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Spoiler, the answer is "almost never" and "anything relegated to anything progressive/left/woke/dei/etc".

Archive: https://archive.today/PpyPt

From the post:

>The price of a college degree in the US continues to tick higher — so it's little wonder many high schoolers are asking: is it still worth it? Tuition fees and living expenses are rising faster than the growth of financial aid. Around 40 million Americans carry $1.6 trillion in student debt — and most are no longer getting a reprieve on repayments. Parents now cover an average of 48 percent of the cost of college, up from 38 percent just a decade ago, according to JPMorgan analysis. Now, a new study from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York has looked into when college still pays off — and when it doesn't. 'Majors providing technical training — that is, quantitative and analytical skills — earn the highest return, including engineering, math and computers,' the report found.

Spoiler, the answer is "almost never" and "anything relegated to anything progressive/left/woke/dei/etc". Archive: https://archive.today/PpyPt From the post: >>The price of a college degree in the US continues to tick higher — so it's little wonder many high schoolers are asking: is it still worth it? Tuition fees and living expenses are rising faster than the growth of financial aid. Around 40 million Americans carry $1.6 trillion in student debt — and most are no longer getting a reprieve on repayments. Parents now cover an average of 48 percent of the cost of college, up from 38 percent just a decade ago, according to JPMorgan analysis. Now, a new study from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York has looked into when college still pays off — and when it doesn't. 'Majors providing technical training — that is, quantitative and analytical skills — earn the highest return, including engineering, math and computers,' the report found.

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