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USA Today
a day ago
- Politics
- USA Today
Kids are ditching traditional college for career tech programs. Parents are concerned.
Kids are ditching traditional college for career tech programs. Parents are concerned. Show Caption Hide Caption Trump signs order to combat 'woke' university accreditation process President Donald Trump directed the Justice and Education Depts. to investigate universities for 'unlawful discrimination' and 'ideological overreach. More teens are showing interest in vocational training and other non-college options after high school. Parents tend to favor traditional four-year colleges over non-degree career paths, according to a new survey from nonprofit American Student Assistance. Financial concerns and a desire for hands-on work are driving some students toward technical education. Nush Ahmed, 22, said she was "stubborn" when she went against her parents' wishes and chose to attend a career technical program 800 miles from home instead of enrolling in a traditional four-year college nearby. Her parents, who live in Buffalo, New York, and immigrated from Bangladesh, said they believed a bachelor's degree was the only path to success. But Ahmed insisted. She's one of a growing number of high school graduates turning to technical schools over two or four-year colleges at a time of spiraling student debt and new incentives for vocational education. Ahmed's choice to forego college and pursue a career working in manufacturing made her an outlier in her South Asian immigrant community, where most parents expect young women to attend college near home, she said. "I was hoping that time she would go to either medical school or engineering college to become a doctor or engineer," said her father, Shuhel Ahmed. "But she really wanted to go into to this career, so I finally decided to let her go." By the numbers: How do kids and parents feel about career technical education programs? New survey data from the nonprofit American Student Assistance shows that teen interest in college is down while interest in nondegree paths is on the rise. Meanwhile, parents are skeptical of options outside of the traditional college pathway to work. Nearly half of all students surveyed – 45% – weren't interested in going to college. About 14% said they planned to attend trade or technical schools, apprenticeships and technical bootcamp programs and 38% were considering those options. Some 66% of teens surveyed said parents supported their plans to pursue a nondegree route compared with 82% whose parents encouraged them to attend college. More: In emergency appeal, Trump asks Supreme Court to let him gut Education Department Seventy percent said their parents were more supportive of foregoing education altogether right after high school rather than pursuing a nondegree program. Young people told USA TODAY that finances, along with the desire to enter the workforce without more classroom-type academics, were among their reasons for choosing technical education. The financial burden of college was on Andrew Townsend's mind when he opted out of college. Townsend graduated from high school in Golden, Colorado, this June and decided against college, saying he wanted to go to work right away. The choice was easy for Townsend, 19, because he was offered an apprenticeship as a manufacturing technician for printer manufacturer Lexmark during his senior year through his school's career and technical education program. That turned into an 18-month internship. "When I went into high school I anticipated going to college and going into biology or sports management," Townsend said. "But I can't sit still in a class, and I want to get my hands dirty and get into work. It's financially best for me right now." More: Is the push for career education prioritizing business over students? His dad, construction worker Corey Townsend, wasn't sure what path his son would take, but he supports Andrew's choice. "My family doesn't have the most amount of money," Andrew Townsend said. "Maybe if I want to go to college later on in life, that's a choice. But for now I want to focus on myself and make my life better for me." College costs vs. career technical education costs At the nation's public colleges and universities, the average cost for in-state tuition is $9,750 per year and and the average cost for out-of-state tuition is $28,386, according to researchers at the Education Data Initiative. The price tag is higher at private colleges. The average cost of tuition and fees at those schools is $38,421,. The Education Data Initiative estimates college tuition has doubled in the 21st century. The costs of career technical education varies widely by trade and program. The average cost of a complete trade school program's tuition and fees was $15,070 during the 2022-2023 school year, according to data from the federal Education Department's National Center for Education Statistics. The Trump administration advances non-college options As parents and teens navigate their post-college options, President Donald Trump and his administration have championed career technical programs as a viable alternative to traditional two-year and four-year colleges. "Under my leadership, America will once again champion a culture where hard work is rewarded and equip our people with real skills for real careers that our communities are in desperate need to fill," Trump said in a Feb. 3 statement. "By offering more alternatives to higher education, we will train college-aged kids in relevant skills for the 21st century economy." More: Colleges report widespread problems with financial aid since Education Department layoffs During Trump's first term, he signed a bill called the Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act into law. The law allows the federal government to provide states and local communities funding to enhance career and technical education programming. This term, the Trump administration announced it is reversing two Biden-era regulations that require states and local career technical education programs at high schools and community colleges to change the way they report on student progress to receive federal funding. What to do after high school ...if you're not heading straight to college 'They should let them follow their dreams' New survey data from Gallup, Walton Family Foundation and Jobs for the Future of 1,327 teens shows that most high school students and their parents are unaware of their post-high school options outside of the traditional four-year college path. The uncertainty resonated with Ahmed's father, who saw college as the only pathway to success for his daughter. Father and daughter now agree the path she chose has afforded her immense opportunity. If she could go back in time, Ahmed said, she would be less harsh on her parents for pushing college. Ahmed is enjoying the success that has come from completing a technical education program at the Universal Technical Institute, formerly known as NASCAR Technical Institute, in North Carolina. She works at a precision manufacturing company that specializes in metal and polymer 3D printing and has a podcast that highlights young people pursuing trade options after high school. She earns about $60,000 a year at her day job. "With the way she has gone through this and how she is doing now, I would say to parents that if kids want to try a short term school they should let them do and then see how it goes," Ahmed's father said. "If it goes well then great and if not, there's time to change. But they should let them follow their dreams." Contact Kayla Jimenez at kjimenez@ Follow her on X at @kaylajjimenez.

