On 2/15/07, Jeremy Hansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Quote: "UVSC graduates overwhelmingly lead the way in terms of employment with 83.9% of its graduates in the workforce and 78.4% employed full-time. The next highest was USU with 74.7% percent in the labor force. USU and UVSC bachelor's graduates were employed at a significantly higher rate than the other schools, while BYU bachelor's graduates were employed full-time at the lowest rate [57%]".
Interesting post. I wonder why this is the case with these smaller schools (UVSC, USU). My theory would be that people who are eager to get into the workforce and make some money more quickly gravitate towards smaller/less expensive schools with the intent to get through quickly and cheaply. Do these people represent the more practical and ambitious of our populous? I'm not smearing the value of a deep, thorough education, but I do think there are those who love to learn and those who love to apply what they have learned. Some schools may be more agreeable to the later group of "go getters". -Bryan /* PLUG: http://plug.org, #utah on irc.freenode.net Unsubscribe: http://plug.org/mailman/options/plug Don't fear the penguin. */
