Many colleges market their wares by appealing to the baser instincts of prospective students.
The idea is to make it easier to attend. As a result, graduates, if they get that far, are unable to find real, practical jobs.
It also explains why we have so many with easy-to-get law degrees, while few are doctors and scientists.
Affirmative action is practiced, not just for conventional minorities. It is there for any group that is not equally represented on attendance roles.
The truth is, few undergraduate students have the vaunted, celebrity professors. They often are taught, instead, by graduate students.
In fact, Colleges and universities engage in "bait and switch;" confer what are actually deficient degrees, and engage in other practices that would bring legal sanctions if done in any other business.
Parents and taxpayers pay billions of dollars to colleges and universities. Schools make money no matter what students learn, whether students graduate, and whether students are able to get good jobs after leaving school. (See the Earl J Weinreb NewsHole® comments.)
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