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Should College Tuition Vary By Major, Based On the College's Costs For the Major? (qz.com)

Registered Coward v2 writes: Vault, in a blog post, discusses whether colleges should base tuition on the actual cost of providing the education rather than on a one-price-for-all-credits basis. Their argument is based on a Quartz article that shows engineering and science degrees cost schools a lot more than liberal arts degrees for a variety of reasons, including higher professor salaries and equipment/infrastructure costs. As a result, those majors are subsidized by the cheaper ones even though they also have the highest earnings in aggregate. The new paper on the topic estimates that it typically costs the universities more than $62,000 to educate an engineer (including professor salaries, facilities fees, and administrative costs), while an English or business major costs nearly half that. Quartz has a chart embedded in its report that shows the cost of education by major at the University of Florida. There's also another chart that shows the earnings of past graduates, up to age 45, minus the cost of each degree. According to the paper, even though it costs more for an engineering degree, it pays off.

537 comments

  1. No by The+Real+Dr+John · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Community college and state colleges should be free, like it is in civilized countries.

    --
    A brain is a terrible thing to waste... Mind? That's debatable.
    1. Re:No by Z00L00K · · Score: 2

      I agree here.

      Differentiating the cost depending on type of education would cause only those that already have a good economic situation to actually pick the more expensive educations. Especially some educations in technology and biology may be a lot more expensive than an education in art or sociology due to the need for qualified equipment and material.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    2. Re:No by MightyYar · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm fine with that - at the least I think our world has changed since the high school diploma became the de facto public education cutoff and I believe that we would benefit collectively from having public education at least through associates/trade school.

      But the expectation of what you get for free needs to come way down. There are so many amenities on college campuses today that are just not necessary to the educational mission. I don't mind people using their own money to pay for these, but I think we'd need to take a serious look at how tax dollars are spent if it becomes entirely publicly funded. At the end of the day, you'd be subsidizing the entertainment of the top 50-ish % of the population that actually continues school after high school.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    3. Re:No by jfdavis668 · · Score: 0

      Double our taxes and make college free like in civilized countries!

    4. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But that would devalue my degree. It'd also increase housing prices.

      I say no!

    5. Community college and state colleges should be free, like it is in civilized countries.

      I'd like to se that as well, perhaps with a sliding scale where your GPA determines how much of a tuition discount you get. First year us free and then on above some number it's free, and so on done until failing students pay full freight. Of course, you'd probably need to have some forced curve so grade inflation wouldn't make everyone an A student. Of course, if it's totally free then that would increase demand and costs to the point where you'd have to make admissions that much harder. That is not necessarily bad, but it means state schools would become much more selective than they already are and even the tier 2 schools in a state would be harder to get into, even if they are free. Free is a good idea but implementing it is a challenge. Then the question becomes - what about foreign and non-resident students? Do you let them in for free as well?

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    6. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      We don't need 70% tax to cover it, just stop wasting it on dropping freedom around the world

    7. Re:No by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

      And what about people who don't do school work? Who party? Do you think anyone who wants to go, without regard to anything else, should be provided with housing, food, and take up space in a classroom? If you went to a US Public University you would know there are a lot of people who go there who don't do sh!t.

      --
      If you're scared of your govt then you need to further restrict its powers
      Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
    8. Re:No by helsinki92 · · Score: 2

      My taxes are about 35% now and I get absolutely nothing from the government except maybe passably drivable roads. For an extra 5% I would gladly love for my kids to have a free education. As it is, I pay school taxes now, so why shouldn't they apply to a college education.

    9. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The current administration suggested that, but the left seems to have problems reducing our role in NATO.

    10. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And is it civilized, to extort the labor of the entire country in order to pay for said colleges?

    11. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      true

      and you would still have prestigious colleges and private. it would be the public of high ed..

    12. Re:No by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they should be harder to get into. There is no reason that someone who is going to be a hairdresser or a sales clerk needs a college degree. Ability, not money, should determine which of our population is educated to a higher level.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    13. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But that would devalue my degree.

      You do that enough already, just by opening your big mouth.

    14. Re:No by Major+Blud · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How about we first find out why college is so expensive and fix that?

      If you think it's expensive now, just wait until it's free.

      --
      If you post as Anonymous Coward, don't expect a reply.
    15. Re:No by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Colleges and universities have a lot of waste. For those who had graduated you probably will get notes saying they need your support to build a new building. While during peak class times 20% of the rooms are being occupied. And would be much cheaper to renavate then build. Especially because of most majors with today's technology you just need a spot for wi-fi and perhaps a place to charge.
      Sure there will need to be some lab areas with some specialty room requirements but for most degrees of study most if not all your classes will be in a boring lecture style room or a small group classroom. Which they have plenary available at nearly every college.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    16. Re:No by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but you will also be raising my taxes, to pay for the education of your children. What do I get out of it?

    17. Re:No by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 2

      I like what someone suggested above- cost is determined based on your grade point average. Maintain all A's and it's free. Have all C's or a C average and you pay full price. If you can't maintain a high grade, perhaps you shouldn't be in school.

      I also think the USA should do away with socialized sport. College sports moves focus away from academics in Universities and moves it on athletics, giving scholarships and grants to people who really don't belong in University and are taking the place of someone who could actually use a degree. The socialized sports program is an unnecessary distraction from learning and education, what universities are supposed to be about.

      The US, has a hard time keeping minor league and privately owned smaller sports teams in business because their socialized sports programs take away business from the smaller teams. It's not like other countries where private sports teams can survive well over 100 years in lower leagues with out collapsing. Average age of a minor league sports team is less than 10 years. Their socialist sports agenda- making sports part of government run entities kills the private sports teams.

      If private universities want to have big stadiums and spectator attended matches, I can't argue with that. State run universities should not be about promoting socialized sports. It is an unfair government run business that impacts private teams and smaller private universities who frequently have to run a sports program at a huge loss to have "status" compared to the socialized state run teams.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    18. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Community college and state colleges should be free, like it is in civilized countries.

      You keep using that word "free", perhaps if you had paid attention in primary school you would understand what it actually means.

    19. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do I have to pay for fire fighters and police? I've never needed them!

    20. Perhaps they should be harder to get into. There is no reason that someone who is going to be a hairdresser or a sales clerk needs a college degree. Ability, not money, should determine which of our population is educated to a higher level.

      I agree, and that is what we see at US schools where state programs offer free tuition - the applicant pool gets better as students who might have gone elsewhere apply there because of the free tuition. Unfortunately, the college degree has replaced the high school diploma as the base qualifier for many jobs; even if it's simply because so many more people are getting them now than say 20 years ago.

      We've also undervalued skilled trades to the point that educational programs in them have languished although some areas are seeing companies ally with community colleges to feed programs that produce people with the skills needed to operate the very increasing complex machinery companies use. That is where community colleges really offer value - teaching skills such as auto mechanics, HVAC work, etc. so people can get the basic technical education needed to certify and get good jobs.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    21. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      I get more than that. I can drive to work with working roads. I can walk downtown without having shove a gun in my face and demand my wallet, with my wife and kid being seized for sex slaves. I can go cross country without worry that bandits will block a highway. I can tell the government to fuck off, and I won't be going to jail for it. I don't have to worry about bodyguards or having to pack when downtown.

      So, government provides me a lot. The fact that I don't wake up to looters wanting to burn down my house is a big thing.

    22. Re:No by ausekilis · · Score: 2

      Think of it as paying it forward for when you have little ones. Others will be paying to put them through school too.

      If that's not in your life plan. How about the fact that with accessible education you raise the average IQ of our society? That means the total number of inbreds at the polls would be far fewer, our society would make more informed decisions, and we'd end this race to the bottom.

      For me, it's worth a few % tax for my kids to go through college and for them to not have to deal with the brain-dead reality TV we have today. Nobody with more than 2 braincells gives a crap about the size of kimye's ass or what they ate last night.

    23. Re:No by Fragnet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the cost should be inversely proportional to the stupidity of the degree, and the likelihood you'll come out of the course knowing less than you did before you started it. For example a course in mathematics or physics should be free. A course in feminist dance theory or gender studies should cost at least $500,000, possibly more.

    24. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish I had mod points

    25. I also think the USA should do away with socialized sport. College sports moves focus away from academics in Universities and moves it on athletics, giving scholarships and grants to people who really don't belong in University and are taking the place of someone who could actually use a degree. The socialized sports program is an unnecessary distraction from learning and education, what universities are supposed to be about.

      I disagree here . While the major revenue sports get a lot of publicity, schools offer many other sports that have real student athletes. College is about learning how to function in the world beyond just learning a skill, and sports provide a lot of experiences that are as valuable as what yo lean in the classroom. personally, when I look at a resume i give preference to someone whose played a team sport or been involved in other activities beyond class such as writing for the school paper, etc. over someone who hasn't, even if the other one has a higher GPA, because in my experience the former tend to be better to work with since the have been par of a team.

      The US, has a hard time keeping minor league and privately owned smaller sports teams in business because their socialized sports programs take away business from the smaller teams

      In the US minor league teams, such as baseball ones, are often far more profitable than major league teams.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    26. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the cost should be inversely proportional to the stupidity of the degree, and the likelihood you'll come out of the course knowing less than you did before you started it. For example a course in mathematics or physics should be free.

      I serve thee a slice of pi with a side order of golden ratio.

    27. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but you will also be raising my taxes, to pay for the education of your children. What do I get out of it?

      A better educated society with fewer criminals and parasites on social assistance. Taxpayer funded post-secondary education is a less expensive than taxpayer funded industrial-prisons.

    28. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A capable workforce that will continue to provide for a decent society and actually might advance the cost of living? That sure as hell beats just people capable of menial work where actual economic booms don't happen.

      Look at the southeast part of the US. Education isn't common there. Neither do booms happen. The entire region has been in a depression for decades. Now look at CA, NYC, Austin, and other areas where there are educated people. Said areas are booming. Notice the correlation?

      Yes, you may not want to pay for someone's kid to be educated, but that kid is going to be growing up and paying for your retirement, and he will be either employed and making money, or unemployed on meth trying to break into your house because there is no future.

      This whole thing about not funding education is just plain retarded. Yes, I stated the "R" word. Farmers understand you till and plant a field so you get a decent havest. Not funding education is like being the guy who buys seed corn, eats it, then wonders why the field produces little but weeds. This is the US in a nutshell.

