She also focuses on the jobs that certain college
She also focuses on the jobs that certain college
Jeanette Juachi, a high school senior, who has been granted admission at Cal State Dominguez Hills; however, with her mother unemployed and her deceased father, she has been left with the burden to meet her annual student obligation. She tirelessly works as a cashier at a supermarket, after her long day at school. The price of tuition has been rapidly increasing over the past few years; therefore, many families are questioning whether college is worth the cost and hassle for those 4 years. While a college degree can lead to a more lucrative and fulfilling career, it can also engender a huge financial burden that can encumber graduates for many years to come.…
Most college students who attend community college as a stepping stone towards achieving a bachelor’s degree at a university commonly fall short of this intention. Only 11.6% out of 81.4% of these community college students accomplish a bachelor’s degree at a university. Discovering this compelling fact was discouraging as a community college student desiring to pursue a biochemistry degree at a four-year institution. Financially, college students are saving more money in attending a community college their first few years in place of a university. President Obama proposed the idea of ‘free community college’ to improve the wages and living standards of the middle class. As a community college student, I wonder if this proposal would improve this startling statistic and aid the student’s desire to pursue their educational goals. In Robert Farrington’s article “Community College Is Not…
For a majority of high school students, after graduation the next step usually is to continue their education by attending college. According to Thomas R. Wolanin, a senior associate at the Institute for High Education Policy, a vast majority of those students and their families will probably be discouraged to do so because of the portrayal of college life and its expenses created by mass media. In his editorial “Joe and Jane Go to College: Today’s College Student is Not Who You Think”, Wolanin argues that college students portrayed in the media are a misrepresentation of the vast majority of college students. He states that the “reality of students in American higher education is quite different”(1) from what is usually displayed by mass media. And the only reason why he brings this to America’s attention is because he believes their misrepresentation has created “some serious and unfortunate public consequences”(2).…
Students often enrolled in community college face financial problems during college. It is stated that students and their families come from low income families and they…
In the article, “Are Colleges Worth the Price of Admission?” by Andrew Hacker and Claudia Dreifus, the authors did research on several colleges around the country to see whether our investment on higher education is really worth the money that we pay for it. The authors believe that universities are the ones responsible for the doubling of tuition costs compared to what they used to be , and not fulfilling the most important objective to student’s which is: “to challenge the minds of young people” (180). In the article, Hacker and Dreifus outline some things they think would help improve some of the problems in the college system and a few universities that they like, and tell us why these schools have won their favor. Being an incoming freshman at Grambling State University, I’ve been able to see some of the issues universities can have from budget cuts, to problems with the G-men football team.…
The big question for students and parents today would be, are Colleges Worth the Price of Admission? The excerpt, “Are Colleges Worth the Price of Admission,” by Andrew Hacker and Claudia Dreifus is to evaluate whether or not the cost of tuition is worth the benefit anymore. Both of the Authors elaborate in this excerpt by providing problems with the higher education costs and solutions that will allow for money to be saved by students. By focusing on these points of opinion Hacker and Dreifus provide detailed examples of how to fix Americas’ higher education problems.…
The community-college tuition initiative by President Obama is a subject to unusual superlatives as it seeks to universalize two years of college. The plan integrates policies that attempt to narrow educational disparities that are characteristics of growing socioeconomic inequality in the United States. In this sense, the purported Obama tuition plan sought to facilitate an increase in the attendance of college students, therefore ensuring higher graduation rates with less debt compared to the current curriculum. The ideal, rendered most Republicans allergic to the ideology as it carried a 10-year price tag of $60 billion that included state and federal components (Alexander). However, the plan is already a subject to criticism due to its failure to account for the fact that few students under the current college…