USA Today
28-04-2025
- Business
- USA Today
Trump's first 100 days have blown my mind. He's delivering on his promises.
Trump's first 100 days have blown my mind. He's delivering on his promises. | Opinion While progressives scream louder and louder into the void, millions of ordinary Americans are sticking with President Donald Trump and his agenda of rapid and dramatic change. I'm one of them. Show Caption Hide Caption Trump signs order to combat 'woke' university accreditation process President Donald Trump directed the Justice and Education Depts. to investigate universities for 'unlawful discrimination' and 'ideological overreach. President Donald Trump has done more good for the United States in his first 100 days in the White House than Joe Biden did in four years. Yet, much of the mainstream news media, chock full of journalists with a leftist bias, portrays the Trump presidency as a chaotic disaster. Trump has been smeared, scorned and labeled an authoritarian. If the news is any indication, America is already in steep decline because of Trump's first 100 days. But I want to show a different side of what we've seen unfold since Jan. 20 as Trump moves at an extraordinary pace to implement policies that 77.3 million Americans voted for in November. Those measures will in time improve our lives and strengthen our nation. DOGE's mission to instill fiscal responsibility is vital If I had to describe Trump's first 100 days in just four letters, it would be DOGE. The Department of Government Efficiency, led by Elon Musk, has undertaken the Herculean task of trying to bring fiscal responsibility to a federal government that doesn't blink at trillion dollar deficits. DOGE's critics snipe at every cut to the bloated bureaucracy, but none has offered a credible alternative. Democrats have become the party of the status quo, and the status quo has respected financial experts forecasting economic disaster for the United States if we don't cut the deficit and slow the growth of the national debt. Opinion: Musk's radical approach may reduce US debt. He's not the problem – we are. As the CATO Institute has noted, Musk overpromised with his goal to slash federal spending by $2 trillion. But don't miss something remarkable that Musk and Trump have done in only three months: The mindset in Washington for years has been that deficits and the debt don't really matter, that the bureaucracy will grow without fail, that taxpayers just need to suck it up and pay more to keep the federal spending machine chugging along. That mindset has now been shocked back to reality. Federal workers and entire bureaucracies have to justify their work − just like most ordinary American workers. And the expectation of endless government growth is gone. Trump's tariffs show signs that they're working Trump's tariffs have ignited a firestorm of criticism and sparked predictions of a recession. But there have been indications that the tariffs are bringing jobs back to America. Here are a few examples: Swiss drugmaker Novartis on April 10 announced a $23 billion investment over five years to expand manufacturing and research in the United States. The company estimated that it will add 4,000 jobs here. Honda Motor has announced that it will move production of its Civic hybrid hatchback from Japan to America. Drugmaker Eli Lilly announced in February that it will build four pharmaceutical manufacturing plants in the United States. The company said the expansion will create 13,000 jobs in manufacturing and construction. In addition to his big initiatives, Trump also has signed executive orders for obscure but important matters that modernize the government and strengthen the economy. One of the orders will end the antiquated practice in our government of issuing and accepting paper checks. Opinion: We're paying too much in taxes. I want Trump to fix it. Trump also ordered the creation of a bitcoin reserve and digital asset stockpile, managed by the Treasury Department. The goal with these executive orders and others is to modernize and streamline the government, which far too often moves at the speed of snail mail in a nation that expects overnight delivery. Trump is still far more popular than Biden To hear Trump's critics on the left and in mainstream media tell it, the president's first 100 days have brought us to the brink of economic ruin and an authoritarian dystopia. But while Trump's approval rating has dropped since he took office, far more Americans now say Trump is doing a good job than said the same thing about President Joe Biden in January − 45.3% for Trump versus 36% for Biden. So while progressives scream louder and louder into the void, millions of ordinary Americans are sticking with Trump and his agenda of rapid and dramatic change. I'm one of them. History will show that Trump's first 100 days involved a policy blitz of epic proportions. I didn't think he could drive so much change so fast, but he has, and I'm glad. Nicole Russell is a columnist at USA TODAY and a mother of four who lives in Texas. Contact her at nrussell@ and follow her on X, formerly Twitter: @russell_nm. Sign up for her weekly newsletter, The Right Track, here.