It depends on how you measure it, how about 'One of the least educated' is that better?
The point is there is a huge disconnect when black people start talking about a college bubble
I also get this vibe when I hear that people start talking about less people are needed to go to college and more into vocation. Don't get me wrong, I understand the need for many people, including Blacks, to get vocational training, especially if they don't have a college or associates degree. I work in an industry where machine operators and welders are pretty damn essential, and I can do some basing machine operations (lathe, drill/tap) myself. We need trained vocational people from plumbers to machinists, especially for guys coming out of prison who can't get a job.
It urks me though when vocational schooling is talked about as the "solution" for us only having 1/9th of Black males finish college (1/3 go, 1/3 complete). There is a difference between someone who has an aptitude for a vocation and where vocational school is valuable and channeling a whole group of people away from Higher Education. I don't see upper middle class Whites or Asians lectured on looking more into vocations rather than college.
The PhD bubble, if there is one, is crucial to one's job prospects and people need to go in it with their eyes open. Same with Law. What is best is to combine a PhD with some business education and training to leave yourself options.