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Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

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    Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

    Allow me to direct your attention to a recent article in the New York Times regarding how families choose to finance higher education:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/10/education/10aid.html

    The NYTimes (or I guess, specifically Mr. Glater) could not be showing off their upper-middle class stripes more blatantly, in my opinion. It's almost shameful how ignorantly he treats such a widespread and serious problem as adequately meeting rising educational costs in a world where retirement is no longer secure. Of course this may just be me reading into the fact that he has no (and can't have any) figures for students dealing with this issue to back up this bit of "news," but then again the article emmanates a very strong insinuation that students fronting financial costs is somehow the fault of parental moral decay rather than hard economics. The general acceptance that the average parents are more than willing, but more importantly capable of paying exorbitant costs from which they will get no clear returns is innacceptable in the face of the fact that, whether it's redeeming to a financial aid officer or not, past "discretional spending" (which is doubtfully always luxury goods) is a reality that families in our credit society have to deal with. On top of that, the comment that parents are willing to make any sacrifice to see their child get a Harvard education is not only bad journalism (it's based entirely on financial aid workers' opinions about whether they see a trend or not, opinions that they have strong reason to bias) but makes an exception to what should be the point of the article for no good reason: to be able to make any sacrifice, all parents of Harvard undergrads would have to have something to sacrifice to begin with. Although a higher proportion of wealthy students attend Harvard, granting acceptance is a need-blind process, meaning that logically students would struggle just as much there as anywhere. Even if the trend is in fact existant at Harvard, the journalist could first attribute it to Harvar's superior financial aid policy before falling back on the hazy ideological theory of parental attitudes. In the end this article hurts the effort to improve the rates on outside funding by failing to bring to light the scope of the problem of student self-support. I'm offended.
     

    #2
    Re: Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

    The Times usually passes ignorant and offensive bullshit off as news articles.

    On behalf of New York, I apologize. NOW GIT OUTTA HERE.

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      #3
      Re: Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

      Hi Starba
      http://www.brandonMdennis.com

      "You wrote that the world doesn't need a saviour, but every day I hear people crying for one." - Superman. Superman Returns.

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        #4
        Re: Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

        Howdy!
         

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          #5
          Re: Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

          I'm bankrolling what my scholarships don't cover. My dad isn't capable of working and my step mom has been working her ass of for below working class wages. When I first attended college, scholarships covered all but like $3k in various fees. Prices have risen substantially, scholarships on part of the university have not risen at all, and next year I'll need to take out $15k.

          ***edit

          I'd also like to add that I've heard profit margins are up over 150% from when I first attened. That is likely the reason why tuition costs are rising.
          Last edited by The Toecutter; 04-11-2006, 02:39 PM.
          The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder." ~ Thomas Jefferson

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            #6
            Re: Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

            My parents pay for my college.

            ...

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              #7
              Re: Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

              Spoiled.

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                #8
                Re: Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

                My parents are paying for mine, but they want the money back after Im done.

                When I do finish Im going to owe them around 20k. JOY.

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                  #9
                  Re: Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

                  I'd rather owe the bank than my parents. I'd feel like I was living at home for 20 years.
                   

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                    #10
                    Re: Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

                    I recently emerged from college, sans debt, but I had to do it living with my parents. I paid my own tuition and associated costs. I don't recommend the whole living with parents deal, if it can be avoided. I went to a state university, and in the two and a half years since my graduation, costs have doubled. My younger sisters could not afford to go to school the way I did.

                    One of them I'm helping out, but she's still going to emerge with an anchor of debt, the other doesn't quite have the ability to finish a four-year degree. The average graduate finishes with around 20k in debt, more for those that attend private schools or go for advanced degrees. Even so, college has become the dividing line between working poor and middle-class. The average college graduate can expect to make twice as much per year as the average high school graduate, well worth the cost if it can be borne.
                    So you're a fish out of water...
                    Keep swimming.
                    What else can you do?

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                      #11
                      Re: Load of Baloney About Educational Expenses

                      I live at home as well. If I had a dorm, I'd have to cough up an extra $10k/year. My family is anything but middleclass, although we could have been described as that when my dad was working.

                      But I do at least have the luxury of going to a private university.
                      The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder." ~ Thomas Jefferson

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