I have to agree. I mean, the basics in terms of marketing, finance and bare business sense are nice to have when selling yourself, but spending college-type money on it hoping someone will care that you did someday is just insane to me. I have a good amount of college debt left and I honestly just hope people realize what they're getting themselves into. Quite seriously if you don't have a specific list of things you want to learn, you're throwing money right out the window. I honestly know so many people that went to school, are paying for it bigtime and aren't really using their degree for anything constructive- and these aren't Liberul( not getting that changed to Democrat, lol) Arts degrees either. You know how many engineers want to kill themselves after the first 6 weeks in a cubicle? It's crazy how miserable people can really make themselves when they plan out their life as an 18 yo. I went to business school to better learn how to run my family's manufacturing business and it has paid off in spades, but that is far from the norm. Most hope to go to school and figure things out along the way, which is a fool's errand IMO.
My most honest advice is to take a year or even two off after high school to really try to get into the life you're thinking you might want to live- unless you want to be a doctor, etc that requires specialized learning there is no way around. Too many people just go because they think that's what they're supposed to do, and they are still way too 'High School' in mentality to really make the most out of a hundred grand worth of information. It's scary to me how that debt is inescapable now too- if you end up going bankrupt, you can clear a million dollar mansion from your credit and start over- but that student loan debt can not be. There is no way to void it aside from paying it along with whatever fees they feel like blasting you with should you befall misfortune or economic meltdown thanks to the industry's creative lobbying and our heavily-bribed reps letting them write their own laws. It's a scary thing!
One would be well-served to check themselves before they wreck themselves, because if you thought 'Ol Salvatore Sixfingers down the block has ways of making you pay you've never dealt with Sallie Mae.
Instead of asking ourselves "What can I learn with $100k" perhaps we should be asking ourselves "What business could I start for $5k or less".