Higher education is increasingly framed as a financial transaction. Tuition is weighed against starting salary. Majors are judged by market demand. Return on investment becomes the dominant lens.
But this framing misses the most enduring value of education.
As Christina Dryden reflected, college is not just preparation for a first job—it’s preparation for a lifetime of adaptation. Most graduates will change roles, fields, and even identities multiple times over their careers.
The real ROI of higher education lies in formation.
What Education Actually Produces
Beyond content knowledge, higher education develops:
These capacities compound over time. They don’t show up neatly in early salary data, but they determine long-term success.
Education as Becoming, Not Just Training
When education is reduced to job preparation, it becomes fragile. Jobs change. Tools change. Entire industries evolve.
But when education is about becoming—a more thoughtful, capable, adaptable human being—it endures.
Students who experience college as formation are better equipped not just to earn, but to contribute.
A Leadership Reframe
For leaders, the challenge is to defend and design for this deeper value. That means resisting purely transactional narratives and articulating why learning itself matters.
The most powerful institutions don’t promise certainty. They promise capacity.
Reflection Question:
How do you help learners—and stakeholders—see education as formation, not just credentialing?