All I'm saying is it's a huge increase in ten years. In ten years when my son is getting ready to start college should I expect to pay $16000 a year for tuition? Is it going to continue on this trend?
All I'm saying is it's a huge increase in ten years. In ten years when my son is getting ready to start college should I expect to pay $16000 a year for tuition? Is it going to continue on this trend?
I don't think it can continue much longer under the current business model.
Some degrees are worth several times more than other degrees when you enter the job market. This price difference needs to be reflected in the tuition you pay for that degree.
Also, blindly lending money with no regard to ability to recoup your investment is causing the student debt bubble.
Wouldn't modeling TOPS to subsidize higher earning degrees to a larger rate steer prospective students, or maybe look at jobs shortages in the state and have TOPS pay a larger percentage for those degrees. Maybe it's a bad way to say it but degrees that give you a small chance of actually getting a job should be funded to a smaller degree. You could also look at some payback to the state by having TOPS recipients have to work a certain number of years in the state as well. Just throwing out thoughts.
IMO inflation is far worse than reported. Anything having to do with American Labor is out of sight. Your food, your housing, your plumber, your physician, your body shop technician, any skilled service, your restaurants all are up tremendously. We cannot import education from China, India, Mexico, and Africa it is damned expensive for a reason. Well I guess you will be importing it from those places in a few years. Virtual class rooms, virtual football teams, virtual hot coeds.
The object is to NOT borrow money. The answer is to start saving when a child is born. The problem is not that lending institutions [with government encouragement] make bad loans; the problem is that people accept them.
Obviously, if your child ends up going to med school, there will likely be debt. But if you start when a child is born and conservatively invest even 10% of the current tuition at your local public university each year, escalating your investment as tuition rises, when your child reaches college age, you should not have to incur any significant debt to get them a degree.
Encourage those who might give toys, etc. to your child [especially grandparents] to instead put their gift money in the child's college fund.
Disagree.
Too many degrees are given that are simply not worth even a fraction of the cost.
The answer is to get the government out of the process. Bring more free market pressure to bear. Costs will come down and different systems of education delivery will be introduced.
Still a good idea to save money anyway.
Very well stated. The money needs to come from somewhere...
Also, not sure if this has been mentioned yet, but there was a related article published in the DA today. It will be very interesting to see if there is any impact from the rise in tuition.....I am saying that there won't be, or at least we will still see a significant rise in enrollment this fall. Not to say that that # would not have been even higher without the increase in tuition.
http://www.theadvertiser.com/story/n...bers/29869557/
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