Tag Archives: value

How to assess the value of an education in the humanities (or indeed any college education)

In discussing the value of an education, things often get muddled up. That comes across in this essay in the New York Times, where the author who teaches humanities confesses she is not sure of their value.

That’s too bad, because the humanities obviously have value. A humanities degree may not. The difference hinges on the word value. Let’s take a moment to examine that essential word in relation to a college education.

The value of a college education can be looked at in two ways: it’s economic value and it’s non-economic value.

If you go to college and get a degree, there is an economic cost associated with that. There are the costs of going to a school of higher education, such as tuition, books and even residence. There are also opportunity costs: I might forgo getting a job right after high school in order to attend school and as a result I lose the salary I could have made at that job. Both sets of costs need to be accounted for.

Besides the costs, there are the economic benefits of going to college. The job I skipped to go to college may have paid me $X dollars over 20 years. If I studied medicine and become a doctor, then I may end up making $X+Y over 20 years. The additional Y dollars is the economic benefit of going to college.

Take all that, subtract the economic cost of going to college from the economic benefit, and you get the economic value.

Of course you get more than economic value. You gain knowledge and skills. You might learn to live independently in a new town or city. You could meet people who become lifelong friends, perhaps even your spouse or partner. The  non-economic benefits you acquire from going to college go on and on.

The challenge humanities (and even undergraduate science) degrees have is they no longer have the economic value they once have. The time you spend gaining a degree in English literature may have enriched your life forever, but it likely won’t get you a good job the way it did for the boomer generation.

If people are going to formally study subjects in post secondary school, there either needs to be some economic benefit to doing so or the cost has to be drastically reduced. Otherwise most people will stop going to college and university and start going to schools that provide more focused practical education and greater value to them.

In some ways that would be a good thing.  College may be the best way to study classic literature, or practice computer science, but it is hard to do it all there.  You are pretty much forced into a lane when it comes into choosing courses at school, be it in math or philosophy or theatre. Unless you have lots of money and time, trying to learn a diverse range of subjects in school is prohibitively expensive. The only way of gaining all that value is outside an academic environment. People need to learn how to gain that outside a four year degree program. Education should not be something that ends in your early twenties. It’s also something you go into lifelong debt for, either.

The humanities have value; it just may not be economic value. The challenge we have now is providing that particular value to people outside of costly college programs. It a challenge to us both as individuals and as a society.

P.S. Throughout this essay, I used the terms college and diploma. You can easily replace diploma with degree or certificate gained from any post high school institution that resembles a college.

 

On buying cheap wine at the LCBO, 2022

 

 

Annually various publications in Toronto will publish articles on how to buy cheap wine at the LCBO. BlogTo takes a stab at it here: The top 10 cheap wines at the LCBO.

 

 

 

 

If you want to buy cheap wine at the LCBO, here’s some things to consider:

  • the wines that appear on these lists often tend to be the same year after year. The price changes, but the wines listed more or less are the same. The wines themselves are consistent too. Hey, these are not handcrafted wine! So a cheap wine list published in 2015 will likely have a list of wines you can still buy now, just with a different price and a different date.
  • Once these wine lists used to be “best wines under $10”, but that price ceiling is outdated now. Most cheap wines are over $10. There are still a few good ones, as the Toronto Star argues, but not many.
  • Once you get up into the $14-15 price point, head over to the Vintages section instead. Wines there generally are good at any price point, and you’ll get something better than the general section, imho.
  • These wine lists will hype up these cheap wines. Note: most of them are limited in quality. Not too much wine in the LCBO is Bad anymore. None of these will be Great either. Most cheap wine is pleasant and drinkable. Something to have at dinner or on an outing. They are not sophisticated. If you can’t taste all the notes of “peaches, nectarines, pears” mentioned in the lists, there’s a reason for that.
  • The “cheap” wines I’ve been drinking lately (under $15) have been Ontario Riesling. They go great with so many foods and are good value, I believe. If you want red, consider a Baco Noir. Many of them are fine and under $15.
  • If you have to go closer to $10, the best bets tend to still be Portugal, Italian and South African.

(Image linked to LCBO.com of a Californian Chard that just slips under $10)