      Part of the reason why the Indians, Pakistanis, and Chinese are moving in and sending real estate prices through the stratosphere is simple. They are educated, the natives they are replacing are not. Do you want to live in a world where because you didn't spend time to get ready for a race, you are perceived as the dump shit in your native country while everyone else around you is treated better because they are not US citizens? Its happening.

      tl;dr/ELI5: Educated people make a stable, prosperous society. Uneducated people become the slaves of the educated people.

    29. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The left also has a problem with a cheeto-faced, pussy-grabbing, narcissistic, vulgarian man-child int he oval office.

    30. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If other people are more skilled, you should get better quality products and services for the same money. And lots of other things could be better, like lower crime rates and such. Having a share of a more tasty cake is better than having the same share of a less tasty cake.

      This of course does not happen overnight, and during transitory periods the shares of the cake may change.

    31. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How about the fact that with accessible education you raise the average IQ of our society?

      The most-educated person is not necessarily the most intelligent person. In fact, some of the stupidest, most incompetent people I have ever met were also the most highly-educated people I have ever met.

      I have serious reservations about the quality of education in many of America's universities. Don't even get me started on many of the garbage majors being offered.

    32. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Putting short people on a basketball team does not make them taller.

    33. Re:No by rhazz · · Score: 1

      Just because it's free doesn't mean it has to be open-door. They could still curb applicants by their grades and push out poor performers to lower tier institutions. This could also vary by degree, as it did in my university where you could pass all your courses and still get kicked out for your GPA being too low.

    34. Re:No by Notabadguy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While that is funny...

      I'd much prefer that college was free - like it should be - and is in most first world countries - and that instead, the sponsored state/federal institutions didn't offer feminist dance theory or gender studies - and that you could instead elect to go to a private institution for some crap like that.

    35. Re:No by mwvdlee · · Score: 2

      This. The financial situation of a student or his parents should not impact the choice of education the student makes.

      --
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    36. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same poster here, I apologize for my outburst. I just got laid off and I've been really sad lately.

    37. Re:No by budgenator · · Score: 0

      Community college and state colleges should be free, like it is in civilized countries.

      Define "Free", is it no cost tuition, but with outrageous contact hours or lab fees? Do you have to live on campus and pay for 2 years of room and board? Are your books a $1,000.00 per class?

      Frequently when a telemarketer calls me with an "Amazing Free Offer", I simply and truthfully tell them that I can't afford "Free".

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    38. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not think you understand the meaning of the word free. You mean that the individual or family would not bear a particular financial burden and that instead teh community as a whole would pay, this is very different than free.

      That being said, your idea is foolhardy. We already have plenty of people with no need or inclination to attend a college attending college because they are told that is what people should do. Instead, they should either be working, learning a trade, or keeping house. What is the use of a college degree for a janitor? Now a janitor might desire a college degree, say in nuclear engineering, but it is simply a desire if the janitor is simply going to be a janitor.

      Also, by hiding tuition as a community tax there is very little control over collegiate costs. College tuition and fees have grown disproportionately with the advent of cheap student loans and pell grants. After all it is now assumed that everyone can come up with 5,300 dollars a year so no school is ever going to go below that as they know that the student can get that much in grants. Why then control costs. It would only be worse if it was simply a tax.

    39. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I like what someone suggested above- cost is determined based on your grade point average. Maintain all A's and it's free. Have all C's or a C average and you pay full price. If you can't maintain a high grade, perhaps you shouldn't be in school.

      And get even more grade inflation?

      I used to teach in a European college with a lot of American exchange students. When I grade a good paper, I give it 7/10, which is a "cum laude" grade. However, the American students complained:
      US Student: I did what you asked.
      Me: Yes, you did.
      US Student: Then why do you give me a low grade?
      Me: 7/10 is not a low grade.
      US Student: If I return to the states with a C+, it will ruin my GPA. I want an A grade.
      Me: Sorry, for a 9/10 you need to do more than just what I have asked, you need more than a good paper. You need an excellent, outstanding paper. If I give all good papers a 9/10, how can I reward excellent work?
      US Student: I am calling my lawyer.

    40. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How about we first find out why college is so expensive and fix that?

      If you think it's expensive now, just wait until it's free.

      Student loans are the single most significant reason that post-secondary education is expensive even at state colleges and universities not only in the United States of America but in other countries such as Canada. I agree with the suggestion that the first year is cost-free to students and subsequent years the amount paid is based on GPA ranging from 100% subsidised (B and above) to 0% subsidised (D and below). Also employers should be responsible for providing on-the-job training so universities are no longer the modern-day white-collar trade schools.

    41. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing is free. The question is who pays, the individual student or the taxpayers (directly or through deficit spending)? This is not a trivial question, and with the current acrimonious political situation in the USA today, reasonable discussion is very unlikely.

    42. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no one said it would be manditory.

    43. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason NYC and Cali and Austin are prosperous is because they attract (poach) the well educated and intellectually gifted from the rest of the world. It has nothing to do with the education system in N.Y. or California.

    44. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There's no such thing as free. There's merely shifting costs.
      K-12 in the US is saddled to homeowners in the form of school tax. It's easy to see school tax in the range of 5-10k a year regardless if you have kids.
      College is fairly expensive and typically non-local. Why should a homeowner be taxed at least double their current school tax if their kids (assuming they even have children) take a course online at a different state?

      Instead of schools being saddled to tax payers, why not focus on the real problem which is the increase of how much a college degree costs? It clearly has not increased in-line with inflation. It used to be the case 40-50 years ago that a degree could be paid for while working part time. Today that's practically impossible.

    45. Re:No by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      And some obscure useless degrees should come at a price defined by Graham's number.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    46. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Less rapist, muggers, burglars, beggars, religious nuts and drug addicts on the streets. Romantic evening walks with your girl/boyfriend without fear of other people. Ain't that enough for you or you can't see farther than the curb in front of your window?

    47. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not trying to flame here, but aren't standards for getting into university in many first-world contries a lot higher than they are in the USA? Not everybody needs to go to college. Free college for everyone seems unnecessary.

    48. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Differentiating the cost depending on type of education would cause only those that already have a good economic situation to actually pick the more expensive educations"

      in a rational work perhaps. in that same world with the price of all area's of study being equal students would flock to area's of study that have the highest ROI like engineering and medical while staying away from worthless degrees. But in the world we live in with unlimited government backed student loans students will still take out the largest loans they can without regard to cost.

    49. Re:No by Salgak1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And the answer is almost always "administrative overhead". Some universities have more new administrators than new instructors. . .

      Several Links:

      http://www.usatoday.com/story/...

      https://www.thestreet.com/stor...

    50. Re: No by sound+vision · · Score: 1, Insightful

      But that would promote economic equality. The blacks will move into our neighborhoods, and marry our daughters.

    51. Re:No by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      If you put away 5% of your money from the time the kids are born until they go to college, you are well on your way to covering tuition anyway. Even if you only make $25,000 a year, 5% is $1250 a year, or $22,500 by the time they are 18. That's without even calculating interest on the investment over time. You could save over $35,000 if you invest it at 5% interest which is reasonable to assume if you find a good index fund. Assuming you make $50,000 a year, and invest 5%, with interest your savings are up at $73,000

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    52. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't know who Kimeye is and don't suspect it's worth Googling. I do recommend dropping TV, it improves mental health.
      It's not "paying it forward", free education is about greed. I want less lower class around me. I want colleges to be free and have a good program for "teenaged bullshit ruined my grades in high school but now I'm ready to get my shit together but can't afford to on minimum wage."

      People bitch about the lower class draining them, but refuse to be part of the solution. If you want a better, cleaner, safer society, you have to educate the lower classes. Primary and secondary schools fail in the ghettos. You have to wait until they are in their 20's.

      Want to make it even better? Offer free education but remove drivers licenses from anyone who doesn't complete at least two semesters of college or trade school by 23. Easy justification is... if you didn't do college, you likely can't afford a car that should be on the road and you'r fucking up my lungs. There should be an exemption exam as well.
      1) Write a polynomial and apply it to a real world problem.
      2) Write an essay explaining why useless federal jobs are so important and explain why it is important to fund these jobs by increasing national debt.
      3) Explain in terms of the laws of motion how high a ball dropped from a meter will bounce if in a vacuum and the ball and surface are rigid.
      4) Create a spreadsheet which calculates how much money you would have to earn per hour and the minimum number of hours you'd have to work to :
      - Pay 23% federal,state,county & city taxes and social security
      - Pay for health, dental, life, automotive and unemployment insurance
      - Pay for a $19,000 car amortized over 4 years at 5% dealer interest rates.
      - Pay for gas, diesel, hydrogen, alcohol or electricity to travel to and from work
      - Eat out once a week for an average cost of $20 a head
      - Pay rent on a 60sq. meter apartment
      - Pay electricity, gas, water, and Internet
      - Pay for groceries at an average cost of feeding 2.1 people per income meeting the requirements of question 5's diet
      - Pay for 3-5 doctors visits per year as well as medication averaging a cost of $100 a year
      - Cover up to 10 days unpaid sick leave from work per year
      - Cover a 1 week unpaid vacation at an average cost of $100 per day per person with a 2.1 person per wage earner.
      5) Create a weekly diet and grocery list to meet the government specified daily caloric intake recommendations. Provide the grocery list to correspond to the diet and the planned days to visit the grocery store to manage consumption and spoilage.
      - Each day should contain at least some form of meat (bologna and hot dogs meeting the definition of meat 1 in 4 days) or protein and vitamin supplements.
      - Vegetables should be present in at least 60% of all meals while containing fatty vegetables (like corn) at most in 30% of all meals. Ketchup absolutely does not count as a vegetable.
      - Sugar and some substitutes should be limited. Minimize excessive use of real sugar (think Coca Cola) and excessive use of high fructose corn syrup or substitutes proven to increase thirst as opposed to quenching it.
      - Include cooked in salt while limiting the need for added table salt.

      As a matter of fact, I'd recommend forcing anyone who can't answer 4 and 5 unsuitable for living unassisted in society and believe they should be required to visit probation officers regularly to audit their personal finance.

      I earn more money than I spend. This is not because I'

    53. Re:No by budgenator · · Score: 5, Informative

      So I'm taking "Human Anatomy and Physiology II" in a summer session and one of the Ladies in my class has a 13 year old daughter who's too young to stay home all day on her own and way too old for daycare. The lady asks the instructor if her Daughter can sit in on the class because of the above and the Instructor agrees. In lecture she asks a few intelligent questions, in lab she dissects her fetal pig like everyone else. Eventually we come to the first hour exam, the Instructor hesitantly hands her a test and she get a C on it. At this point she's pretty much a student like everyone else, she finishes the course with a C+. The Instructor, who's the Science Dept Chairman, get her retro-actively enrolled, credits her for the course, and transfers the credit back to her middle school.

