Everyone who wants to go to college is often faced with the same fact, how will I pay? Students often go with the options of taking loans, after much consideration and research, research sometimes based on essays written by authors. Even though Carey and Wilson both address the debt college could put someone in. Wilson provides a more convincing argument due to the fact that he gives more information on statistics of student loans, more information about loans, and an unbiased opinion.…
Wilson begins with stating a possible “…national crisis: Student loan borrowing that is threatening the financial future of today’s college students” (256). In other words, Wilson’s statement issues that student loans are beginning to get out of control. On the other hand, many other people borrow an acceptable amount of money, are able to repay it, and become a better person by getting a college education. According to Wilson, “More often, the problem among students who go heavily into debt is that they are determined to attend their dream college, no matter the cost” (257). Wilson’s point is that it may be the college itself that is In Robin Wilson’s article A Lifetime of Student Debt? Not Likely, Wilson compares on how even though student loans can get out of control; they do not have to affect the rest of a person’s life. Wilson begins with stating a possible “…national crisis: Student loan borrowing that is threatening the financial future of today’s college students” (256). In other words, Wilson’s statement issues that student loans are beginning to get out of…
The student debt in the United States alone is in the trillions. According to Forbes and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the student loan debt is between 902 billion and 1.2 trillion (How). Since the economy took a plunge in 2008, a big issue is that not enough graduates are able to find job opportunities that can help pay off their debt, and on top of that support themselves independently. “Americans who received bachelor’s degrees in 2008 were roughly twice as likely to be unemployed after a year than were their peers who graduated in 1993 and 2000…(Inside).” The supply and demand of employment is slim and fiercely competitive. Of those that had the opportunity to get a job, 27 percent of them reported that it was unrelated to the degree…
“Graduating with six figures ' worth of debt is becoming increasingly common.” (179) In the essay “Are Colleges Worth the Price of Admission” Andrew Hacker and Claudia Dreifus discussed about how the price of college education is increasing, while the quality of some teachers is decreasing. Hacker and Dreifus gave tips on how to make college education successful. Hacker and Dreifus included the tips they discovered including money, faculty-student relations, classes that should be taken, graduate schools, and teaching techniques; the two also visited schools across the United States from University of Mississippi to Western Oregon and figured out what those schools were doing right to have a good success rate.…
It’s bad enough trying to survive taking out loans for four years of schooling, but what about the students that want to or need to further their education in graduate school? The debt alone makes students stray away from furthering their education or have them wait a couple years to gather the income they need to attend grad schooling.…
Although, unemployment for college graduates is less than college graduates. The area of study plays a significant role when seeking employment. Fifty percent of all graduates agreed that their education is worth the debt, while 50% disagree that their education is worth the investment. These numbers have important implications for life after college. For instance, more than half of the graduates' quality of life is affected by student loan debt which affects major life decisions such as continuing education, marriage, children, home and car. This leaves students dissatisfied with higher education. So, to answer the question based on the facts that were revealed, "Is College Worth the Student Debt?" I believe that over the life span of work that graduates earn more than their counterparts. However, depending on their major, ability, and future earnings, it may not be the best investment, and students should explore their options of the…
Student loans are a savior and a demon put together into one by the government. On one side student loans have numerous amounts of pros that shine a golden light on the loans making them look as if they are a savior to humanity. Some of these prospects include the hassle free process it takes to actually get a student loan, the boost of your credit score if you can pay it off in the allotted time, and they open up the opportunity for anyone to go to college. On the other side of the spectrum student loans are horrible plagues on society. The student loans can be bad in the cases of putting the person in extreme debt, ruining their credit if the person cannot pay, and even ruining the person’s mental health.…
