A Gen Xer was tired of balancing 2 jobs and earning under $50,000 a year so he went back to school. The decision 'changed his life,' he said.

Lloyd Morgan went back to college at age 36 after losing his nanny job and struggling to make ends meet as a preschool teacher.
Lloyd Morgan went back to college at 36 after losing his nanny job and struggling to make ends meet balancing multiple jobs.Courtesy of Lloyd Morgan
  • Lloyd Morgan struggled to make ends meet working multiple jobs and earning under $50,000.

  • He went back to school in hopes of landing one higher-paying job.

  • Now he's working in local politics and earning $78,500 a year.

In 2014, Lloyd Morgan was struggling to support his wife and three children. He worked in early childhood education in Philadelphia and held a part-time job on the weekends, contributing to a household income of under $50,000 annually.

Morgan decided he had to try something different. At 36, he quit his teaching job and enrolled in Penn State Abington — a suburban campus of Penn State University.

"This decision changed my life," Morgan told Business Insider via email.

Ten years later, Morgan completed a bachelor's and master's degree and is earning $78,500 a year working as the director of community relations and policy development for Pennsylvania State Sen. Jimmy Dillon.

Morgan is among the many Americans who have grappled with the same life choice: Should I go to college? Business Insider has interviewed several people who've gone to school later in life and said earning a degree helped them land higher-paying roles. Others said it didn't open up doors and left them burdened with student debt.

In recent years, some people have decided college isn't worth it due to the cost of higher education and job opportunities for workers without degrees. For many people, going to college can be a great financial decision: College graduates earn considerably higher salaries than people with a high-school diploma and are less likely to be unemployed than people without degrees.

To be sure, a college degree doesn't guarantee a higher-paying job. But some graduates, like Morgan, say their degrees gave them a career boost.

Losing one job forced him to explore other options

In 1997, Morgan enrolled at Dean College in Massachusetts, but after two years, he decided that school wasn't for him. After completing enough courses to receive an associate degree, he decided to leave college without completing a bachelor's degree.

While he was enrolled, Morgan worked at the school's children's center. He said this turned out to be a "great decision" because it helped him realize that childcare could be a good career fit for him. In 1999, he applied for and landed his first nanny job.

Over the next decade, Morgan worked as a nanny in the suburbs of Philadelphia and on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. He said he earned as much as $70,000 a year.

"With an associate degree, I was able to make great money that allowed me to live on my own in NYC for many years," he said.