Meredith Reynolds - Head Start College Blog

College “Wrong Carrot” for Some?

In an article in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal entitled “What’s Wrong With Vocational School” Charles Murray argues that too many high school graduates are going to four-year colleges. Getting past Murray’s troubling reliance on an IQ of 100 as a cut-off of sorts for students going to a four-year college, Murray should cause parents and educators to pause and consider both the personal and societal value of alternatives to a college education. Assuming value in a vocational education is found, the obvious first step is to expose high school students (or even middle school students) to classes that expose them to the various vocations, just as high schools currently expose their students to the sciences, math, music etc. But how can we expect high schools to offer vocational classes if  their success is judged both locally and nationally by student performance on standardized tests in math, science and english to say nothing of the reality that parents often select their child’s high school based on how many graduates go on to a four-year colleges? Murray’s article correctly focuses attention on the symptom–“wrong kids” going to college, but readers should recognize the source of the problem is not the kid or the parent, but is state and federally mandated curriculum that dangles the “wrong carrot”–college for all.  In fact , a large percentage of high school students might be better off in their adult lives if they were “left behind” from college and attended vocational school.

One Response

  1. info says:

    Once again, you’re right on! IQ shouldn’t be used to track people – it’s an imperfect, limited evaluation method – but there are people who would benefit from a vocational education. Businesses would be thrilled if more young people were truly prepared for the “real world”, and it’d be easier for folks to find jobs in professions they’re actually interested in. But, it needs to be a decision made by the student and his/her parents, not by the government. Right now there aren’t enough options.

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