Piggybacking on the financial success thread here...
My DD is a HS Senior. We have daily conversations about college. I'm pushing her to get a 4 year degree right out of HS. On the flip side, I know many people have (and are still paying for!) degrees they aren't using.
Any thoughts on getting a 2 or 4 year degree vs. not at all? Do you think folks with 4 year degrees are further ahead later in life than those without?
If you didn't go to college right after HS how did that work out? Do you wish you had?
Thanks!!
If your student is ambivalent about college, then it's a sign she isn't ready or isn't sure she wants to go.
A couple questions: Does she like high school? Not the social aspect, but the education part? Does she read on her own? Does she have good attendance in high school? How are her high school grades? Look at these things honestly, and you'll know whether she's ready.
Also, you mentioned money. If you'd need to borrow to send her to college, that's a big concern. The worst-case scenerio is that she starts college but doesn't finish . . . and has money to pay back. Avoid that trap!
Is a degree worthwhile? Absolutely! The average person with a degree will be more employable, will earn more money and greater benefits, and will be less likely to be laid off. Sure, you can find examples of people who don't fit this mold, and you can find people who aren't using their degrees.
It's important to choose something that's actually going to get you a job; the colleges aren't good at helping you find that something. They tend to present philosophy and accounting as equal alternatives, yet we all know which one's going to get a good career job and which one's going to continue working at the mall.
I went to college right out of high school. It was the right choice for me. I was a good student in high school (and did better in college). I was ready.
My husband was rather like your daughter. He wasn't sure he wanted to go to college. He really wanted military, but a minor disability put a stop to that plan. He worked at a manual labor job for a couple years, and then he decided that he didn't want to do that for the rest of his life. He started wtih community college and then went to the university. It took him five yeas total to get his degree (which is typical for a transfer student and pretty much negated the community college savings). He says it was the right path for him: He wasn't ready for a university at 18 when he graduated.
If she decides not to go now, I'd give a couple suggestions:
Set a time frame for her to work/consider. Perhaps you'll agree that you'll discuss college again when she turns 20, 21, 25 . . . and at that point honestly assess how far she's come in her job, how far she's likely to go without a degree. Also, encourage her not to make decisions that'd prevent her from returning to college: Don't buy an expensive car, don't have a baby while the "Am I gonna return to college?" option is still out there. You don't want her to say, "I wish I could go back to school, but with two kids and a house payment, I just can't do tuition, day care, and everything else." Don't let her trap herself into so many responsibilities that it'll become too difficult.