Going to college is a good thing,
right? That’s at least what I was told as a kid, and what led me to get a
college degree. I was the first one in my family to do so.
Yet new public opinion polling shows most
Republicans think colleges have a negative impact on the country.
Unfortunately, they might be right — but not for the reasons you might
expect them to give.
Attending college has been proven to
unlock opportunities. A report by the Association of Public
and Land-Grant Universities found that college graduates are 24 percent more
likely to be employed than high school graduates — and earn $1 million more
over a lifetime.
Those with college degrees are also
more than twice as likely to volunteer, and over three times more likely to
give back to charity.
College educations also affect the
way people vote. Three-quarters of bachelor’s degree holders vote in
presidential elections, compared to just over half of high school graduates.
So why might some view college
negatively? Well, there’s a lot of reasons — 1.3 trillion, to be precise.
That’s how much debt students, current and former, are carrying in this
country: $1.3 trillion worth, and rising.
Who’s hit worst by this skyrocketing
debt? Women, who owe two-thirds of that amount — and
especially black and Latina women.
Worse still, women are paid
about 80 cents to every dollar a man makes —
a number that falls to 63 cents for black women, and just 54 cents for Latina
women, when compared to white men. That means these grads start out deeper in
debt and then have a much harder time getting out.
So, is rising Republican opposition
to the academy a result of their concern for the economic well-being of black
or Latina women? Doubtful.
After all, our GOP-led Congress
refuses to engage with potential solutions to close the gender wage gap, which
could make huge strides in reducing overall student loan debt. And not a single
Republican senator supported the Pay Check Fairness Act, which would make it
harder for employers to discriminate based on gender.
Same goes for the College for All Act, a bill put forward by
Senator Bernie Sanders to create a debt-free higher education system and help
student borrowers refinance their debt. A lot more effort is needed on the
federal and local levels to remove this economic burden systemically placed on
women.
Unfortunately, the Pew study that
showed Republican opposition to universities didn’t dive deeper as to why.
However, an old quote from Karl Rove, the Republican
mastermind responsible for bringing George W. Bush into office, offers a clue:
“As people do better, they start voting like Republicans — unless they have too
much education and vote Democratic.”
What else about college might rub
conservatives the wrong way?
Colleges provide a space for
critical thinking where students can expand their minds and become more
knowledgeable of the world. That might be why universities have historically
played major roles in the resistance to bad public policy — from Vietnam to
Iraq to today’s #resistance to Donald Trump.
Fixing higher education means
reducing barriers to college, not increasing them. Greater investment in
debt-free higher education and debt relief for the most impacted students,
including black women like me, is what’s needed — not mindless broadsides
against the idea of education.
Jessicah Pierre is the Inequality
Media Specialist at the Institute for Policy Studies. Distributed by
OtherWords.org