      In 1980 that was pretty amazing, now most Colleges have dual enrolment programs so High School Students can get College credits before they graduate. The confidence in public education has deteriorated to the point a High School Graduate with out being able to check "Some College" on a job app is really in YMMV territory..

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    54. Re:No by sjritt00 · · Score: 1

      No, but it can make the team better, (Patty Mills,San Antonio Spurs)

    55. Re:No by Salgak1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Apparently the Left has a problem with name-calling as well. If objectifying women or minorities is bad, so is objectifying the competition.

      Hint: this is why we got Trump. . .

    56. Re:No by budgenator · · Score: 1

      A better educated society with fewer criminals and parasites on social assistance. Taxpayer funded post-secondary education is a less expensive than taxpayer funded industrial-prisons.

      Or a better educated class of criminals and parasites on social assistance; which may or may not be an improvement.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    57. Re:No by mark-t · · Score: 1

      For the first semester or term, and then after that (generally speaking), as long as a certain minimum performance is maintained, it is no-cost tuition. Full stop. No additional buts or caveats, just no-cost tuition for your first term and thereafter as long as you achieve a certain minimum performance threshold each term (this may not necessarily be easy, depending on the program that you go into).

    58. Re:No by Nemyst · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Shifting the costs is the point here: college students are the ones least able to pay for their own education. They don't have a job yet (that's why they go to college), and unlike high school, the workload from college is often high enough that getting a part-time job would make their education and performance suffer.

    59. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It isn't free in civilized counties. It's subsidized. The last time someone invented a way to get people to work for free, people whined about "slavery."

    60. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like the asshole teacher I had once. He would never give 100% on anything, because "it could always be better." The worst part of that was he wouldn't take any points off, either.
      Can't have it both ways.

      Better to just not have a damn curve at all. Fail half the class? Sure, if they didn't do the work, they shouldn't pass.

    61. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Putting people who are terrible at basketball on an NBA team won't make them good at basketball and it will hurt the team.

      Forcing companies to hire people or schools to educate people who lack the skills or intelligence to succeed will not give those people skills or intelligence and the companies and schools will suffer.

    62. Re:No by ColdWetDog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nothing eh? No police or fire protection? No water or electricity? No libraries? No defense or disaster services? Airports? Railroads? Nominally representative government? (Well, nothing is perfect.)

      Sucks to be you, I suppose.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    63. Re: No by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      Most of the country has that it's just cities that do not. High-density living is broken.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    64. Re:No by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      Now now it's far easier to give the money to the government forever they never do anything bad with it.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    65. Re:No by swb · · Score: 2

      College has long been a kind of social finishing arena, with education as kind of a secondary accomplishment for many.

      It wasn't that long ago that nobody needed a professional degree, even for a lot of occupations we would assume were necessary. In a lot of places you could practice law if you passed the bar exam, and a law degree wasn't required. Even basic medicine wasn't that complicated because there weren't many things that could be done anyway besides give pain killers, set bones and close and clean wounds.

      Only highly technical fields like engineering and serious, in-depth areas of study required anything like an advanced degree, and often the people who did some of that kind of research work just did it self-directed (didn't Einstein come up with General Relativity working as a patent clerk?).

      People went to college to become more worldly and get exposed to liberal arts concepts and classics by and large. Often larger purpose was explicitly social, a place to practice serious public etiquette and possibly meet a mate. For women the latter was often the principal goal, you sent your daughter to a good school not because you cared if she could recite Shakespeare or read Tacitus in Latin, but because it exposed her to a range of potential husbands of suitable social standing. Even for men, the education (outside of a small number of highly technical fields) was largely superfluous, outside of the benefit of exposing them to worldly ideas beyond their parochial upbringing.

      For better or for worse, this mindset has continued with college. People often go because it's expected of them, and the thing you do. The middle class believes it not only gives them the vocational skills they need but some kind social access.

    66. Re:No by chris234 · · Score: 1

      Well, for starters you don't have you live around dumb people.

    67. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many college students have jobs -- they generally don't have careers, though. You might not be able to handle the two but there are millions of Americans that have managed it fine.

    68. Re: No by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's really not. I've seen too many people in college that really have no aptitude for anything, come out with a lot of debt, and then we have to hear about how they're overburdened with debt and it's somebody else's fault.

      Besides, tuition is already very heavily subsidized in the US. When at community college, I recall seeing a Korean student's receipt and she paid something like $9000 for 12 credit hours whereas mine cost $700 for the same.

      $700 was at the time (2004'ish) enough to make you say "well, let me think about it" vs "it's free so let's go to college whether it makes sense or not" but not so much that you needed a loan.

      I also think we should get rid of student loans because they put upward pressure on tuition rates, making the super expensive colleges even more expensive even after the subsidies.

    69. Re:No by Altus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Just because school is free doesn't mean you don't have to get accepted. Thats the way it works in those countries that have higher admission standards. Of course part of those higher standards are likely driven by the fact that they get more applications because more people can afford to go, meaning they end up turning away a higher percentage of people.

      The thing is, if state schools are free, private ones cant cost what they do now or they would have practically no students... or only students who couldn't get into the state schools. Prices would have to fall to the point where the school could show that the outcome for student is worth the cost of paying tuition in order to attract the best students.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    70. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't care how good a team player somebody is if they're and idiot meathead that got a pass because they brought in $$$ for the school via their sportsball team. College is about education, not playing games.

    71. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is how it is for gradschool. Physics, math, chem etc, they pay you (not much) to get your phd. English, philosophy, etc. You pay them.

    72. Re:No by Altus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah because its NATO operations that are costing us so much money compared to the wars we have stared all on our own, or the 6.5 trillion dollars that the Pentagon can't account for... or all the money spent on the F-35 the plane nobody wanted.

      It has nothing to do with the fact that NATO is all thats standing between our presidents Dom, Master Putin, and the Scandinavian countries he really wants to invade.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    73. Re:No by gtall · · Score: 2

      Except....not all students are educated equally. Students from inner cities and the sticks do not generally get a good education because the tax base to support it is not there. When they get to college, they need remedial work but that isn't really a substitute and they continue to struggle. Not educating them means they will be a drag on the rest of society, a notion that has never entered the head of a libertarian or conservative Republican. The Democrats flip the other way and think gender studies is somehow a growth industry.

    74. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was just being snarky, good luck with your job search. I hope you find something to cheer you up soon.

    75. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like what someone suggested above- cost is determined based on your grade point average. Maintain all A's and it's free. Have all C's or a C average and you pay full price. If you can't maintain a high grade, perhaps you shouldn't be in school.

      It's a nice thought, but as everyone knows not all majors are creating equal. Here where I teach, many students in the Communications and Market departments get a 4.0 in their major (which are the majority of their classes). In Engineering and Nursing it's much less common, because these students have to actually do work to get an A.

      Why should students pay [literally] because they're in a more difficult program of study? If anything, we should be encouraging students to take difficult subjects instead of graduating them with a 4.0 despite never having opened a book.

    76. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think the cost should be inversely proportional to the stupidity of the degree, and the likelihood you'll come out of the course knowing less than you did before you started it. For example a course in mathematics or physics should be free. A course in feminist dance theory or gender studies should cost at least $500,000, possibly more.

      This is funny, but it also points out a fallacy that a lot of people make about what going to college is about. University is not a trade school. Much of what we're trying to teach, even in 4-year state schools' engineering departments is how to think and how to evaluate a breadth of ideas. If you just want to take classes on how to program, go find a MOOC and build experience by contributing to an open-source project. Being at University should not only give you skills, but it should also teach you how to think and be a member of a community. What's wrong with dance and gender studies being a part of that?

    77. Except....not all students are educated equally. Students from inner cities and the sticks do not generally get a good education because the tax base to support it is not there. When they get to college, they need remedial work but that isn't really a substitute and they continue to struggle. Not educating them means they will be a drag on the rest of society, a notion that has never entered the head of a libertarian or conservative Republican. The Democrats flip the other way and think gender studies is somehow a growth industry.

      Our education system is definitely broke, and your example is valid. If our K-12 education system does not prepare students that go to college for college level work than it isn't working. Community colleges could fill in the gap as well as keep a flow of prepared students at the 2-4 year entry points to keep 4 year school's classes full all 4 years.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    78. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      > If you think it's expensive now, just wait until it's free.

      I hear people say that about health care and it's hilariously stupid because the US pays the most per capita for health care and covers way less people than other countries do. We have entire regions in this country where the health care many people get is third world level.

      So millions of poor Americans suffer needlessly because people would rather quote cute little dismissive phrases like that than to actually consider how we could be doing things better. Ironically, the usual motivation behind this attitude is how terrible it would be to pay higher taxes to give poor people free health care, doesn't even work out because people who are dying or in great pain and who have no health care often end up in emergency wards getting care anyway. That care isn't "free" and ends up being paid for by higher insurance premiums and, yep taxes, for the rest of us. So we would save **massive** sums of money by implementing a basic level of universal preventative care, and we would keep millions of people from suffering.

      I bet the same thing would be true for giving people a basic level of college education but again we will never even consider it because a huge swath of this country has completely shut their minds to any and all evidence of anything that disagrees with their world view.

    79. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like a colossal waste of taxpayer dollars.

    80. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The left's lament: "Why doesn't anyone love me punching up at them?!"

    81. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is expensive because the high availability of student loans.

      Colleges don't compete on price, but on reputation. The government covers the price. So they just up it whenever they feel like it. The kids can deal with the lifelong debt long after they realize how they've been had.

      If there were no student loans, and a huge percentage of the current student body could not afford to be there, prices would drop precipitously.

      Supply, demand, and all that.

    82. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      free at the federal or state level? non residents going to state school presumably have not been contributing tax to the state before entering be it sales or income(including their parents). foreign students presumably haven't contributed any taxes anywhere. Free college wouldn't be free as in air, to qualify for resident discounts you must establish residency and pay taxes...maybe a foreign student lives and works in the state 2 years then qualifies for a sliding scale discount. Not sure if its true or not but have been told that the stigma of public vs private university is reversed in some euro countries and the less capable go to private schools because paying makes it less competitive.

    83. Re:No by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      I imagine you might even think you're not ultimately paying for it.

      So perhaps you're not getting much of an education, then?

