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…
the current laws and regulations to be able to make these necessary changes in the area they are…
Kane, T. (1999). The price of admission: Rethinking how Americans pay for college. Washington, D.C.: The Brookings…
Appel, Hannah, and Astra Taylor. "Education with a Debt Sentence: For Profit Colleges as American…
Many are against the idea of not charging for community college because they believe that not charging for community college will bring more debt to America. Andre Kelly, the director of the Center on Higher Education Reform at the American Enterprise Institute, describes why he believes that having free community college tuition is not the way to go. He states that community college is already practically free and that’s there’s no need to have this type of promise. That its incredibly naive for anyone to think that college graduate percentage would increase just because community college now has the label as…
There are a lot of people saying college degrees are overrated, and that they are more…
Paying for community college can be a handful for some. While many can pay for college with financial aid, however a many students argue that they can’t afford to pay off tuition or the cost of books and material because it’s too expensive and they don’t attend community college. This is a serious issue for many people that want to earn a degree in a particular majors. Obama promotes the idea that community college should be free to attend and take class without the burden of paying for tuition or the overwhelming cost that students fear. With that statement gain more of an outcry of students agreeing on the idea and many others opposing of it. In the article by Joanne Jacobs, “As He Promotes It, Some Question Obama’s Free Community College Idea,” she discusses that there are pros and cons to both arguments.…
Obama has proposed the idea of having community college be free in order to increase the number of people to own a degree. Joanne Jacobs writes in her article about free community college that “The White House estimates that this would cost $60 billion for over 10 years” to execute. With our economy in shambles at the moment, this can worsen the economic status of the country, adding to the drastic debt that continuously rises on a daily basis. If Obama creates some sort of promise about tuition being free, then another issue could arise, which is having schools become more crowded than what they already are. States need to spend more money in order to increase the…
During the 2016 presidential election, the debate of whether or not college tuition should be free was a popular one. Although none of the candidates who used it as part of their platform were elected, it remains a popular topic of discussion, especially resonating with college-aged students and those who are still recovering from college debt. Additionally, the socio-economic divide is at an all-time high, and much of it is due to college not being accessible to lower-class individuals. In order to lessen the growing socio-economic divide, college tuition should be free.…
Imagine a world where the poor only become poorer and the wealthy become greedier, a world in which equality is only a figure of speech but no action is set to prove it. The United States has been dramatically declining in its system of education. We have high dropout rates due to burdened students who cannot afford school. President Obama, the nation’s leader, has come up with a proposal to help better the nation and the United States of America. This proposal states that community college shall be free of tuition for 2 years.…
Further, nothing is truly free. Were college free to all students, someone would still have to pay those bills. Public education is already the single largest expense of non-federal governments and a huge part of the federal expense. Increasing the scope of free public education would also significantly increase the costs involved - those costs must be borne by someone. So, you either pay for it now as tuition or you pay for it for the rest of your life in the form of taxes but either way, you'll pay for it.…
Free college is a utopic vision created from the 2016 election that promotes and idealizes socialism. This seemingly unattainable goal for Americans has been created on a foundation of poor information. However, the reality is that affordable college is coming around the corner. The piles of student loan debt accumulated are forcing Americans to make some type of change in higher education. While some oppose the idea of free college it is an inevitable outcome that will help most Americans and further educate the population. The topic of making affordable secondary education will continue to be discussed in American politics until student debt decreases and college becomes more affordable. The America’s College Promise Proposal brings America…
There are many opinions about the free community college program and everyone have a right to be express their opinion. It was remarked in an article that, “While many prominent Democrats champion affordable and even free higher education, Tennessee is a Republican state. Haslam, a Republican himself, has drawn rare bipartisan praise for the new education measure, a rare show of unity in an era where divisive politics have become the norm, particularly on the national level” (Williams 4). The idea of free community college seems like something a democratic state will be interested in, but many people were amazed when the republican states join in the program. Though there are many people in favor of the idea of free community college tuition, there are also some people who did not agree with the idea. These people think that the program is going to be taken over by the rich people and some private institution worried about the program affecting their enrollment status. As usual, there are always people supporting and some other people opposing. This prediction seems to affect the programs and some states are trying to solve this problem by putting conditions on who get a certain amount of…