A Matter of Degrees

Thursday, June 17th, 2004

A Matter of Degrees contrasts elite colleges and community colleges:

At Smith, as at most elite colleges, most of the students are young and single. They often believe that they are at these places because they deserve to be, because they ‘got in.’ And to an extent, of course, that’s true, and some have overcome significant hardships to get there. Certainly, by no means are all of them from wealthy families; there are scholarships and loans and student work programs, and some families sacrifice greatly.

Nevertheless, if you were to put it the opposite way and ask me why one goes to community college, the answer might be educational for many of my daughter’s classmates. You go to community college because you are an ambitious kid whose parents don’t have professional jobs. Because you are a girl in a family whose culture for thousands of years has valued education only for boys. Because you come from a family that never really thought about college for anyone, never saved for it or steered you toward it. You go to community college because you had a significant trauma during your adolescence: Perhaps you had an alcoholic parent, lost a sibling, lived in a household of chronic anger, suffered from depression or anorexia, did too many drugs. So you failed some of your high school courses, and the “good” colleges won’t take you. You go to community college because you were born in another country and came to America too late to pick up English very easily. Because you landed a good job or gave birth to a beautiful baby right out of high school, and didn’t look back for 10 or 15 years, when, suddenly, you thought about college. You go to community college because you have a learning disability, undiagnosed or untreated, that pushed you to the sidelines in school. Because you started at a four-year school and discovered that you weren’t ready to leave home. And you go to community college because you believe that America is a society where intelligence is rewarded, and since you’re such a fine, intelligent person, it’s unnecessary for you to actually do any homework in high school, and suddenly you have a C average and your SATs are pretty good but, frankly, so are a lot of other people’s, and the best offer you got from four-year colleges was their wait list.

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