- Joined
- Jul 22, 2009
- Messages
- 1,873
- Reaction score
- 290
- Gender
- Undisclosed
- Political Leaning
- Undisclosed
Free education:
If a USA student continuously demonstrates their ability to fully benefit from an education to prepare them for their chosen profession, requiring they financial sacrifice to pay for that education is contra-productive to our nation's economic and social well-being. Scholarships based on merit should be awarded to all those that earn them, regardless of their personal wealth. Our nation requires the sacrifices and then complains of a medical providers' prices. That's unreasonable.
No student that has acquired their “ticket” to exercise their chosen (and nationally needed) professional knowledge and/or technical craftsmanship should be in financial debt due to direct and indirect costs of that education and training They leave school with a mountain of debt, and then we unreasonably complain they're too greedy and materialistic?
Respectfully, Supposn
Free education:
If a USA student continuously demonstrates their ability to fully benefit from an education to prepare them for their chosen profession, requiring they financial sacrifice to pay for that education is contra-productive to our nation's economic and social well-being. Scholarships based on merit should be awarded to all those that earn them, regardless of their personal wealth. Our nation requires the sacrifices and then complains of a medical providers' prices. That's unreasonable.
No student that has acquired their “ticket” to exercise their chosen (and nationally needed) professional knowledge and/or technical craftsmanship should be in financial debt due to direct and indirect costs of that education and training They leave school with a mountain of debt, and then we unreasonably complain they're too greedy and materialistic?
Respectfully, Supposn
Who do you suggest pay the costs?
"An educated citizenry is a vital requisite for our survival as a free people... Preach, my dear Sir, a crusade against ignorance; establish & improve the law for educating the common people. Let our countrymen know that the people alone can protect us against these evils, and that the tax which will be paid for this purpose is not more than the thousandth part of what will be paid to kings, priests, & nobles who will rise up among us if we leave the people in ignorance."
-Thomas Jefferson
The whole rest of the developed world is doing it. There are many ways. Why is it that it's such a profound mystery only to us?
A well educated public is a public good, not just an individual one.
Can we afford it? Will we have to give something up? Will we have to raise taxes?
Important questions, don't you think?
...the tax which will be paid for this purpose is not more than the thousandth part of what will be paid to kings, priests, & nobles who will rise up among us if we leave the people in ignorance."
-Thomas Jefferson
Sure. Jefferson sure seemed to think the tax was worth it:
The modern rise and worship of plutocrats like the Koch brothers, Rupert Murdoch, and Donald Trump is more than ample evidence for Jefferson's prescient predictions.
Nobody needs to be "ignorant". If they are, it's by their own choice. In Jefferson's day, there was very little opportunity for education. Nowadays, opportunity abounds.
Say that to all the coal miners who say they can't retrain to get out of coal mining because the costs are prohibitive. So what do they do? They vote for politicians who want to keep artificially propping up obsolete industries like coal mining so they can keep their jobs. That hurts us all.
Free education:
If a USA student continuously demonstrates their ability to fully benefit from an education to prepare them for their chosen profession, requiring they financial sacrifice to pay for that education is contra-productive to our nation's economic and social well-being. Scholarships based on merit should be awarded to all those that earn them, regardless of their personal wealth. Our nation requires the sacrifices and then complains of a medical providers' prices. That's unreasonable.
No student that has acquired their “ticket” to exercise their chosen (and nationally needed) professional knowledge and/or technical craftsmanship should be in financial debt due to direct and indirect costs of that education and training They leave school with a mountain of debt, and then we unreasonably complain they're too greedy and materialistic?
Respectfully, Supposn
Where in the Constitution does it read...……... that a student should not be in financial debt from college?
Evidently, these kids are picking majors that are not in high demand, and I would think that during their four years of college that they would have figured it out with all the critical thinking (snark) that goes on in academia land. Just goes to show that secondary education isn't for everyone....huh?
Coal is not obsolete. It was driven into the ground by Obama.
Coal is not obsolete. It was driven into the ground by Obama.
