Click here to read about the 13% tuition hike at A & M. This is for College Station, the small schools that make up A & M ‘s real ‘minority population’ are not at $4,000 per semester. About three years back ,the Legislature allowed the schools to start setting their own tuition. And of course UT wasted no time in moving from $2500 to $3500 in two years, A & M has of course followed suit, now $4K is the number.
An Aggie alum of mine makes the point that there are lots of ways for students to get over this hurdle, true there are Pell grants but their very existence only encourages the type of price gouging that these schools engage in. Another defense, is, well it is still much cheaper than private schools, true enough. But that too encourages every one to go up, and 13% is surely beyond even what the head in the sand FED would call inflationary.
Who is the consumer, the student, the business and govt that hires the graduate, the ‘research’ these schools provide? This strikes me like witholding of income tax, since you never have it you don’t miss it. After all school loans are not paid till AFTER graduation. How many students realize what their real obligation is when signing on to grants, loans, etc.
University costs have outpaced the general level of costs for decades. And while the ‘all our grads get great jobs’ story is true for say the top 10-20%, there are lots of students in liberal arts or other non specific outcome majors that end up at the outlet mall, hardly a feather in the distinguished alum list. And by the way, has any one repealed the bell shaped curve, don’t most students have a C average. Is hmm 4K x 8 or these days 10 semesters, $40,000 worth a job at the outlet mall or teaching school at what, $30 K to start?
What say you?
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