When I attended SCSU, my first year of tuition was $5,600/academic year. Per SCSU's site, that same academic year now costs $18,360. Adjusting for inflation figures provided by the Minneapolis Fed, SCSU should cost roughly $9,209/year now. Paying for school is far more difficult for today's youth and their family than it was when I was (or you were) in school.It isn’t required to live at school to earn a degree. Or are you suggesting we should be paying for people’s housing and meals as well?
Here in my area Mass Bay Community College is $212 per credit. Or if you want to go a little more expensive one could commute to Salem State and pay $10,800 per year. If you borrowed it all, you would graduate with roughly the equivalent amount of a car loan.
No, she doesn't. But keep on concern trolling. You may get a bite someday.
When I attended SCSU, my first year of tuition was $5,600/academic year. Per SCSU's site, that same academic year now costs $18,360. Adjusting for inflation figures provided by the Minneapolis Fed, SCSU should cost roughly $9,209/year now. Paying for school is far more difficult for today's youth and their family than it was when I was (or you were) in school.
When I attended SCSU, my first year of tuition was $5,600/academic year. Per SCSU's site, that same academic year now costs $18,360. Adjusting for inflation figures provided by the Minneapolis Fed, SCSU should cost roughly $9,209/year now. Paying for school is far more difficult for today's youth and their family than it was when I was (or you were) in school.
This. And my kids are doing it now not when St. Clown did it. Thanks America.
I don't disagree that for the most part, college costs have gone out of control. Using your numbers though, should the discussion be about "free" college? Or should it be more along the lines of "how do we bring college costs under control so that tuition at a school like SCSU is about $9,200 per year"?
LOL
Fine. Good luck with that. Give us your proposal.
I don't disagree that for the most part, college costs have gone out of control. Using your numbers though, should the discussion be about "free" college? Or should it be more along the lines of "how do we bring college costs under control so that tuition at a school like SCSU is about $9,200 per year"?
Why is that more laughable than saying that college should be free?
Basically, higher ed is a business. Every year, it goes like this:
*Raise revenues - seek out more private donations and endowments from individuals and corporations, get more research grants, get more state and federal money, increase tuition
and/or
*Cut expenditures - no more new buildings or renovations, cut research expenditures, cut scholarships, cut faculty, staff, and admin pay, etc. Then, watch as all your best people leave in droves.
And that's why I laughed. You know it's already been posted in this thread and 100% correct that the States used to pick up a lot of the tab. The reason this is happening more than anything is the Republicans shut that spigot off.
Sorry, but this is just normal ranty barking until you have stats to back it up.
Have the states been decreasing funding proportionally to the increase in tuition? I doubt it.
Fade is 100% correct.
Sorry, but this is just normal ranty barking until you have stats to back it up.
Have the states been decreasing funding proportionally to the increase in tuition? I doubt it.
Fade is 100% correct.
It’s not. Trade or community college should be free. But we also need to attack costs from the other side as well.
Tuition is out of control. Time to reign these schools in.
And that's why I laughed. You know it's already been posted in this thread and 100% correct that the States used to pick up a lot of the tab. The reason this is happening more than anything is the Republicans shut that spigot off.
Do people not think the demand for higher education went up in other industrialized nations that pay for their constituents' higher ed?