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A Gen Xer shares why going back to college after dropping out was the best decision he ever made
David Houde
David Houde said going back to college after dropping out was the "best thing" he ever did. David Houde
  • A Gen Xer went back to college five years after dropping out in the hopes of boosting his income.

  • He struggled to find a high-paying job even with a degree, but the journey was eventually worth it.

  • He's making nearly $150,000 as a software engineer and paid off his student debt.

David Houde feels like he's made it — and he thinks it wouldn't have been possible without his college degree. But it's been a long, winding road to this point.

"If you knew me in my 20s you wouldn't think I would have been successful," the 48-year-old, who's based in Michigan, told Business Insider via email.

After graduating from high school in the mid-1990s, Houde enrolled in a four-year college but said he dropped out before his second semester after struggling in his classes.

For the next five years, Houde worked various "dead-end jobs," including door-to-door salesman, gas station clerk, fast food worker, landscape laborer, and delivery driver. He said his favorite of these jobs involved making glasses in an optical lab, but he saw no path for advancing or increasing his pay.

Around 1999, at roughly the age of 23, he decided to go back to school. By 2006, he'd earned an associate degree in computer information systems and a bachelor's degree in computer science.

A degree didn't immediately solve all of his problems: He struggled to find a job and pay off his student debt — and even had to withdraw from a 401(k) from a past job. But ultimately, the journey was worth it.

Houde is making nearly $150,000 annually as a software engineer, according to documents viewed by Business Insider. He said this income has allowed him to pay off roughly $45,000 in student debt in about eight years, travel regularly with his wife, and for the first time in his life, buy a new car before his old one breaks down.

"For me, going back to college was the best thing that I ever did," he said.

Houde is among the many Americans who have grappled with the same fork-in-the-road life choice: Should I go to college? In recent years, the cost of a four-year education and job opportunities for workers without degrees have led many people to decide that college isn't worth it. A Pew Research survey of over 5,000 US adults conducted late last year found that 76% of Americans thought a college degree wasn't worth the cost if the student has to take on debt — this sentiment has also shown up in declining enrollment figures over the past decade. What's more, paying for college doesn't guarantee employment — graduates can be subject to the whims of the job market.