Matt H. answered 10/01/15
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PATIENT :-) Elem/Middle MATH and WRITING; HS SAT and COLLEGE ESSAYS!
Hi Sophia--
I don't think this is a math question at all. I think it's asking, "Why do people with higher levels of education (college and graduate school) have a higher employment rate than people with just a high school education?"
They want you to give two reasons why this is true.
Does this help?
Matt in NY
Matt H.
One reason might be that people with more education have learned more skills that are valuable to employers.
Another might be that by attending college they have showed they can work hard and stick to responsibilities--good traits to have when you're looking for a job!
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10/01/15
Sophia C.
Would this work... This is what some one else gave me
Age has an effect on this right? Seniority effects right ? The jobs held by younger workers are often more marginal, younger workers tend to have less education than older workers, and they leave their jobs more often than older workers. In addition, workers under age twenty-five also have less seniority to protect them against layoffs. These workers have less work experience than older workers as well, which can work against them when looking for a new job.
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10/01/15
Sophia C.
10/01/15