Site Search

Google

Links

Browse Articles

Highest Rated

Most Popular


Education > Education

GED or High School Diploma? What’s Best for You?

By : Leonard Williams


My best advice: If you're still in high school, stay and finish. You will make more money, get better jobs and feel better about yourself with a high school diploma. No one has ever been sorry they didn't finish high school.


But if it's too late for that and you left high school without a diploma, what are your options?


Can you still get a High School Diploma?

A few accredited schools offer extended high school diplomas, but they are costly and the programs take several years. Many "internet schools" claim to offer high school diplomas in a few weeks (some even days!) with a quick test. Be very wary of these. They are fakes; all you receive is phony diploma that means nothing. These are diploma mills. They're in the printing business, not the education business.


Is the GED the best choice?

The GED or General Education Development was created in 1942 for individuals who were not able to finish high school. The GED is considered equal to a high school diploma by 97% of colleges and universities, and virtually all businesses. GED means high school diploma.


The GED diploma is issued by your state when you complete the 7-? hour set of five tests in person at a test center. The American Council on Education, the individuals who write the GED, authorizes each state to administer the standardized GED exams. So wherever you live you take the same GED tests.


What are the advantages of a GED?

1. People with a GED make $480,000 more in their lifetime than individuals without a GED. That averages out to $12,000 a year more income for you. Not a inferior raise!


2. A GED will assist you get a better job. Employers would rather hire somebody who has the basic skills to pass the GED test than somebody who doesn't. Completing the GED means that the graduate has the fortitude to successfully finish a difficult exam. The GED is not a small thing!


3. You can get a GED quickly and inexpensively. Most community colleges offer GED classes and there are excellent programs online.


4. Passing the GED test will make you more valuable to your employer because you'll have gained basic writing and math skills in addition to demonstrating critical thinking and knowledge application. You'll find it's easier to get a work promotion or advance through workplace job-training programs once you have your GED.


5. Having the GED opens doors for advanced training. Most specialized training programs require either a high school diploma or a GED. And with a GED, you can look at higher educational opportunities.


6. You'll feel better about yourself with a GED because you've accomplished something that only 60% of high school graduates can do.


7. Finally, consider the impact of your educational achievement on your family. That alone goes a long way; it's priceless.


GED or high school? Really there's only one selection for most people. Getting a GED is the quickest, easiest and simplest way to improve the opportunities in your life.


2006 Essential Education Corporation / www.essentialed.org

Author's Info: Leonard Williams, an e-learning instructor with www.essentialed.org, is also a curriculum specialist who focuses on research and development, implementation and assessment of best-practice learning solutions for adult learners and individuals with educational challenges. Leonard's email is LeonardWilliams@passGED.com. He invites feedback and questions from GED students and instructors.

Rate This Article Rating Saved!
Add to Mixx!

Keywords:

school high diploma people test education programs finish best better


Related Articles:

The Evolution Of Video Game Design
Online Quiz Creation Guide
Nextstudents Loan Incentives Help Students Manage Debt
A Marketable Computer Science Degree May Mean Specializing
Imagination Comes To Life With A Computer Animation Degree
Drugs And Violence In Public Schools
Cooking Up a Career by Attending a Culinary Institute
Unleash The Power Of Elearning
Virginia Schools Focus on Literacy Problem
Tampa Schools Encouraged Student Referrals to County Disciplinary Panel Down
Financial and Political Problems Plague the Troubled St Louis Schools
Five New Area Superintendents Appointed to the San Diego Schools
Controversy Continues Between Home Builders Association and Orlando Schools
Ohio Schools Award 4 Million to School Districts for Teacher Training in Mathematics and Science
Successes of SingleGender New York Schools Overshadowing Opposition
Michigan Schools Shore Up a Failing School System
Florida Schools McKay Scholarship Program Offers Alternative School Choices to Students with Disabilities
New Denver Plan of the Denver Schools Is Ready to Launch
Eleven California Schools Districts Awarded 150000 to Encourage Students to Attend Health Career Institute
Boston Schools Benefit from the ReadBoston Program
No Bully Policy at Philadelphia Schools
Using Story As A Teaching Aid
If Puget Sound is Falling Down An Article on Earthquake Studies
Houston Schools New Teacher Merit Pay Program Will It Help or Hinder
Will Legislators Help or Only Provide a Patch for the Phoenix Schools