The signaling view of college holds that graduates of elite colleges earn high average salaries not because of what they learned in school but rather because top colleges select for students who have highly valued traits, the two most important probably being high IQ and strong work ethic. Since in rich countries almost every smart, hard working person attends college not going to college sends a loud negative signal to potential employers. Elite colleges, of course, are fantastically expensive signaling devices.
Although I teach at an elite college I have a proposal for an alternate much less expensive and probably even more accurate signaling mechanism. An organization could have a one month program which only admits those who get a high score on the SATs or some other intelligence test. Then the entire program would consist of spending sixteen hours a day solving by hand simple addition and subtraction problems. The point of the program would be to show that its graduates can spend a huge amount of time doing extremely boring tasks with high accuracy. Graduating from the program would signal that you had both a high IQ and strong work ethic.
If the program had a reputation for graduating valuable employees then I suspect it would become desirable to many recent high school graduates. The challenge would be for the program to initially earn its reputation. Perhaps it could accomplish this by having some well-known backers, by giving big cash grants to its first few graduates or by promising the first few graduates attractive jobs such as at the SIAI.
Why does getting admitted to a college signal creativity? If anything being admitted to an elite college means you got all As in high school by doing exactly what your teachers wanted.
As Edison wrote "Genius is one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration." My graduates would show that they could do the 99% part so perhaps have signaled their high capacity for creativity?
If colleges teach you how to think clearly than the signaling view of college is false and my proposed program is worthless. Your IQ is your ability to process complex information so if colleges don't raise IQs knowing someone graduated from college should tell you nothing about their ability to think clearly if you already know their IQ.
A creative person would be driven nigh to insanity by such a program, the reasoning goes. So only uncreative types would apply.
If applying is strong evidence for being uncreative, then by Bayes, not-applying* is weak evidence for being creative.
* Such as by applying instead to a college.