More On: Is College Tuition Really Too High? – The New York Times

“…the great national crisis is..that too many..young adults are not going to college or, if they do, don’t graduate..” Source: Is College Tuition Really Too High? – The New York Times I wrote: “…he great national crisis is..that too many..young adults are not going to college or, if they do, don’t graduate..” Sadly, the national […]

It’s Higher Than the Author Thinks

The answer depends on what you mean by college. Source: Is College Tuition Really Too High? – The New York Times Here is my take after just the 1st Paragraph. “…it’s useful to start with some figures from 40 years ago…” Indeed it is. Now, let’s look at what that tuition got you then vs. […]

Why Students With Smallest Debts Have the Larger Problem – The New York Times

Source: Why Students With Smallest Debts Have the Larger Problem – The New York Times Everyone seems to be looking everywhere but right in front of their nose.  By that, I don’t mean that every problem isn’t important, I just mean that there is an elephant in the room that most people are ignoring. Here […]

Fixing Fafsa Will Require Fixing Colleges

Shortening the nightmarish federal financial aid form for college loan applicants will allow lower-income students greater access to higher education. Source: Time to Fix the Fafsa – The New York Times I wrote, “Colleges won’t easily give up the data they get from Fafsa. That data is too valuable for pricing, manipulating admission rates, and […]

Federal Aid’s Role in Driving Up Tuitions Gains Credence – WSJ (BUT ONLY BY USING VERY FLAWED DATA)

View long held by conservatives is being adopted by more mainstream economists; New York Fed study faults government aid for letting colleges boost prices Source: Federal Aid’s Role in Driving Up Tuitions Gains Credence – WSJ Here is an explanation of the problem, which I put in a comment, “…We focus our attention on sticker-price […]

So Are the Ramifications of Not Getting What You Paid For

The ramifications of defaulting and remaining in debt deliberately are usually real and lasting. Source: Taking On Student Debt, and Refusing to Pay – NYTimes.com I commented. You write that “…the ramifications of defaulting and remaining in debt deliberately are usually real and lasting…” True, but there is something much worse: the ramifications of colleges […]

“Student Loans and Defaults: The Facts – NYTimes.com” My View: Anyway you Slice it, or Dice it, It’s Too Commonly a Shakedown

“…Graduate students borrow a lot more than undergraduates…” Source: Student Loans and Defaults: The Facts – NYTimes.com I commented. A more descriptive statement than “…borrowing is highest among the minority of college students who go on for graduate study..” is:Borrowing is highest among two groups of students: those who realize that they were scammed and […]

“Platinum Pay in Ivory Towers” Op-Ed Shows Frank Bruni is on to Something – That’s Good

The excessive salaries of some college presidents send a message at odds with higher education. Source: Platinum Pay in Ivory Towers – NYTimes.com I commented as follows. “..ostensible mission of academia..” Great word, “ostensible”. Here is how they get away with fooling us. “..advantage can..be taken of [students] by unscrupulous instructors and institutions..the student estate […]

“The In-State Tuition Break, Slowly Disappearing” is a Symptom

Source: The In-State Tuition Break, Slowly Disappearing I wrote this Here is Clark Kerr’s warning. “…I am concerned..that…the greatest threats to the university will be those which arise from within the university…” Right now the threat is not to the university itself – at least not to its financial and research arms. The present threat […]