      --
      -Styopa
    84. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What fairy tale country do YOU live in? NOTHING is free...someone is paying. TANSTAAFL

    85. Re:No by harperska · · Score: 1

      Such things depend on the context. A course on feminist dance theory might be valuable in the context of a larger sociology degree, where the student might gain the perspective that practitioners of feminist dance are reacting to something in society, and what are the larger implications of that thing which they are reacting to, and might society as a whole benefit from somehow addressing whatever that thing is?

      But if the feminist dance theory course is nothing more than self-congratulatory navel gazing, then sure, charge $500,000 for it.

    86. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like in Germany! Where they only let 30% of their eligable high schoolers go to college as opposed to our 65%!

      Who cares about freedom and choice, let's decide whether they're college bound when they are in late middle school and then we'll get to claim we pay for 100% of college tuition (for only the select few we let in...)

    87. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then maybe, just maybe, the left should have done more to appeal to the masses rather than insulting them to appeal to the men who wear panties and California (but I repeat myself).

      The Democratic party is trying really, really hard to not learn the same lesson that comic book publishers just went through: if you alienate 90% of buyers in hopes of appealing to hardline feminists and men in panties, nobody is going to buy your comics because hardline feminists just don't buy comics, even if you beg them to "ask me about my feminist agenda" (sorry, the burqua-wearing woman on the cover is "too sexy" for them to support. True story.) No, it's instead because of fake news, low information voters, russian hackers, or any other excuse that doesn't involve backing away from loudmouthed hate-spewing extremists.

    88. Re:No by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      Bill Clinton?

    89. Re:No by interkin3tic · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Putting the government in the position of deciding what thought is valuable to society and what is not? Yeah, that sounds like a GREEEEAAATTT idea.

      Sarcasm aside, I think you'll find that no matter what your political warp is, you'll find reason to disagree with which studies cost a lot and which ones don't. If you're not a fossil fuel executive, elected republican, or mindless fox-news glutton, you should be upset with marine biology, ecology, geology, and climatology courses being effectively censored due to price, which they undoubtedly will. If you're right wing at all, you'll likely object to ecofeminism courses being taught under other course names, which they will. And history and politics will be targeted by the assholes on both sides (though I think would-be tyrants have all realized by now it's the GOP that is the fertile ground and the party that doesn't ask questions). It's a testament to how far downhill slashdot has gone that your post was modded insightful.

    90. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, it doesn't exactly help society when people flock to easy & useless degrees.

    91. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      those students are not playing with their own money, parents, grants, co-signed student loans. though not all education equates to grades, it may be that those people are good at test taking. we have expert field engineers who barely graduated.

    92. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>> I think the cost should be *directly* proportional to the stupidity of the degree.

      FTFY (physics major here).

    93. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not free anywhere. Costs are hidden

    94. Re:No by sdinfoserv · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The "raw cost" to educate has decreased due to efficiency and technology. What has flipped is the subsidized percentage. When I earned a BS in the 80's, tuition, room board & fees was (c)$3k per semester. Costs were subsidized by the State by over 80% leaving the 20% residual to students as tuition. . Tight State budgets, screaming conservatives and greed have flipped State sponsorship to 20% leaving 80% on the backs of students. Throw in predatory lenders and for profit schools and the result is a disaster. Like the guy above saying "i don't have kids, I shouldn't pay for schools!" - but you do pay when uneducated, unemployable criminals break into your home and steal your stuff. Either we as a society value education and the benefits it delivers or we do not. and if we collectively decide there is value in education, we must fund it.

    95. Re:No by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 2

      If you insist on common integer units, I'd suggest you bake your pie to have a diameter of 113 and a radius of 355.

      You won't be able to afford a measuring instrument precise enough to physically measure the pie and not have a perfectly round pastry.

    96. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because school is free doesn't mean you don't have to get accepted.

      Amen! Public community colleges also spend a lot on "remedial" classes - to get students up to the college level. If they had admission requirements, maybe remedial classes wouldn't be necessary.
      There's also this myth in the USA that you need to go to a traditional college to have a career - many would benefit from more vocational education. Cooking, fashion design, and mechanics are not necessarily fields that benefit from liberal arts electives.

    97. Re:No by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 1

      I think you're just saying that 'Physics, match chem' post-grads can be employed in the research part of the University creating value. So they are turned into chattel to keep the engine of science churning.

      Liberal arts post-grads need to work as barristas to make ends meet, because who would allow a liberal arts student near a centrifuge, voltmeter, or other confusing and dangerous equipment?

    98. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really have to wonder what the hell these administrators are doing. We're in an era where automation has gotten rid of huge swaths of clerical and accounting positions. So what the hell are they doing? Is it busy work? Why do they need so damn many administrative staff?

      Also, don't forget the cost of football coaches, some of whom can command multi-million dollar a year salaries.

    99. Re:No by ghoul · · Score: 1

      You do realize that the only reason Europe is able to provide free college is that they do not spend on a military and the only reason they can get away with theat is that the US provides the military as part of NATO. If US stopped dropping freedom all over the world Europe would have to build its own military and could no longer provide free college.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    100. Re:No by ghoul · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually if you are in the 35% bracket you need the police and the military to protect you from being eaten alive by the masses. So most of the govt budget is spent on you. Social spending is nothing compared to the law enforcement and military budget.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    101. Re:No by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 1

      The feminist dance theory course exists because they gave Ruth tenure for political reasons that are actually in conflict with the practical pedagogy of actually teaching, and needed to find a classroom to park her in. She needs to pull her load in classroom-hours.

    102. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey gramps, long time no see! Listening to you is like listening to my parents complain about how kids these days are so lazy and that they should git off their ass and mow lawns for $5 a pop to pay for stuff just like they did. Why, it can't take more than 50 lawns or so to buy a car, and if they mow all summer they can go to school the rest of the year! What's that? Inflation? You mean like pumping up a tire?

      or $22,500 by the time they are 18

      So, about 1 year at in-state rates at a public university? I hope you tell your kids to start at community college with credits that'll transfer to the state college next door (because they're sure as hell going to be living with you for the next 4 years). If they want some spending money they're going to have to step up their game, I can hire a family of four people (I'm not saying they're Mexicans, but they're Mexicans) for $20 to mow and edge, trim bushes, and weed and mulch my garden.

      I worked a full time and a part time job to put myself through college. Dating kind of sucks ass though, apparently 3AM moonlit strolls through the campus isn't college girls' idea of a great date, and nobody gives you time off for getting laid. But hey, I'm a debt-free decently paid virgin now, I'm sure women will crawl all over me to be the first to date me.

    103. Re:No by gwolf · · Score: 1

      At the not-precisely-first country where I live (Mexico), public universities are free for the Technical and Bachelor degrees, but as postgraduate students are likely to produce more for the society, most postgraduate programs grant scolarship to all of their students so they can devote full-time to them.
      Of course, we also have private universities of all sorts, from the quite cheap ones to some where tuition rivals the USA one.

    104. Re:No by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      This is one of the civilized countries that has a lot of citizens who want to migrate to the US?

    105. Re:No by Solandri · · Score: 1

      I hear people say that about health care and it's hilariously stupid because the US pays the most per capita for health care and covers way less people than other countries do.

      That was the most common argument i saw for Obamacare. Unfortunately, it's wrong. Before Obamacare was passed, the U.S. already spent just about as much government money ("public expenditure") as percent of GDP and per capita as Canada did on its single payer system. Since Obamacare, it's actually gotten worse, with the U.S. government now spending 25% more per capita on health care than Canada.

      The reason for the high health care costs in the U.S. isn't because of lack of government provided health care as the socialists want to think it is. In fact, given that medicare ("public expenditure") recipients are only 17% of the population but account for roughly half of the U.S. health care costs, there's a strong argument to be made that government-provided health care is the problem.

    106. Re:No by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 1

      Putin is barely capable of ruling Russia, and his armed forces struggle to dominate a small country like Ukraine right on their border. The Russian economy is in shambles, and nobody there pretends that expansionism will help.

      Putin cannot invade the west, nor does he really want to do so.

      NATO is a joke, a giant subsidy of Western Europe.

      It's ludicrous how the 'Red Scare' tactics of the '50's have now become a popular sockpuppet for the left to wave around. What a reversal.

    107. Re:No by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      What you mean is that "Those people who pay taxes should fund them."

    108. Re:No by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 0

      And yet, for all that free college, your country is still a third world nation...

      No, that isn't an attack, it is the truth, deal with the why, not the person who pointed it out...

    109. Re:No by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 1

      You don't need a college degree to learn where the switch is to turn off the television.

      Frankly, most of the people who I know who 'fast tracked' to get a degree and 'career' based on their degree are the most likely people to park on the sofa afterwards and do nothing with their life outside office hours.

      Personally, I've chosen not to have kids and it's now far too late to even contemplate changing that. And I am certainly not banking on the current set of spoiled snot-nose brats I see out there to support me in old age.

      I live my life with a feeling of wonderment that motivates me to never stop living, studying and learning. I know I am not alone in this, and that there will always thus be people who congregate together in centers of learning. There are also career-track sorts festering inside said centers to have to deal with, but for the most part life works out, and the body of knowledge continues to gradually increase.

    110. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NOTHING is "free".

      You mean to say that other people should pay for it.

    111. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Admnistrators tend to be a small part of the overall budget. The big costs that add to administrative overhead are all the myriad support services in a college.

    112. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your numbers seem off. According to Wikipedia 49% qualify for university just by their school results.
      However even that number is only those qualified to study WHATEVER THEY WANT.
      In addition to those 49%, the rest have the option:
      - of studying while working in evening schools to get the university qualification
      - of qualifying for specific courses by attending a more targeted school that has lower requirements in other areas
      - of qualifying for specific courses through (work) experience
      - going to e.g. trade school instead, which in many areas is fairly well-respected way to do it (not really in programming though I'd say)

      All of this is of course irrelevant if not enough people are even interested in going to university (which is a bit of an issue in Germany, but asking for a fee is not all that likely to change that)

      Either way, even 70% not being able to attend university because they lack the education or will doesn't sound much worse than 35% not being able to attend university because they don't have the money (if I were to interpret your 65% number the same way you interpreted the 30%). Education for the qualified seems more useful than education for the rich in many ways.

    113. Re:No by gwolf · · Score: 1

      It is a third world country, yes. However, were it not for that, it would fare much worse.
      I work at the largest university in the country; it has (among all of its levels) over 350,000 students. Yet, every year it accepts less than 10% of the applicants. There is a lot of room to grow to make our country fairer and richer (and I hope that's the priority in which it's done!), but following this model is IMO fundamental.

