College Students Lack Skills

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College Students Lack Skills

The best education money can buy?

With college tuition more expensive than ever, we can expect only the best results from our college grads, right? Maybe not. According to a literacy study funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts, more than half of students at four-year colleges and at least 75 percent at two-year colleges lack the literacy to handle complex tasks (cnn.com, January 20).

These “complex” tasks include analyzing newspaper editorials and using math skills needed for checkbooks and restaurants. The study showed these skills were lacking in students no matter what their field of study.

But some good news gleaned from the literacy study was that most students at community and four-year schools possess intermediate skills, meaning they can handle moderately challenging tasks, such as “identifying a location on a map” (ibid.). Phew!

The real issues this study shows is how inadequate our modern education system is in producing balanced and well-educated graduates who can handle the real world.

Education does not come all wrapped up and ready to be handed over when paying the tuition bill. As educator Herbert W. Armstrong wrote in his Autobiography: “Education comes from study—from books—from lectures—from contacts—from travel—from thinking about what you see and hear and read—and from experience.”

For more on this subject, request our free booklet Education With Vision.