Is it the job of secondary education to start developing all inclusive students who have been familiarized with a broad range of subjects? Is it fair that some children are able to afford private education and expensive tutoring with a one on one basis? The government needs to step in on this matter because the children who are growing up now are going to be this countries future. The rich are always going to be well educated because they can afford it. There needs to be government programs that provide free tutoring and counseling for the underprivileged. But the way things are going this will never happen because education is almost always one of the first things to be cut.
One of the greatest sacrifices of college is the money required to attend. The Education Statistics Quarterly says:
One of the biggest concerns for many families is how they are going to pay their children's college expenses. In academic year 200203, the average total price for full-time undergraduates to attend 4-year institutionsincluding tuition, fees, room, board, books, supplies, and other education expenses, as estimated by the institutionswas more than $12,800 at public institutions and almost $28,000 at private institutions (College Board 2003a). Over the past decade, inflation-adjusted tuition prices at public and private 4-year
Cited: Kirsziner Laurie G. and Mandell Stephen R. Patterns for College Writing, Bedford/St. Martin 's Boston, New York Kozol Jonathan. "The Cost of an Illiterate Society." From Illiterate America by Jonathan Kozol. Copyright 1985 by Jonathan Kozol Zinsser William. "College Pressures." From Blair and Ketchum 's County Journal, Vol VI, No. 4, April 1979. Copyright 1979 by William K. Zinsser. National Center for Education Statistics http://nces.ed.gov/programs/quarterly/vol_5/5_2/q2_4.asp 1990 K Street, NW, Washington, DC 20006, USA, Phone: (202) 502-7300