    114. Re:No by Mitreya · · Score: 1

      I like what someone suggested above- cost is determined based on your grade point average. Maintain all A's and it's free. Have all C's or a C average and you pay full price. If you can't maintain a high grade, perhaps you shouldn't be in school.

      Only if you could agree on fully standardized tests across all schools
      Otherwise you are opening so many horrible doors...

      • Grade inflation is an issue everywhere (sometime the average is B- or C, but more often it is A- or B+)
      • If you curve, then having one's payment depend on how smart the class is really unfair
      • Do you really want professors to have a financial incentive to give student a C?

      It's all about unintended consequences.

    115. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing in this universe is free. Exactly who is going to pay for these institutions to function? Please don't say the government unless you are willing to double or triple your current income tax payment (assuming you actually pay income tax).

    116. Re:No by magarity · · Score: 1

      Shifting the costs is the point here: college students are the ones least able to pay for their own education. They don't have a job yet (that's why they go to college), and unlike high school, the workload from college is often high enough that getting a part-time job would make their education and performance suffer.

      First time entrepreneurs who want to start a new company are the ones least able to pay for the startup costs. They don't own the company yet. And loans for starting up often consume too much valuable cash flow that would otherwise let the startup succeed. So, no, just because you're least able to pay up is not a good argument for why your costs should be spread to someone else.

    117. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahhh slashdot, where the intelligent want to rob the less intelligent for their education.

    118. Re:No by twotacocombo · · Score: 1

      They don't have a job yet (that's why they go to college)

      I had a full time job for 6 years before I went back to school, and continued to work full time while going to school at night. Employment and education are not mutually exclusive. Between my employer's education benefits and tax breaks, school cost me little more than time and effort. I think those who live completely off of loans for 4 years, and then expect to find immediate employment above what they could have been doing all along, are foolish.

    119. Re:No by Zak3056 · · Score: 1

      Deep red Tennessee has two years of free community college for all. We also don't have an income tax.

      --
      What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
    120. Re:No by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      In 1980 that was pretty amazing, now most Colleges have dual enrolment programs so High School Students can get College credits before they graduate. The confidence in public education has deteriorated to the point a High School Graduate with out being able to check "Some College" on a job app is really in YMMV territory..

      I tend to look at it another way. Workers with higher education can make products that have more value than those that have less education. We have pretty much passed the point of where our society really has a use for what was considered a High School Education with no skills. Automation has made it that most manual jobs are now done by million dollar machines that may be easy to use but need to be entrusted to somebody capable enough to not do something stupid. Some college is needed because we no longer have an economy that can make use relativley unskilled and untested workers. While education of the population does not mean a greater economy by default, it is the limiting factor. Eventually, we'll be at the point proposed by ST:TNG with the five year old running from his parents screaming "I don't want to do my calculus homework!"

    121. Re:No by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

      If schools were not paid for the students if too many (or too few) made "A" or "B" (I'm talking about as an entire school, not per class) then they would be incentivized to not allow a grade inflation.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    122. Re:No by Zak3056 · · Score: 2

      One thing you completely missed in the above is the rise of the administrative class in education. They cost more than teachers do, and is a large part of why college is so expensive.

      With regard to "screaming conservatives" I think you'll find that most of them object to basket weaving 101, gender studies, etc, rather than education in general. Tennessee (even our democrats are usually on the conservative side of various debates) offers two years of community college for no cost. We pay for that mostly through lottery revenue. Republican legislature, Republican governor.

      --
      What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
    123. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stereotypes aren't always accurate. The one of the brightest students in my differential equations class was a star on the hockey team. The social aspect of college is as important as the educational components. A college professor at Wharton remarked that the math involved, many people could master, their field of accounting sometimes had shifts in the best practices, changes in forecasting for economics, and evolution of methodologies, so of all the things they learned they would be a foundation to learn in a slowly evolving field. But the one thing they would use throughout their lives, the most important theming they would learn at Wharton, was the network of associates they would create while there. Student to student, student to professors, they were building a network that would allow them to be dominant forces in business for their generation.

      Sports teams bring a tremendous amount of money into colleges. So in a very real way, sports teams attract money to the colleges to help defray the costs for all the students.

    124. Re:No by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      I like what someone suggested above- cost is determined based on your grade point average. Maintain all A's and it's free. Have all C's or a C average and you pay full price. If you can't maintain a high grade, perhaps you shouldn't be in school.

      I'd disagree. Some people do better in college than high school, some don't. Some do better in academia than the "real world", and some don't. Still, the more educated a nations workers are, the more valuable product they can manufacture. This is the limiting factor of our economy and any barrier that keeps a nation from having the most educated workforce will be hurting that economy. Grades are a good metric, but hardly representative of what a person can actually contribute once outside of the school system. C's are average. The average person should be able to get through school by default if you want your economy to work at that level.

    125. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, as long as you pay for it, no problem.

    126. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've always wondered if the "useless" degrees actually cost more in the long term through government subsidies throughout their lifetimes. Consider in the US if you graduate with a English Literature degree you have a strong chance of being in the lower 40% of wage earners which means in addition to your crushing student debt being reduced or eliminated by the government, you also will always be getting more from the government than you put in through taxes. You will essentially have a subsidized existence for your entire life. So maybe charge more for the degrees that don't have serious related contributions to society and end up with lifetime real costs to society. How complex of a model do we really want for charging students? Simpler is better. Complex leads to unintended consequences.

    127. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hypothetically, you would get to be somewhat less of an uncivilized shithead.

      But fear not; that will never happen in the U.S.

    128. Re:No by SScorpio · · Score: 1

      That's assuming that people in those industrial prisons even passed the currently free secondary education. Why would free college stop criminals who dropped out of high school?

    129. Re:No by spikenerd · · Score: 1

      No, no! (Professor of computer science here.) My classes are already dragged down by students who see no value in learning, and whose parents are paying the full cost. When there is no direct cost even to the parents, the situation will be even worse! Those who care will have an even harder time learning because they will be surrounded by others who think they have some kind of right to pass because they are people too. College is already the new high school. Don't make it the new junior high.

    130. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The government already decides what is important to society. STEM majors are being foisted off as a huge need, so huge we start grooming for them in grade school. And the governments biggest stick directing society is subsidy and taxation. Why if you're married are you taxed differently. Why deductions for kids? If you had a flat rate tax, and this seems counterintuitive, you'd have fewer lower income people. By contributing to the economy through taxation they'd have more motivation to be in a situation that earns them more. The economy is not a zero sum game. You shouldn't tolerate a system where you can be "entry level" for a lifetime. By subsiding the lower income levels to the extant done currently, we encourage stagnation. We are on the verge of massive changes to the method tasks that are associated with lower income paying jobs are accomplished. Machines are more reliable, and less costly in the coming years. Society is about to lose millions of jobs and we need to be able to move people to different roles. We can't at the moment. We don't know how as a society to do this en masse. The societal safety nets have turned into holding cells.

    131. Re:No by pla · · Score: 2

      and sports provide a lot of experiences that are as valuable as what yo lean in the classroom

      C'mon, man - I'm not going to bullshit you and claim that the ivory tower perfectly mirrors what the working world wants; but college athletics have nothing to do with anything in the real world.

      College sports is a money-grab, period. Sure, the sports at bottom-tier schools may not directly bring in much revenue - But take a look at what any college sends its alums when begging for money. New library? One paragraph in the bottom left corner of page 9. Government and industry research ties? Half a page that focuses exclusively on possible military applications. SHINY NEW STADIUM? FRONT AND CENTER, MOTHER-FUCKERS! GIVE US MONEY!.

    132. Re:No by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      There is a pretty big difference in the importance of those two things.

    133. Re:No by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      Student loans are the single most significant reason that post-secondary education is expensive even at state colleges and universities not only in the United States of America but in other countries such as Canada.

      Correct, because with student loans and grants, most people don't see the true cost and this allows the schools to hike up costs.

      I agree with the suggestion that the first year is cost-free to students and subsequent years the amount paid is based on GPA ranging from 100% subsidised (B and above) to 0% subsidised (D and below).

      Well, your solution just made the problem worse.

      Also employers should be responsible for providing on-the-job training so universities are no longer the modern-day white-collar trade schools.

      Guarantee you that big business will love this as it will force small companies out of business. It's kind of like Big HealthCare doesn't mind HCR. The smaller insurance companies have collapse and been bought out by the large insurance companies since the smaller companies didn't have the resources to keep up with all the new regs. We saw this in Big Pharma and the DME world as well.

    134. Re:No by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and as a result of that lack of income tax, the poor get gouged and the rich barely even notice the tax systems. It's horribly inefficient, and is the main reason why Tennessee is dependent on aid from the federal government to keep them from going bankrupt. Because of Tennessee's fundamentally broken tax system, the education systems in other states (mostly blue states) suffer, because we have to pay more in taxes to make up for what the state of Tennessee (and others) should be collecting, but aren't.

      And as someone with close ties to the UT system, the free tuition at community colleges has caused serious pain for Tennessee's four-year institutions by reducing their incoming enrollment for the first two years and causing them to have to deal with a flood of third-year students whose first two years of education were of significantly lesser quality than they would have gotten at a four-year institution. Worse, it is often impossible for students who start out in a CC to graduate in four years, because the CCs don't offer enough of the required major courses. So the net effect is that the quality of education has suffered significantly as a result of that decision, largely because the people who came up with the plan didn't understand the state's educational system well enough to make good decisions.

      By contrast, the best thing that happened to Tennessee's education system were the lottery scholarships. These needs-based scholarships have made it possible for students to afford four-year colleges.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    135. Re:No by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      This. The financial situation of a student or his parents should not impact the choice of education the student makes.

      I like your ideas of having people ignore the reality of their situation. Let me take that further and ask what other non-life saving things/services should be covered for free.

      Also, do you get to free by making everyone in education jobs work for free or do you get it by taking other people's money through taxes and having them pay for the school - which is not really a definition of free that I am aware of.

    136. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes I do. I'm still stuck on Earth.

    137. Re:No by ranton · · Score: 1

      I think those who live completely off of loans for 4 years, and then expect to find immediate employment above what they could have been doing all along, are foolish.

      With starting salaries for college graduates averaging $50,651, and starting salaries for high school graduates averaging $33,176, the assumption you state is hardly foolish. Believing there is no chance for hardship after college may be foolish, but believing the investment of time and money will pay off is very reasonable.

      I had a full time job for 6 years before I went back to school, and continued to work full time while going to school at night.

      This is exactly the type of behavior we don't want to be the norm. It's always commendable when people work hard to find ways to work within the current system, but it is a tragedy that these extreme measures are necessary. Needing to work for six years in a lower paying (and therefore probably less productive) job and then having less energy to commit to education once you start school is not an ideal situation.