It is no secret that California’s state university system is facing cuts across the board as a result of tough economic times. Those who approve of these cuts have valid arguments but fail to look at the negative results from lowering funds for higher education. There will be an increase in people within the lower income earners as a result of these cuts. High school graduates with the potential to attend a university will be intimidated to apply because of high tuition costs. Education will be easily accessible for the wealthy but more difficult for those from lower incomes to attend. Current students are less likely to graduate as costs rise due to budget reduction. A high rate of retiring baby boomers results in an increasingly high demand for professionals; with less college graduates these positions are less likely to be filled. Also, there will be many jobs lost among those who work within the system. Knowing the negative effects of the California State University budget reduction, evidence will be provided throughout this report to address those in favor of Governor Brown’s new balanced budget resulting in $500 million taken away from the CSU system. (California State University Employee Update. 24 September 2012. www.calstate.edu)…
“It’s just extremely disappointing and aggravating to have paid all that money and have nothing to show for it other than debt.” proclaimed Michelle Polyakov, an English graduate from Drake University. Polyakov obviously feels that college is not worth the cost and that all someone has to show for the education is debt. College has been deemed, by some, that it is not worth the cost because of the financial loss, the future job security, and the need for “blue collar” jobs. Finances, job security, and the need for manual laborers are all major factors in the debate of college and its cost. The reason being is because not all people are meant to go to college, or their situation just isn’t ideal. College is a privilege, and not every job requires you to have a higher form of learning, but most do. By viewing the debt of a student after graduation, the job security of graduates, and the need for manual laborers, one can infer that college is not worth the cost.…
Sawhill and Owen believe college is the right choice although it may not be for everyone. Cost of education and career choice is especially crucial to making a decision on attending college. The authors give sufficient facts and supportive evidence to get the readers thinking about their options and career choice. Making a point that college is the right choice for people who are willing to give more then they get sometimes. An example of that kind of person being someone in the education or services career. They also suggest financial aid is defiantly a tool for low-income families to implement to attend college. Everyone considering attending college should weigh all their options, not just attend because they have been told over and over college is the…
When an average high schooler walks into senior year, the students are quickly bombarded by school counselors discussing which four year college they should apply too. At my high school, it was never second guessed whether the student would be attending college but was assumed. Most people have misconceptions that if they do not get a degree, they will unable to obtain a job and have an overall unsuccessful life. In Charles Murray’s, “Are Too Many People Going to College” and Freeman Hrabowski’s “College Prepares People for Life”, the two author both discuss the education system we have in place, however, Charles Murray provides a more convincing argument that college, contrary to popular belief, is just not for everyone.…
The dreams of numerous college students are being crushed before they even step through the doors of their dream university. Imagine being accepted only to see the price tag for four years at the school is a quarter of a million dollars that’s enough to make the most ambitious people stop and think. It’s way too expensive! College that is, families of all sizes are reconsidering where they send their children. Why? Some may ask this question it’s due to the rising cost of the tuition. People of all walks of life except for the richest find it hard to pursue secondary education out of fear of falling into large amounts of debt that will haunt them for the rest of their lives. Examples are being made around the world about the benefits of allowing secondary education to be free or reducing the cost of schooling to make it more affordable.…
Everyone in America knows that college is where you want to be. At a very young and impressionable age, the children in our schools are asked what college they want to go to. As this idea that a higher education is something they’ll inevitably have, the children go on to believe they need it to have a better life. However, is that really true? College, in particular, is a very strange and corrupt system. Many problems reside on the modern college campus, so many that we wonder if going to college was ever the better option. The truth is, it’s not. Going to college is not worth all its burdening, and often crippling, costs.…
Throughout the United States, many young adults are piled with debt due to the excessive costs of a college education. Today in 2017, Americans owe more than 1.4 trillion dollars in student loan debt. In the United States, college is more expensive than almost any other country. Overall, it limits students abilities to reach their full potential. This impacts many families, even my own, from coast to coast. My family is middle class and I know there are plenty of families out there who have children that want to attend college, but are limited due to not being able to afford it. This is very significant to me as I see my older cousin, Katie, who now lives in Tennessee, struggle to even pay her bills as a high school teacher due to the amount of…