It is no secret that our society is increasing the demand for a college education, as more and more people are going to college each year in hopes of making a better life for themselves. The main purpose to go to college is to expand the minds of students and to offer them the knowledge to attain good, quality jobs that they could not have received without a degree. The blame for expensive university costs can be spread among a handful of subjects, but political cartoonist Jeff Parker’s “Higher Education” places the blame on the public universities themselves. In this cartoon, various rhetorical strategies are used to show the cartoonist’s opinion of universities increasing the already large financial burden of higher education. The cartoon hints that colleges and universities are to blame for raising tuition costs by showing a student standing on top of a mound of debt trying to reach a degree that is being pulled away from him. The political cartoon suggests public university students are subject to the discretion and motives of the university itself by oversimplifying the university’s effect on rising tuition costs and budget cuts, which represents a growing concern the author has for the future.…
College is an expensive endeavor that can result in a student falling into student loan…
Student loans are the leading cause for college debt. The reason that they have to take out loans is that they are from a family that can’t help pay or they are unable to pay for college. Most time the debt is a hard thing to avoid because now many colleges prices are extremely high and many family are unable to afforded what the college want. The lower class is the one that are the most affected by the rising cost of college debt because they come from families that have low incomes and is harder for them to pay for college. Not paying for your debt is not a good thing to do because you can lose credit and make it harder for…
In 2015, 34,015 students attended N.C. State University (NCSU). Research by The Wall Street Journal claims, “Almost 71% of bachelor’s degree recipients will graduate with a student loan, compared with less than half two decades ago and about 64% 10 years ago.” With so many students in debt before finding their source of livelihood, how could they make a start in the world already stumbling? Another fact from CBS News, in 2014 forty six percent of college graduates were working jobs that did not require their college degree. With so many startling facts about what happens after college, admissions to college in recent years have fallen according to CBS News.…
By the time you’re finished with the first four years of college, you’ll probably have around 30,000 dollars in debt. That’s only for a bachelor's degree. Students in medical school usually finish with 180,000 dollars in debt, while law school students have an average of 100,000 dollars of debt. Coupled with their undergraduate debt, and how they’re doing financially, the cost could be sky high in the end. College used to be much more affordable in the past, but by this point, the cost of college has tripled, and students are deciding to skip out on college because they think the cost isn’t worth the reward. The problem is that it is worth it. Only 69% of high school graduates decide to enroll in college. That means 31 students…
Robin Wilson states that students who get student loans, go to college, and graduate are better off than the ones who don’t go to college at all. Especially the ones who end up with high paying jobs. In her article “A lifetime of Student Debt? Not Likely.” She talks about students who attend college and take out student loans. A great student can be one that ends up in the most debt, and a not so great student could be one that doesn’t have to pay back as much. It all depends on how wise you are with money. Wilson talks about how students take out more than they need, they spend the money on unnecessary things such as clothes or video games, these students will be the ones that will spend the rest of their lives paying back their loans. About eight percent of american students borrow at least double the national average, these students are borrowing more than they need. Some students choose defer their student loan payments, one of the major problems with this is the interest rates will go up, therefore, putting the student farther and farther into debt.…
This year the average college student will graduate with at least $20,000 in student loan debt (College access and success). For years higher education has been worshiped with God like influence as a way to escape poverty and attain a career and live the American life. With the rising college tuitions it has become increasingly harder for the middle class to afford college and reap the benefits. Seven out of ten students, will have a burden over their shoulders for years to come as to how to repay the debt. Debt is no respecter of persons: business owners, single parents, teachers and seniors to this day are still constantly bombarded with debt.…
After reading the Article Student Loans: Debt for Life by Peter Coy I was shocked at what I found. Being a loan taker myself, I never realized how messed up and corrupt Colleges actually are. This Article really brings in some good insight into what I am getting myself into, that more than likely by the time I am finished with school I will be in a good amount of Debt. On average graduating students after the year 2010 will be in $25,250 as said by Bloomberg Business Week. That’s a hefty amount of money right there, and that is just on average! Who knows it could even possibly be more for me, depending on the situation I might find myself in the next 4 years.…