Is it possible to avoid student debt? These career, education tracks offer a different path

No one knows what the Supreme Court will decide on student debt cancellation, but for some people, it won’t matter. They’re already forging toward a future with little to no student debt to haggle over.

As an alternative to college, some people have gone through certificate programs – which can teach people the necessary skills for a job in less time and at a lower cost than a four-year college degree. Others have found organizations like nonprofit Merit America to learn skills, or companies like Multiverse to help them find apprenticeships. Apprenticeships are meant to teach people skills they need for work without incurring a mountain of debt.

Since 2013, the number of apprentices tracked by the Department of Labor has doubled to 437,083 last year. Meanwhile, nationwide, undergraduate college enrollment dropped 8% from 2019 to 2022, with declines even after students returned to in-person classes, according to data from the National Student Clearinghouse.

Doug Shapiro, National Student Clearinghouse executive director, partly attributes the decline to students weighing the cost of college against the benefits. Students "think about what the actual cost of tuition will be,” he said, noting they’re also increasingly comparing the return on investment of different programs and need to weigh borrowing costs against their earning power.

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As an alternative to college, some people have gone through certificate programs – which can teach people the necessary skills for a job in less time and at a lower cost than a four-year college degree.
As an alternative to college, some people have gone through certificate programs – which can teach people the necessary skills for a job in less time and at a lower cost than a four-year college degree.

“It changed my life," said Halid Hamadi, who racked up $100,000 in debt studying economics at Penn State University and didn't earn a degree because he couldn’t get a loan to cover his final semester of college.

He tried to find a way to finish, working myriad jobs – Subway, Jimmy John's and as a bar and restaurant bouncer. In the end, he found Merit America and is now an integration engineer, which coordinates and implements a company's computer applications.

These aren't just blue-collar jobs

One of the biggest misconceptions about apprenticeships and certificate programs is that they’re only for people interested in trade jobs like plumbers, chefs, mechanics, or construction workers, according to the Society of Human Resource Management Foundation, which helps people find apprenticeships and is partly funded by the Department of Labor. But it’s more than that. It’s also for software engineers, marketing specialists, data analysts, web developers, project managers and many more roles.