Where in the Constitution does it read...……... that a student should not be in financial debt from college?
Evidently, these kids are picking majors that are not in high demand, and I would think that during their four years of college that they would have figured it out with all the critical thinking (snark) that goes on in academia land. Just goes to show that secondary education isn't for everyone....huh?
Another FOXNews talking point. The kids graduating from college right now, regardless of their major, are doing just fine. Those who are in trouble as the ones who cannot afford or have access to the education.
If they are doing just fine, then they should pay off their education and stop bitching.
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Tahoma, Calibri, Geneva, sans-serif]If there were no accreditation standards, government backed educational and training loans would be granted for “study” at schools that had no regard for any standards and falsely pretended to service some useful public purpose. Such was the case with Trump University. That's the purpose of requiring schools that directly or indirectly receive government money, to comply with recognized standards to qualify and retain accreditation.[/FONT]University doesn't have to be 100% free but put it this way:
In 1982 my last year of in-state tuition at UCLA was less then 1800 bucks, COUCH CHANGE.
I was working part time and I was able to afford it.
If a student or parent's incomes are less than a certain amount and the student's test scores indicate they can benefit from a state college or university, give them free tuition. If they or the parents are affluent, charge them three thousand a year.
It should hinge on "ability to benefit". Smart ambitious hard working students should not have to worry about costs if they are poor.
Can we afford it? Will we have to give something up? Will we have to raise taxes?
Important questions, don't you think?
Free education:
If a USA student continuously demonstrates their ability to fully benefit from an education to prepare them for their chosen profession, requiring they financial sacrifice to pay for that education is contra-productive to our nation's economic and social well-being. Scholarships based on merit should be awarded to all those that earn them, regardless of their personal wealth. Our nation requires the sacrifices and then complains of a medical providers' prices. That's unreasonable.
No student that has acquired their “ticket” to exercise their chosen (and nationally needed) professional knowledge and/or technical craftsmanship should be in financial debt due to direct and indirect costs of that education and training They leave school with a mountain of debt, and then we unreasonably complain they're too greedy and materialistic?
Respectfully, Supposn
There are only so many ways for that to happen:It should be more affordable to more people.
Who do you suggest pay the costs?
There are only so many ways for that to happen:
- Price of tuition, books, etc. increases at slower rates or decrease
- Students (their families) obtain money to pay for whatever be the costs for which they haven't the money to pay:
- Private funding
- Public funding
- Students matriculate to less pricey institutions -- less pricey in terms of tuition as well as room and board.
Say what you want about it, but were I aware that I didn't have the money to pay for a "big bucks" college or university
I mean, really. As an undergrad, it doesn't much matter where one goes so long as one goes to a decent-enough school (in the U.S., damn near all colleges are) because it's not as though the body of information taught to an undergrad differs by where one goes to college, and strong critical thinking skills are what one is supposed to have developed prior to matriculating, thus that isn't what one is there to learn (if it were, everyone'd be required to take philosophy). Accordingly, less wealthy applicants really should "get over" the notion of going to "a" top ranked school, although applying to one's "dream" schools for which one has at least met the basic objective requirements (high school grades, SAT/ACT scores, and extracurricular leadership activities) and waiting to see what assistance package one receives from it/them is reasonable. That said, when all the "dream" schools packages leave one having to assume tens of thousands in loans and one's in-state school's tuition is less than the loans one'd have to assume, it doesn't make sense to enroll at the "dream" school.
- I wouldn't accept an offer of admission to one that didn't give me enough so that my total costs of attending were equal to or less than the total costs I'd incur going to a less dear institution.
- I wouldn't apply to many "big bucks" institutions.
There's also the matter of kids feeling compelled to attend a school so distant that they have to incur room and board costs as well as the tuition and educational materials costs. I think to myself, "Now that child and his/her family isn't made of money and they all know it. Why the hell is s/he so instant on going to a school that isn't close to home?" It's one thing if one lives "in the middle of nowhere" and there's no school nearby, but it's somewhat hard to live that far from a decent-enough college, and the quantity of folks who do is quite small.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?