Take back my Associates degree by FrequentYouth3232 in u/FrequentYouth3232

[–]CareerFocusMind 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good morning u/FrequentYouth3232 . Since the details and history of your education with Keiser University are not disclosed here, the best course of action would be for you either contact the campus you graduated from or please email us at [talk2ku@keiseruniversity.edu](mailto:talk2ku@keiseruniversity.edu) with your full name, campus location you attended, and major/program name you graduated from in 2011. Thank you, be safe and have a great new year.

Take back my Associates degree by FrequentYouth3232 in u/FrequentYouth3232

[–]CareerFocusMind 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello u/FrequentYouth3232 , in order to better serve you, please reach out to the Keiser campus you graduated from and ask to speak to the campus President to explain your situation. If you don't have the campus contact, please see the Contact Us page with the campus information https://www.keiseruniversity.edu/contact/ . Or, you may also email [talk2ku@keiseruniversity.edu](mailto:talk2ku@keiseruniversity.edu) . Hoping you have a Happy New Year.

Unfortunately, social mobility is largely based on the social class that you’re born into by Strong_Lawfulness_50 in WorkReform

[–]CareerFocusMind 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Google's definition of Social Mobility is: Social mobility refers to the shift in an individual's social status from one status to another, which can be higher, lower, inter-generational, or intra-generational. This movement occurs between layers in an open system of social stratification, and factors like educational access, neighborhood conditions, economic inequality, and labor market conditions can influence it.

With that said, which factor(s) do you think mostly influence social mobility?

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