
Well It’s About Time -
I agree with this woman’s actions, as she spent money based on a promise – that never materialized. breach of contract is certainly right, when colleges toss students out into an economy such as this; with a promise to employment, but no possibilities materialize because there is no real behind the scenes marketing efforts to help them, as promised.
either they (students and colleges) should do better research on the fields that are expanding or better career counseling to those who go deeply into debt to try to make it i todays tough economy.
The real truth is that college prepares you little for the job market, other than teaching you that you have to show up, everyday if you want to get paid. in todays’ economy tenacity and fortitude are not a part of whats’ being taught to these recent grads.
Jobs are scarce in traditional fields, yet colleges continue to turn out grads in those fields enmasse, why ? shouldn’t there be some penalty for these actions within the govermental funding of colleges ? just think, we are funding a whole generation of people who could be unemployed because of college placement faux paus. this is no mistake folks – this is american educations failing.
Our Message to these colleges and the legislators is that they need to “Stop Teaching Business and Start Teaching Employable Skills” – no other industrialized country has as many skilled college educated people unemployed as the USA – Why ? College instead of Technical Education.
If You Want a Job – get one at burger king; but if you want a career, get a firm background in a technical discipline and some certification. that’s where the money is.
We don’t need anymore Ph.D Mailcarriers, Thank You Very Much
NEW YORK (CNN) -- A recent college graduate is suing her alma mater for $72,000 — the full cost of her tuition and then some — because she cannot find a job.
Trina Thompson has sued her alma mater, Monroe College of New York.

Trina Thompson, 27, of the Bronx, graduated from New York’s Monroe College in April with a bachelor of business administration degree in information technology.
On July 24, she filed suit against the college in Bronx Supreme Court, alleging that Monroe’s “Office of Career Advancement did not help me with a full-time job placement. I am also suing them because of the stress I have been going through.”
The college responded that it offers job-search support to all its students.
In her complaint, Thompson says she seeks $70,000 in reimbursement for her tuition and $2,000 to compensate for the stress of her three-month job search.
As Thompson sees it, any reasonable employer would pounce on an applicant with her academic credentials, which include a 2.7 grade-point average and a solid attendance record. But Monroe’s career-services department has put forth insufficient effort to help her secure employment, she claims.
“They’re supposed to say, ‘I got this student, her attendance is good, her GPA is all right — can you interview this person?’ They’re not doing that,” she said.
Don’t Miss
Thompson said she has fulfilled her end of the job-search bargain, peppering companies listed on Monroe’s e-recruiting site with cover letters, résumés and phone calls. But no more than two employers have responded to her outreach, and those leads have borne no fruit.
Her complaint adds, “The office of career advancement information technology counselor did not make sure their Monroe e-recruiting clients call their graduates that recently finished college for an interview to get a job placement. They have not tried hard enough to help me.”
She suggested that Monroe’s Office of Career Advancement shows preferential treatment to students with excellent grades. “They favor more toward students that got a 4.0. They help them more out with the job placement,” she said.
Monroe College released a statement saying that “while it is clear that no college, especially in this economy, can guarantee employment, Monroe College remains committed to working with all its students, including Ms. Thompson, who graduated only three months ago, to prepare them for careers and to support them during their job search.”
Thompson says she has not hired an attorney to represent her because she cannot afford one. When she filed her complaint, she also filed a “poor person order,” which exempts her from filing fees associated with the lawsuit.
Asked whether she would advise other college graduates facing job woes to sue their alma maters, Thompson said yes.
“It doesn’t make any sense: They went to school for four years, and then they come out working at McDonald’s and Payless. That’s not what they planned.”









After reading her court filing, I can understand why nobody has offered this girl a job. She appears to be somewhat "thick", to put it bluntly. Apart from suing her college for not finding her work, after just six months with no previous work experience and a not so fantastic GPA in an environment of extreme high unemployment, her court filing reads like it was written by a person who never finished elementary school. It's sore losers like this that waste the time and money of others for no reason other than the reassurance that they aren't a stupid and useless as they actually are. This girl needs a kick in the backside and now this lawsuit is public, she will probably never find a job anywhere. Who would want to employ that kind of liability?
I read her court filing as well and think she has a valid point. if the college promises to find it’s grads a job; they have an obligation to provide that assistance to the grad.
the school should put up or shut up with that promise.
thanks for your comment peter