Colleges That Pay You Back: The
200 Schools That Give You the Best Bang for Your Tuition Buck, 2017 Edition.
By Robert Franek, David Soto, Kristen O’Toole, and the Staff of the Princeton
Review. Princeton Review/Random House. $21.99.
Gone are the days in which
colleges were supposed to provide a strong general education, the ingredients
of a well-rounded person who could live a well-rounded life. No one has time
for that anymore, and few have the inclination, anyway. ROI, return on
investment, is now what college is all about, and the return needs to be
quantifiable, not some evanescent concept such as “learning to be a better
person.” There will be plenty of time for that after retirement, assuming one
can afford to retire and is inclined at that point to the contemplative life –
and not hampered by health issues. But to be able to afford retirement in the
far-distant future, one must attain significant financial security for many
decades, and that brings us right back to college as training ground for
high-paying professions. Or at least ones that quickly pay back the cost of
getting the education that is a prerequisite for doing that particular type of work.
This scenario leads directly
to Colleges That Pay You Back, a
no-nonsense analysis of what it costs to attend each of hundreds of schools
(including a calculation of how much financial aid those schools provide, since
that figures into the cost of attendance), and how high students’ salaries are
likely to be immediately after graduation and some years down the road. There
isn’t a better book out there for students and families looking to maximize the
financial and career impact of choosing a school. To be sure, the book presents
the usual disclaimers about not regarding college as purely a way to have more
income in adult life: “Your choice of major should not depend solely on your
expected starting salary, but also on your academic interests, the subjects you
are passionate about, and the type of career you’re interested in.” Even if
this is sincerely written, it is worth about as much as most disclaimers, which
is to say, not very much, since it is part of the introduction to a section
called “Great Schools for the Highest Paying Majors” that neatly quantifies not
only the median starting salary for fresh-out-of-college employees but also the
mid-career expectation in each field. There are excellent lists of colleges to
consider if you are interested in aerospace engineering, architectural
engineering, biomedical engineering, chemical engineering, civil engineering,
computer engineering, electrical engineering, industrial engineering, materials
science and engineering, mechanical engineering, nuclear engineering, petroleum
engineering, software engineering, systems engineering, as well as four types
of engineering technologies. So many choices! But this is not to say the social
sciences are entirely absent: there are lists for economics and international
relations.
Colleges That Pay You Back does not intend to be hard-hearted, only
hard-headed. Parents who attended college at a time when majors such as
psychology, English, philosophy, theater and music were deemed as worthy as
those in hard science and business may be startled and may even feel wistful as
they peruse this data-heavy, very well-organized look at each school’s student
profile, selectivity, financial facts, and career information – the last of
which specifically includes an “ROI rating.” Today’s college attendees need to
know how to make it in a very difficult, fast-changing workplace, and the book
quantifies advantages as much as it can, while also including more-subjective
elements such as the quality of each college’s career placement and alumni
network – a key element to getting ahead in the contemporary version of “it’s
not what you know, it’s whom you know” (non-sticklers for accurate English may
say “it’s who you know,” and no one will care). What is interesting is that
many of the top 50 places in Colleges
That Pay You Back are exceptionally good all-around schools, so even if you
do not take one of the currently favored majors and go into one of the
currently hot professions, there is a good chance – thanks largely to strong
alumni networks – that you will still do well in life, financially speaking, if
you attend one of these schools. That, of course, assumes you can get in and
can afford to attend – but given these schools’ outreach to “under-represented”
groups and their extensive endowments, that is certainly a possibility for more
students now than it would have been a few decades ago.
Nevertheless, the top-listed
schools do lean largely in the direction of science, technology, engineering
and mathematics. Princeton University comes in at No. 1, followed by Stanford,
MIT, Harvey Mudd College, and California Institute of Technology. Other schools
with a longstanding reputation for overall excellence dot the top-50 list:
Harvard (No. 6), Duke (No. 11), Columbia (No. 24), Tufts (No. 31), Johns
Hopkins (No. 39). Students may want to search the top-50 list for excellent
pay-you-back schools that are somewhat less-known in this context, such as
Brigham Young University (No. 18), Hamilton College (No. 21), Rose-Hulman
Institute of Technology (No. 29), or Wabash College (No. 38). But before doing
that search, and indeed before using Colleges
That Pay You Back in any way, students need to spend some time looking
within themselves and deciding what they,
not their friends and not some amorphous notion of “society as a whole,” want
to get out of attending college. Colleges
That Pay You Back is an excellent resource for those with a
straightforwardly economic view of a college education, and there is enough
variety in the schools profiled here – not just the top 50 – so students with
that viewpoint will find many different ways of accommodating it. But students
who see the possibility of something in college beyond the notion of trading
college-education dollars for a greater number of employment dollars in the
future should not deem this book the ultimate guide. There are other reasons to attend college, decreasingly common though
they may be, and a student who subscribes to a non-economic model (or not a
solely economic one) will find other college guides (including others from the
Princeton Review) more congenial than this one.
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