@AudaciousEpigon maybe you can do by degree type too? Bachelor, master's, PhD. Maybe samples are too small for PhD though.
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I wonder how much this (if any) is a result of expansion of humanities and social sciences programs. Switching from math/physics to psych in undergrad I definitely noticed a massive IQ drop (I'm sure about 1SD) in fellow students.
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I don't think the GSS allows breakdown by major, but I know that Danish sources have noted that most expansion in university were to the relatively less useful majors (humanities). Recent report suggested cutting back on these. Resulted in fun media whining.
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Assuming the only benefit to college is future earning power is both absurd and hilarious.
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The good news is the Zoomers are now refusing to go to College and so the scam will be ending soon. Trades and Certifications>University.
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- In 2015, 36% of Americans b.1971-1990 (ages 25-44) held at least a Bachelor degree. [Table 1]. Rises to ~41% if excl. non-HS grads. - For age 25-to-29 cohort, more women than men have held Bachelor degrees since 1991; big gap since early 2000s [Fig 7] https://www.census.gov/content/dam/Census/library/publications/2016/demo/p20-578.pdf …
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