      We need to face that a college education is as important today as a high school education was in the mid-1900's, and asking kids to start working to pay for college is not much different than making 13 year olds start working to pay for high school.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    138. Re:No by The+Real+Dr+John · · Score: 1

      Please tell me why this problem doesn't happen in developed and civilized countries around the world that provide free educations? Oh, because the US is incapable of doing simple things? You can just ignore the bad students, or kick them out of class. I can't believe a college professor is saying we need expensive college to keep the rif raf out. Nauseating.

      --
      A brain is a terrible thing to waste... Mind? That's debatable.
    139. Re:No by luis_a_espinal · · Score: 1

      Community college and state colleges should be free, like it is in civilized countries.

      They aren't in Japan. And that's a civilized country. I do agree with the sentiment that community and state colleges should be affordable (as well as, and perhaps most important, vocational/trade schools.)

      But along with this, admission criteria should be more rigorous. Most importantly, focus on HS. We have people graduating from HS who cannot add fractions (I shit you not.) And that's unacceptable. A modern HS program should ensure a young person is capable of doing some type of job at least, and to have an analytical mind.

      HS kids graduate with no skills or vision whatsoever, they have no visibility with regards of all the wonderful options of a vocation or trade, and end up going to college because that's the only option they are told to have.

    140. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree.

      And 'The Real Dr John' should offer his services as an instructor to either a Community College or State College. For free of course.

      Otherwise he is 'Talking the Talk' without 'Walking the Walk'. Show us all how much you CARE!

    141. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tile IX, diversity, student engagement, student counselling... A lot of them exist to avoid potential discrimination lawsuits, others because students can't take care of themselves.

    142. and sports provide a lot of experiences that are as valuable as what yo lean in the classroom C'mon, man - I'm not going to bullshit you and claim that the ivory tower perfectly mirrors what the working world wants; but college athletics have nothing to do with anything in the real world. College sports is a money-grab, period. Sure, the sports at bottom-tier schools may not directly bring in much revenue - But take a look at what any college sends its alums when begging for money. New library? One paragraph in the bottom left corner of page 9. Government and industry research ties? Half a page that focuses exclusively on possible military applications. SHINY NEW STADIUM? FRONT AND CENTER, MOTHER-FUCKERS! GIVE US MONEY!.

      Yes, much of it is a money grab, at least at the revenue sports such as Football and Basketball. However, when hiring or putting together a team,I have found that an athlete often takes the same work ethic, determination and team spirit to the working world as is displayed on the athletic field. Many of them have had to balance a practice / game / academic schedule tay is quite demanding, a friend who rowed crew practiced for hours before going to class. College is about preparing people for doing things in the real world, being able to intelligently think about issues, and in general be a productive member of society. Do schools use sports to raise money? Is the focus too often on winning at the expense of an education? Hell yes; but that doesn't mean the have no place on a campus. Interestingly enough, my undergraduate institution, where sports are BIG, sends me money pitches touting what the engineering school has accomplished. Maybe they think engineers don't like sports?

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    143. Re:No by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      the workload from college is often high enough that getting a part-time job would make their education and performance suffer.

      It's really hard to be sympathetic about that when I, and most of my classmates, worked part-time jobs all through college. Also, summer jobs. Seriously, in most cases, working a part-time job just means you party less, not that your education performance suffers.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    144. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because you turned ‘white man’ from a description into an insult.

      Oh yeah, that one is true. "White man" is literally an insult in a lot of liberal circles.

    145. Re:No by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      How about we first find out why college is so expensive and fix that?

      Because in general degrees are expensive. I mean I went to university for $5000 per semester but I'm under no delusion that my government didn't fund that place to the tune of $20000 on top of what I paid.

      The best way to see what the cost of degrees are in countries where they look cheap is to find out how much an international student on a student visa with no citizenship or even residency would pay.

    146. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. And there should be no sports teams. Colleges and universities should be purely academic institutions. And admissions should be based purely on merit and performance, not on what your parents can afford or any legacy nonsense.

      However, with the free tuition should also come stricter and more rigorous standards. Right now you can fail entire semesters and you get to keep going to school. As long as you keep giving them money, of course, because that is all that matters. In Europe, if you fail several classes, you are out.

      Basically, university education should be free, but it should also be accepted that it simply is not for everyone. That is not to say that those who do not get into college should not have other opportunities to make something of themselves as well, in the form of apprenticeships and trade schools, which should also be free.

    147. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy. The reason is because everyone isn't buying into it. We need to require everyone to attend college or pay additional penalties at tax time. Once everyone is attending college the prices will of course come down. Those that can't afford college will get subsidies. However, only tuition is covered, books, food, housing, etc is not covered.

    148. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Thats the way it works in those countries that have higher admission standards

      Again and again the same bullshit. ENOUGH. Probably were not you able to afford some course about the other countries. Many many countries have neither admission fee nor higher admission standard (no admission exams, other than secondary school diploma, sometimes not even necessary).

    149. Re:No by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      Who said "free"?

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    150. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what about people who don't do school work? Who party? Do you think anyone who wants to go, without regard to anything else, should be provided with housing, food, and take up space in a classroom? If you went to a US Public University you would know there are a lot of people who go there who don't do sh!t.

      OK, let's pretend that millions of scummy people will go to school just to party. I'm guessing these scummy leeches wouldn't be particularly productive citizens anyway, so let's keep them registered for class and out of jail for a year by paying for their party.

      How much does it cost to go to a local community college, on average across the nation? Let's say it's a whopping $20k with food and housing, as a national average, so the many Buttefuk Nowhere's counteract the tiny percent that go to ExpensiveCoastalU. We could bring the price down further with large scale pbliuc housing and online education, but let's ignore that massive cost savings option for now.

      Sounds like a lot, but how much does jail cost for a year? Prison? Including cops, court fees, appeals, prison guard overtime and retirement pensions? Wow, $20k isn't so much after all. Plus it eliminates a major source of crime and a massive amount of police power grab, which improves the civil liberties, rights and freedoms of the rest of us.

      Sure, in generations we might have too many leeches... but we have that issue either way. We can either support contraceptives, abortions options, or force the issue with mass sterilization or death squads. "Sorry, you only got a B- average in robot overlord repair": EXTERMINATE! EXTERMINATE! EXTERMINATE!

      I eagerly await your ignoring my arguments because... reasons.

    151. Re:No by goose-incarnated · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What's wrong with dance and gender studies being a part of that?

      It's an ideological indoctrination, not a study of anything.

      --
      I'm a minority race. Save your vitriol for white people.
    152. Re:No by Crazy+Taco · · Score: 1

      Shifting the costs is the point here: college students are the ones least able to pay for their own education.

      No, shifting the costs is not what you want to do. You want to make the student bear the costs specifically so that they have an incentive to make smart decisions. You want to discourage mass numbers of people from attending college simply to have a four year party and take the easiest or most useless degree they can. Having students be responsible for paying helps to dissuade that (somewhat).

      If a student takes a major that is in demand and has a reasonable likelihood of getting a job and a good salary (and that doesn't come from a university charging a ridiculous amount), then they can bear the cost. If not now, then at least sometime after graduation. Some may still take the dumb majors anyway, but then by bearing the cost they will learn and teach their kids. I remember my dad took one of those majors and has never used it in his entire working career. He told me he'd help with my college costs, but only "if you go get a major that involves an actual skill. If you take something dumb like me you can pay 100% of it yourself."

      I strongly suspect a lot of millenials (of which I am one) have or are learning about this, and the next generation hopefully will have a lot less people enrolling in these types of majors because of it, assuming we don't bail them all out.

      --
      Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it.
    153. Re:No by budgenator · · Score: 1

      U.S. News in September of 2014, Maryland, New York, Colorado, Connecticut, California, Philadelphia, Missouri and Kentucky offer free tuition to residents. There are 11 total schools for applicants to choose from. .... Alice Lloyd College, Berea College, College of the Ozarks, Curtis Institute of Music, Deep Springs College, Webb Institute, the United States Air Force Academy, the United States Coast Guard Academy, the United States Merchant Marine Academy, the United States Military Academy and the United States Naval Academy. Which states offer free tuition to residents?

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    154. Re:No by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Not everyone has the opportunity to live in a civlized country. Some of us are American.

    155. Re:No by Altus · · Score: 1

      Not everyone in this country gets into college and we pay. Some are blind to the need for financial aid and some are not.

      I would be very interested to hear about a country where everyone who finishes secondary school can go to college for free. I would also be curious what percentage of the population of that country takes advantage of it. Maybe you don't need high entry standards to manage free tuition. That seems like it would overwhelm the system, but perhaps that is not the case.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    156. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahhh slashdot, where the intelligent want to rob the less intelligent for their education.

      After being rebuffed for sex.

    157. Re:No by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      Who said "free"?

      The 1 sentence post that you affirmed

      Community college and state colleges should be free, like it is in civilized countries.

    158. Re:No by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      I think the cost should be inversely proportional to the stupidity of the degree, and the likelihood you'll come out of the course knowing less than you did before you started it. For example a course in mathematics or physics should be free. A course in feminist dance theory or gender studies should cost at least $500,000, possibly more.

      That and there should be NO student loans allowed for those useless degrees. Most of those degrees are only good for jobs as college professors, except they hand out 100 times as many of those degrees as there are positions for college professors!

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    159. Re:No by Crazy+Taco · · Score: 1

      It wasn't that long ago that nobody needed a professional degree, even for a lot of occupations we would assume were necessary.

      College degrees still ought not to be necessary, but the problem is that our public schools have so dumbed down what is expected of high schoolers, and so many schools are failing, that the high school diploma tells you nothing about the student anymore. And there are other problems. My sister is a high school teacher and she's constantly getting yelled at by parents because she gives kids the grade they deserve rather than the high grade parents think their special snowflake should get. She doesn't willingly change any grades, but has been forced by the administration to do so before, and other teachers are also more willing to change grades. And if you think parents are unwilling to accept low grades, just imagine how unwilling they are to accept kids being held back or not graduating. That no longer happens at all. Kids don't get held back, and they are basically guaranteed to graduate at age 18 regardless of performance or achievement.

      In the face of all that, a high school degree has become fairly meaningless. You have no idea if the GPA was earned or modified, you have no idea if they learned anything, or even if they truly met the requirements to graduate. In my opinion that's why a college degree is now required for jobs that don't need it: employers still trust that if you fail in college you will generally be kicked out, whereas an 18 year old at a sixth grade reading and math level will probably still graduate from many of our public schools.

