I would apply but I am most likely not qualified. All I have is a lowly bachelors.Do you actually know how much administrators earn? I have opening for Graduate Retention Specialist. You can apply and become rich. $44,000 a year.
I would apply but I am most likely not qualified. All I have is a lowly bachelors.Do you actually know how much administrators earn? I have opening for Graduate Retention Specialist. You can apply and become rich. $44,000 a year.
That is what is required.I would apply but I am most likely not qualified. All I have is a lowly bachelors.![]()
The wealthy and upper 5% are defaulting at accelerating rates, all indications are that they now file more often than their poorer counterparts on a per capita basis.Inflation does adjust for buying power of the dollar. Well if you believe the BLS.
Are you referring to median income? In that case depends on which side of the K your on?
I paid mine off in February of this year. Only $14,000 in loans. It was tough. I worked extra hours to get ahead of it which made the balance drop off considerably.I came across the statements from my sophomore year at University of Portland, a private college. I graduated in May 1975. Fall of 1972 total cost for tuition, room and board and bunch of misc charges was $ 1,474. Winter/spring of 1973 was $ 1,405. Total for the year was $ 2,879.
That was very expensive, or so it seemed. I remember people who worked and went to school, paying their way as they went. No one can do that now. It seemed huge that I had $ 4,500 of school loan debt when I graduated. I think I had it paid off by 1978. I have always been severely allergic to debt.
Yes, that too! We have family members and friends who are basically addressing their own insecurities by using kids.Parents often create their own the financial problems by letting their kids go to whatever school they choose and paying for it.
We told our kids they can go wherever they choose but we're only covering tuition and living expenses equivalent to attending the University of Delaware. My daughter was insistent on going to Lehigh...we told her fine, but you'll be staring down the barrel of $80,000+ in student loans. She chose U of D and loved it. Lehigh is an engineering school...she was a bio major.
Went on to Penn Dental to incur student loans probably 5xs the $80k.
Want to know where these schools spend their money? Overly paid administrators (deans of everything under the sun), expensive to maintain buildings (think of swimming pools, ice rinks), meals that no one in the real world could afford served three times a day in dining halls, etc. The idea of maintaining a safe, secure , NORMAL , comfortable environment in which TO LEARN, seems to have gone by the board.
I think that's the way forward these days. Get enough training or experience to get your foot in the door without going into hock up to your eyeballs, then utilize employee tuition reimbursement for the rest.My education was paid for by the companies I worked for; it was part of my compensation.
I have not seen this since I left a Fortune 500 25 years ago. I have asked my friends and they all say same.employee tuition reimbursement for the rest.
Meals are part of the dorm cost. They are not free and student can choose to live in the dorm or outside apartment. The meals are catered from big companies like Sodexo and Guckenheimer, just like your office cafeteria. You pay for it just like an apartment and an office cafe / meal plan with number of meals per quarter.Want to know where these schools spend their money? Overly paid administrators (deans of everything under the sun), expensive to maintain buildings (think of swimming pools, ice rinks), meals that no one in the real world could afford served three times a day in dining halls, etc. The idea of maintaining a safe, secure , NORMAL , comfortable environment in which TO LEARN, seems to have gone by the board.
The CA Community Colleges are very low cost; since the pandemic they have been tuition free.
A lot of companies have that, government agencies for sure. That is one way to get people interested in getting a certain job, because nothing says excellent paycheck like an average job in the county.I have not seen this since I left a Fortune 500 25 years ago. I have asked my friends and they all say same.
Maybe its just my industry. We do lots of industry specific training - so maybe they don't feel formal courses are worth it.
Some might say we had a sufficiently skilled workforce when taxpayers subsidized education far more than they do today.So the student has no skin in the game but every resident of California does like it or not?
Community college is much lower cost as they don't have research, sport league program, and a lot of the cost is based on property tax. Instructors are not tenured and can just be master degree, good enough for lower level courses and GE. Also no dorm so much smaller land to maintain, and many students just live at home for 2 years so it is much cheaper.So the student has no skin in the game but every resident of California does like it or not?
The tuition costs increase in aggregateRight but depending on the school and the sport none of that cost is borne by the student or the taxpayer. Interestingly studies apparently show that enrollment correlates with how competitive certain sports are.
The results speak for themselves. IMO, if we don't value education, we are handing the future to China.So the student has no skin in the game but every resident of California does like it or not?
The companies are crying for qualified candidates; they know they have to "make them". After I finally graduated, at the age of 40, my company offered to send me to Santa Clara or Stanford for advanced studies. But I was done...I think that's the way forward these days. Get enough training or experience to get your foot in the door without going into hock up to your eyeballs, then utilize employee tuition reimbursement for the rest.
Research actually pays fornitself. Grants are huge windfall and they fund a lot if things that would otherwise fall onto student. We have a lot of grants with corrections, DHS etc. We take overhead cost. No grant can be implemented unless it also pays for cost of administration to run it. Bt in reality, after we cover cost of running the grant, grant allow us also to cover other costs which would otherwise fall onto student.Community college is much lower cost as they don't have research, sport league program, and a lot of the cost is based on property tax. Instructors are not tenured and can just be master degree, good enough for lower level courses and GE. Also no dorm so much smaller land to maintain, and many students just live at home for 2 years so it is much cheaper.
This is how a real university program should be at least at the lower level.