This might be the highest-placing statistic for Mississippi I’ve seen so far
HENMAN79 on
Now show a map of people who voted for Trump
Mr-MuffinMan on
This map correlates with industry or rather cost of living.
You’re not living in NY or CA (unless you’re stuck and can’t move out) w/o a degree. and you’re more inclined to get one if you are working and want a better paying job.
With lower CoL states, people can survive there with no higher education.
Obviously outliers because it’s by % and since 9 people have degrees out of the 17 in ND and SD, it’s a higher %.
Willing-Zucchini9289 on
Wisconsin sure doesn’t *act* that educated.
Honest_Report_8515 on
West Virginia resident who lives near a college town (the irony) and has a bachelor’s, eastern panhandle definitely is more educated. Yeesh on the whole state.
BarracudaFar2281 on
That map pretty much validates my expectations, except that I thought Minnesota was 2nd highest.
SpinachIcy500 on
Well well well…
ComeTasteTheBand on
Surprised how low Oregon ranks… down there in Ohio/Missouri/Michigan territory.
AGrandNewAdventure on
„Keep ‚em dumb.“ – GOP
bigjimnm on
What’s interesting is how low New Mexico is, considering the most educated county in the USA is Los Alamos, NM. But, of course it’s a small county.
An associate’s degree is the new high school diploma because high schools aren’t worth a lick anymore.
ilovefacebook on
ngl, i thought the numbers would be lower
Thadlust on
Anyone else feel like this map is just amplifying noise? There is no functional difference between 45% with degrees and 50% with degrees but Texas is red while California is blue. Same with the difference between VT and NH. VT looks closer to MA in color when it’s closer to NH.
JellyrollTX on
New Mexico is short changed… Los Alamos has the highest concentration of PHDs in the nation
FewWrongdoer654 on
Good ol Idaho….faith, family, freedom, and voting for more tax cuts for the rich….stupid gets what stupid is
AlexRyang on
I am actually surprised Texas isn’t higher; with a pretty large oil and gas and manufacturing industry, plus R&D and engineering are growing as companies have been leaving California and New York for Texas.
FrenchFreedom888 on
I’d like to see this map but where trade school certifications are included
GranolaTree on
WV doesn’t surprise me as someone who was born into deep poverty and expected to accept that and carry it on.
Anyway my son is going to college in the fall, a true first gen on both sides of the family 🥰
thesmart_indian27 on
Thought Oregon and California would be higher
manmythmustache on
I know it comes down to job type and companies in a respective area but whenever I see something like this, I’m always surprised it’s difficult for someone to find a job with a bachelor’s degree to your name. I certainly had my struggles for a year before finding something full-time in my field, even as I was willing to relocate.
overcatastrophe on
We are fucking dumb for such a supposedly well educated country
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Would like to see county level
This might be the highest-placing statistic for Mississippi I’ve seen so far
Now show a map of people who voted for Trump
This map correlates with industry or rather cost of living.
You’re not living in NY or CA (unless you’re stuck and can’t move out) w/o a degree. and you’re more inclined to get one if you are working and want a better paying job.
With lower CoL states, people can survive there with no higher education.
Obviously outliers because it’s by % and since 9 people have degrees out of the 17 in ND and SD, it’s a higher %.
Wisconsin sure doesn’t *act* that educated.
West Virginia resident who lives near a college town (the irony) and has a bachelor’s, eastern panhandle definitely is more educated. Yeesh on the whole state.
That map pretty much validates my expectations, except that I thought Minnesota was 2nd highest.
Well well well…
Surprised how low Oregon ranks… down there in Ohio/Missouri/Michigan territory.
„Keep ‚em dumb.“ – GOP
What’s interesting is how low New Mexico is, considering the most educated county in the USA is Los Alamos, NM. But, of course it’s a small county.
https://www.relpi.org/post/relpi-intel
Depressing
An associate’s degree is the new high school diploma because high schools aren’t worth a lick anymore.
ngl, i thought the numbers would be lower
Anyone else feel like this map is just amplifying noise? There is no functional difference between 45% with degrees and 50% with degrees but Texas is red while California is blue. Same with the difference between VT and NH. VT looks closer to MA in color when it’s closer to NH.
New Mexico is short changed… Los Alamos has the highest concentration of PHDs in the nation
Good ol Idaho….faith, family, freedom, and voting for more tax cuts for the rich….stupid gets what stupid is
I am actually surprised Texas isn’t higher; with a pretty large oil and gas and manufacturing industry, plus R&D and engineering are growing as companies have been leaving California and New York for Texas.
I’d like to see this map but where trade school certifications are included
WV doesn’t surprise me as someone who was born into deep poverty and expected to accept that and carry it on.
Anyway my son is going to college in the fall, a true first gen on both sides of the family 🥰
Thought Oregon and California would be higher
I know it comes down to job type and companies in a respective area but whenever I see something like this, I’m always surprised it’s difficult for someone to find a job with a bachelor’s degree to your name. I certainly had my struggles for a year before finding something full-time in my field, even as I was willing to relocate.
We are fucking dumb for such a supposedly well educated country