      In short, this is another reason NOT to have free college for all, because for most it will become a free four years of partying away from mom and dad, and will probably get just as dumbed as well once it starts being routine for all as high school is today. Then we'll all have to get masters or PhDs to do the things a high school degree once sufficed for.

      --
      Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it.
    160. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Score: 5, Insightful? Really, Slashdot?

    161. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm open to the idea of free bachelors degrees but with a very important stipulation: Only for those with top grades and tests.

      For everybody else, we could offer vocational ed, or (perish the thought) we could actually make a high school diploma worth something again. My father didn't get a HS diploma until after WW2 when the Navy assisted him getting a GED. That generation wasn't held back by the lack of a BS but get this--he read Shakespeare in the 8th grade.

      Of course none of this will happen for a variety of reasons. No free BS because "OMG socialism". No weeding out those who aren't that great because "OMG, my kid is great". No putting young people to work because college in the US has become a huge diversion program for excess workers. Cheer up, debtors. At least you're not in prison, which is also a huge diversion program for excess workers.

      Maybe some college educated person will come up with a real solution to this problem; but most of the people coming out with a bachelor's aren't that bright. It's just the new HS diploma.

    162. Re: No by Jack_the_Tripper · · Score: 1

      Not educating them means they will be a drag on the rest of society, a notion that has never entered the head of a libertarian or conservative Republican.

      So all those people who do the things you don't want to do because you would rather pay someone to do it for you (or don't actually know how to do it yourself) so you can use your time in a more 'valuable' manner are a drag on society?
      Umm...something about comparative advantage and a rising tide lifting all boats would seem to apply here methinks.

    163. Re:No by swb · · Score: 1

      College degrees still ought not to be necessary, but the problem is that our public schools have so dumbed down what is expected of high schoolers, and so many schools are failing, that the high school diploma tells you nothing about the student anymore.

      I agree. Every so often the local newspaper runs some kind of nostalgia piece and reprints essays written 75-100 years ago. Often these were essays written by 7th or 8th graders and they are better writing than I see most adults produce. Kids in those same grades (and I have one..) can't write nearly that well these days, and I think the educational system is responsible for it.

      I'm not always sure it's a pure *quality* issue, though. I think a lot of it is dilution -- just too many subjects being covered and many of them entirely superfluous, often filled with PC indoctrination and busywork.

    164. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I've chosen not to have kids

      On behalf of the world, Thank You!

      If you stick with it, you'll have done the future a great service.

    165. Re:No by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      ... there's a strong argument to be made that government-provided health care is the problem.

      No, actually what those numbers tell you is that older people need more medical care than young people. When you actually look at the efficiency of Medicare, they spend less money on administration than private insurers and have lower reimbursement percentages (about 80% of what private insurance pays).

      If anybody is contributing to the high cost of health care, it is private insurance. By having multiple insurance companies that each have to negotiate independently, there's a bigger tendency for the cost of service to go up to the maximum that the insurance providers are willing to pay.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    166. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I was in grad school, the highest grade you could get on a paper was a equivalent to a 'B'. You had to apply for an 'A', which required that you get another instructor to agree that your work was worthy of the higher grade.

    167. Re:No by twotacocombo · · Score: 1

      Starting salaries for college grads may be higher, but what is the average starting salary for someone fresh out of school, with no prior work history? "College grad" is a large, vague group of people that includes new graduates all the way up to (and beyond?) retirement age. How many of these fresh grads are severely underemployed for the first few years after they get their degree, and don't actually start making a decent amount until later? I bet you can walk into any Starbucks, throw a stick, and hit someone with a degree. I actually work with a person right now who is finishing up a masters, but can't get a job in their field and worked at Starbucks prior to joining up with us doing gopher work.

      My situation was not a tragedy, nor extreme. I started work right out of high school, and spent the next 8 years realizing I didn't what to do what I was doing anymore. It gave me the motivation to do well in school, and gave me a goal. I also didn't know what I wanted to do as a career until I knew what I didn't want to do. It was tiring, with long nights, but I had fun and it felt like an accomplishment to pull it off with a 4.0gpa. I believe everyone should work while they go to school. Colleges can't teach you how to function within a business organization. They don't teach you people skills, office politics, what not to say to the boss even when he's wrong, how to make your measly paycheck last until the next one and beyond, etc. Living in the bubble that is college, and then being thrown to the wolves as soon as you're done, has got to be a terrifying experience. It benefited me greatly to experience all the crap that goes along with employment in a job that I was all to happy to be leaving.

      College education is hugely important for living well in this day and age. Asking adults to start working to pay for their college is a great lesson in life: nothing is actually free. You set them up with a 4 year 'free' ride, then expect them to be instantly successful living in this big scary world afterwards is just setting them up for failure, especially since they're leaving the gates with a massive debt load. If you want to make an argument, it should be 'college should be cheaper', which I won't disagree with. "College should be 'free', except not really and by the way good luck kid" is not a great system for positive outcome.

    168. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks buddy. And again, sorry about that mouth comment, I'm trying to get help.

    169. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was the most common argument i saw for Obamacare. Unfortunately, it's wrong. Before Obamacare was passed, the U.S. already spent just about as much government money ("public expenditure") as percent of GDP and per capita as Canada did on its single payer system. Since Obamacare, it's actually gotten worse, with the U.S. government now spending 25% more per capita on health care than Canada.

      Your fallacious reasoning is apparent. It's ok, as a Conservative, you are innately inclined to lie. Even if your base numbers are correct, you will interpret them for your own fraudulent purposes.

      Here's what you are ignoring: the total amount of per capita healthcare spending, that is what matters, not the amount covered by government increasing. That was going to happen inevitably when you increased the numbers of patients covered. Some 5-10 million directly was the anticipated amount, but I am not sure of the actual numbers due to state's refusing to expand Medicaid.

      Not that you've sourced your numbers.

      And of course, costs have always been increasing lately, thanks to an aging population and inflation. It's the change in rate that matters, unless you want something draconian.

      The reason for the high health care costs in the U.S. isn't because of lack of government provided health care as the socialists want to think it is. In fact, given that medicare ("public expenditure") recipients are only 17% of the population but account for roughly half of the U.S. health care costs, there's a strong argument to be made that government-provided health care is the problem.

      And here Solandri decides to let people die, even though Medicare is highly rated for its efficiency and effectiveness and even though it is actually a good thing, you want to argue for their deaths.

      The draconian solution is apparently what you want. Go go Logan! Run!

    170. Re: No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they are too stupid to not learn anything it's their own fault. And they will get dwindled out of thier minimum wage by interest only house and car loans or some other scams. Stupid people are poor. Period. This is because they don't know how to hold onto the money, they always look for a rich get rich quick scheme, and they don't know how to make money like the rest of us do

    171. Re:No by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      Um..someone has to pay for it. That's not the question being asked anyway..

    172. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't have a job yet (that's why they go to college)

      *This* is the problem IMHO. Why are students subsidising industry training costs? Actually... thinking about it... $60K over 45 years of employment is just over $1300. Just saying, "If you want to hire a university grad, you pay $1300 a year for an education levy" sounds like just the thing. It's a completely reasonable fee for an employer. It should also provide a much needed counter push for useless education. Right now employers are demanding degrees -- any degree -- so that you can work in a mindless, grind-a-day job. How many people would be *much* better off skipping college (because they are only interested in a job, not an education) and getting the job they want?

    173. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would someone want to migrate to the US?

    174. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that the only reason Europe is able to provide free college is that they do not spend on a military and the only reason they can get away with theat is that the US provides the military as part of NATO.

      European countries generally do have a military and while it could be improved, those are generally sufficient to meet their needs. Tax money is better spent on education than on maintaining an oversized military.

      If US stopped dropping freedom all over the world Europe would have to build its own military and could no longer provide free college

      The U.S. dropping their 'freedom' all over the world is the primary reason their allies need a military. The world would be a much better place if the US would focus a bit more on actual freedom for its citizens and a bit less on fostering terrorism around the globe.

    175. Re:No by Timothy2.0 · · Score: 1

      Well, even in places where higher education is "free", it's *never* free. Taxpayers pay. As such, taxpayers need to know the cost of the things they're paying for, and people going to school ought to be getting the most bang for that buck.

      So, in countries with "free" education, do the universities bill the government a flat rate for each program, or do those costs vary depending on the cost of the major?

      Also, why not boost those programs for which there's an economic need? Need electricians and welders? Promote that. Anything not that gets to pay. As the economy shifts year after year, the needs change, the focus changes, the funding changes. Wouldn't it be far more efficient to bolster the needs of society first *then* the wants second?

      More importantly, can we start promoting the idea that people don't *need* a college or university degree for about 75% of the jobs in the economy? Given that most jobs in the developed world require little more than basic education (assembly line work, most service industries, etc.), the idea is ingrained in peoples' minds that they need these skills, when the reality couldn't be further from the truth.

    176. Re:No by The+Real+Dr+John · · Score: 1

      Education isn't just about getting a job, I recall something about democracy requiring an informed public, and that won't happen if people just watch the news.

      --
      A brain is a terrible thing to waste... Mind? That's debatable.
    177. Re:No by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      Averages are kind of pointless here... Most college grads today are getting jobs that don't require a college education. The only reason that high school grads aren't getting these higher paying jobs is because the market is saturated with bachelors degrees. Just because Starbucks pays better than McDonalds doesn't mean it requires a degree. Starbucks can just hire people with a bachelors instead of a HS diploma because they can.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    178. Re:No by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      SO MUCH THIS. Get over yourselves college students. Get a job. College isn't the drunken partyfest that liberal Hollywood tells you it is. It's not 4 years to discover your passions. It's 4 years to work your ass off to make your life better. I graduated with an engineering degree from a private college in 7 semesters taking up to 22 credit hours a semester while working 4 nights a week tutoring and co-oping the off semesters. I then got a job and was able to pay off loans in less than 5 years.

      What's your excuse?

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    179. Re:No by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      I don't know why college loans aren't vetted... Why do they not evaluate the grade history of an individual, the major they want to go in to, and the earning potential of that major? Interest rates should be much higher for degrees less likely to pay off. Oh wait, interest rates are set by the government at a stupid rate and everyone can get a loan regardless of any data on how they might get to pay it back. Oh and you get the loans without collateral!

