail? Is that all you aspire for and to do with your life?” The answer is no, but I honestly wouldn’t be sad if that’s what happens. I personally don’t consider cashiering degrading, I come home to a fiancee who I love, and a condo with a select few things that I enjoy. What’s so terrible about that? I want a job in baseball, but won’t consider myself a failure if I don’t get there.
It’s worth noting that the time I spent working after graduating HS proved to be incredibly helpful paying for the expenses in my first semester. Taking some time off after high school isn’t terrible. You don’t HAVE to go to college right away, which is of course what schools and society try to brainwash you into thinking. They want your $ ASAP. Jumping into a minimum wage job for a year or two and going to college after is perfectly acceptable. You can start paying for school right away and not worry about climbing out of too much debt. In fact I plan on going back to school at some point for sports management, and I will have enough $ saved up for that. If I could go back in time I’d keep my job after high school (graduated from HS at 17), earn the 30-35 hours and the raise much sooner, and do that until I’m 25. I would have had a home sooner, started paying down my mortgage sooner, have even greater savings than I have now, etc. 8 years to save and actually own some stuff. Then at 25, still pretty young, start trying to reach my dreams and accomplish much more. If I fall flat, college didn’t work for me, didn’t start working my way towards my dream job, then things wouldn’t be too bad. I would already own some things, and have very little/no debt.