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A Partial Solution To High Tuition Costs?
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Re: A Partial Solution To High Tuition Costs?
Originally posted by vt View Post
I don't think that accepting anybody with a pulse and online classes are going to solve any problems. If anything, the school's perceived quality is just going to suffer.
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Re: A Partial Solution To High Tuition Costs?
Originally posted by dcarrigg View PostI don't think that accepting anybody with a pulse and online classes are going to solve any problems. If anything, the school's perceived quality is just going to suffer.
As for the public colleges, I know of someone who has an accounting degree from a state university that's considered reputable and yet he does not know how to compute compound interest even when given a calculator, paper, and pencil. When computing returns on an equity in a healthy company, he was showing returns of greater (in magnitude) than -100% for some years. It never occurred to him that such a thing is utterly impossible when computing a compounded rate of return for a total return that is greater than zero.
Usury and, in a way, its counterpart entitlement is getting totally out of hand in this country.
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Re: A Partial Solution To High Tuition Costs?
+1
Usury and, in a way, its counterpart entitlement is getting totally out of hand in this country.
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Re: A Partial Solution To High Tuition Costs?
Eliminate HELOCs for tuition, student loans should be limited to $10,000-$15,000 total per student for entire education.
Education reminds me of the Soviet-USA arems race- and everyone is spending more money to beat the other kids family. As every one races to grab fewer and fewer good job opportunities.
It never dawns on any body that all the money going into K-12 (extracted from home owners through draconian tax increases) and over inflated University education is what is killing the economy and job opportunities.
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