      Why don't we just drop the loan bullshit and call them grants with an optional tax that might go back into funding more grants.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    180. Re:No by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      It's generally the educated and employed criminals that really steal your stuff. They are also unlikely to pay anything more than a token penalty and definitely not jail when caught.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    181. Re:No by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Not sure what state you live in, but based on these numbers the highest cost state is New Hampshire with a rate of $15K for each year at a 4 years institution. The US average was $9650. So if you saved $73K based on the median family income of $50K, you would easily have education paid for. For those who don't make as much, you could do your first two years at a community college to save money and then transfer your courses to a 4 year university. I hear this is a great way to save on the costs of education.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    182. Re:No by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      Community college and state colleges should be free, like it is in civilized countries.

      In Quebec, Canada, the community colleges are free, and offer grade 12 and grade 13. Grade 13 is really 1st year univerity (some minor student fees like accident insurance $200, student organizations, etc). The student has to pay for books and for use of chemistry/physics/agriculture/other facilities.

      He can be in college, until he has completed the first year of university or the preparation for a trade.

      University is about four hundred per course (5 courses per semester). Aside from housing expense, student fees (insurance, etc), A student can get a university bachelor degree in three years at roughly $12,000 cost. Many students earn their university expenses while they attend.

      Residents of Quebec have "medicare", our government health insurance. Fees are based on your income taxes. And here, if you do not have a prescription plan, your are obliged to use the government plan. There is a $3000/yr cap on prescribed drug/medication expenses.

      Yes, we are spoiled, and yes, we get to choose our doctors and our hospitals and our drug stores

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    183. Re:No by ghoul · · Score: 1

      College is free in Europe because they are not spending money on their military and are instead being protected by the US military. If the US reduces its military spending it could afford free college. At the same time Europe woul have to increase its military spending and could no longer afford free college. its not about being civilized/uncivilized, its about being militarist/pacifist. The US has been fighting wars from the time of its creation. You are not going to change the militarist nature of USA in a generation.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    184. Re:No by valnar · · Score: 1

      Administrative costs are rising because of the number of superfluous positions being created in our PC world. Directors of Multiculturalism, LGBT, Race, Gender etc. Everybody needs a Director of something. Everybody feels slighted for some reason and needs a counselor to talk to.

    185. Re:No by IcyWolfy · · Score: 1

      Every deduction on your income tax is a government subsidy. (They really should be renamed from "Deduction" to "Government Subsidy"

      Do you have a mortage? That income tax deduction should really be renamed: "I can't afford my mortgage government subsidy".
      Capital Losses? "I gambled on the stock market and lost government subsidy"
      Business Expenses? "My business isn't profitable government subsidy."

    186. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely! Also, it is counterproductive to channel students who have less capability to pay tuition (for whatever reason) into "cheap-to-teach" humanities courses.

    187. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Instead, there should be a unified effort into creating online courses that teach all the general courses and all the common majors. Then those online courses should be free.

      If you want to attend a physical brick & mortar campus, it shouldn't be free.

    188. Re:No by sdinfoserv · · Score: 1

      "administration" was figured into the cost per credit hour fee structure just as it is today
      Today instead of 4-10 people to process a University payroll, today everyone enters time cards on a website leaving 1 PR clerk.. Also when I was in college class scheduling was mostly manual. Instructors sat at tables in a massive stadium - you went from table to table for the classes you wanted - trying to get past hundreds /thousands of others doing the same - and hoped like hell the roster wasn't filled or try to arase kiss your way into the class. That's all gone now with automated scheduling - aka less cost.
      Education budgeting doesn't work the way you suggested. It's a much higher level. All they (conservative state representatives) look it is "the State is paying X millions to education and our State budget is upside down. Cut education by 20%!:" Then the Regents decide what to cut and where to load the difference - which ultimately is increasing the credit per hour frees.

    189. Re:No by sdinfoserv · · Score: 1

      That's called "Victim Mentality"... Everyone is victim of something or someone. We've stopped being able to solve problems because we can no longer define problems. The definitions "offend" someone so we need to squander precious resources and time over what the terminology should be.

    190. Re:No by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Per the NATO agreement, participating nations are expected to spend 2% of GDP on defense.

      Of the European participants, only the UK does.

      In 1946 it made sense for the USA to pay to defend western Europe. Much of it being having been recently bombed. But now?

      European countries that complain of American influence should take the opportunity to step up.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    191. Re:No by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      In American grad schools, in your subject matter, a B is a C and a C is an F.

      A couple of Cs will find you bouncing out the door and down the stairs of the administration building.

      Grad students should get mostly As in subject. The lower performers aren't there anymore.

      Ivy leagues justify their own grade inflation in undergrad similarly. Which makes it even more amazing that Bush and Gore both graduated Ivy leagues with shit (basically the same) GPA. Those were called 'Gentleman's Cs' (nowadays Gentleman's Bs).

      If you ever see a 3.0 student from Harvard/Yale/Brown, don't hire the lazy moron.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    192. Re:No by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Ask them, based on the numbers, it won't be hard to find one.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    193. Re:No by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      'Animal House'

      They usually last about a year before their parents say 'get a job'. A few have really dumb parents and last longer.

      The worst pick a college (cough, Chico State) where this is expected and they can get passing grades while drunk and/or stoned. For the dumbest of these, the college is private and costs north of $50k/year (cough Evergreen, Dartmouth). Which doesn't even start on those majors with no academic rigor...sadly 'education' is right at the top of that list.

      'Gap year parties' would actually be good for most of these kids.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    194. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing is free, bitch ... you pay for it or I do. And figure what you really want cost twice what you really need.

    195. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is one of the problems I have with you conservatives. You had it rough, you had it difficult, you had to suck dick to get ahead, whatever so that means everyone after you BETTER BE taking a cock in the mouth or they're whiny ass liberals cucks. You do this all the while spouting off your feel good proverbs about "making the world a better place" and "making my child's life better than mine was". Insisting everyone suffer because you suffered is not only the hallmark ideal of conservatism, but it clearly is polar opposite to your stated goals. The excuse of "we've always done it this way so it must be right" is just that- and excuse to pass the responsibility off to someone else. You didn't come up with this shitty idea- God did!

      You used to have to hand crank your car to start it. You did remove all electric starters from your modern cars, right? If hand cranking was good enough for the inventor, Henry Fucking Ford, then it better be good enough for you, by gawd. If he wanted electric start, he'd have put it on there. We need to stop interpreting the wishes of the founding Engineers and Make Cars Great Again! Hand cranks for all! No seat belts! Fuck your fuel injection. Carbs or die bitch! My pappy used a carb, his pappy used a carb, and by gawd, me and mine are gunna use a carb and the rest can burn in hell, the infidels they are. Phantom5 uses a carb, why don't you?

    196. Re:No by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yeah whiner, when was the last time you helped out a homeless person?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    197. Re:No by Zak3056 · · Score: 1

      I said the "administrative class" and I meant it. Yes, the cost of everything you've named has gone down shockingly as a result of automation. However, those costs have been replaced by even more expensive things. Payroll clerks have been replaced by things like "Title IX administrators" and not on a one for one basis--there are MORE of these people than there were payroll clerks.

      NY Times Op-Ed piece on the subject contains this gem:

      By contrast, a major factor driving increasing costs is the constant expansion of university administration. According to the Department of Education data, administrative positions at colleges and universities grew by 60 percent between 1993 and 2009, which Bloomberg reported was 10 times the rate of growth of tenured faculty positions.

      Even more strikingly, an analysis by a professor at California Polytechnic University, Pomona, found that, while the total number of full-time faculty members in the C.S.U. system grew from 11,614 to 12,019 between 1975 and 2008, the total number of administrators grew from 3,800 to 12,183 — a 221 percent increase.

      So in the period where we've seen massive improvements in administrative automation (as you yourself note) we've decreased the ratio of professions to admin bodies from around 3:1 to 1:1. Is it any wonder that educational costs are out of control?

      --
      What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
  2. Include all costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the university has any research, the overhead from funded research will help offset the cost of undergraduate education, as well as graduate.

    Then, there's the costs of athletic programs, Don't forget that, and assign it to the right departments...

    1. Re:Include all costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "the overhead from funded research"...

      Ok, CSB time here - I bring in research funds. The "overhead" is actually what pays for the facilities I work in, the admin assistants, IT workers etc that keep our stuff running. It doesn't contribute a dime towards anything outside of research, nor should it. Funding for most research is on razor-thin margins as it is - I have to account for every penny in my budget, and we scrape by (as we should, wringing every ounce of research we can get out of the money). If anything, universities use income from teaching to pay for research, not the other way around. This has a payoff as front-line research attracts more students.

      TL;DR version: Research funds are desperately lacking, no way are we letting any of them go to teaching.

    2. Re:Include all costs by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      If the university has any research, the overhead from funded research will help offset the cost of undergraduate education, as well as graduate.

      Why would a university do this instead of using those funds to do more research? This suggestion makes no sense.

    3. Re:Include all costs by MrLogic17 · · Score: 2

      >Then, there's the costs of athletic programs,

      For college, athletics should be an entirely separate organization. They should have to pay for the rights to use the school's name, and otherwise be self-supporting. With all of the ticket sales, merchandizing, tie-ins to professional sports, etc - that should make it a profit center. Athletic scholarships should likewise be paid from the athletic organization, paid directly to the student as an offset to normal college costs. Nets the same to the scholarship'ed student, and prevents the masses of non-jocks from having to pay for that new stadium.

    4. Re:Include all costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This is a myth (at least at most universities). The "overhead" pays for the buildings, infrastructure, maintenance, power, library, computing, laboratory equipment, and other things necessary for the research. Also it's frequently cut back as part of "cost sharing" on a proposal, sometimes yielding no overhead at all. The only way research funds impact the cost of undergraduate programs is from what is called "release time" which is research funds being used to buy part of a faculty members time for that project; those funds are typically then used to pay for somebody less expensive, e.g. a graduate student, to teach a course.

    5. Re:Include all costs by chihowa · · Score: 1

      You must be the only person in the world who thinks that the indirects siphoned off by the university are actually being well spent. From my perspective, it's almost entirely wasted on administrative bloat.

      You can get a better idea of the real costs of overhead by renting lab space from the university's incubator, even after you account for any subsidies that they put toward them. (I mean, just look at the fact that indirects are taken as a fixed percentage of the the total money brought in. How would that work to cover the fixed costs of facilities and admin, which don't directly scale with the dollar amount of research funding?)

      Now the funds that actually get to go toward the research, sure... that's lacking.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    6. Re:Include all costs by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      >Then, there's the costs of athletic programs,

      For college, athletics should be an entirely separate organization. They should have to pay for the rights to use the school's name, and otherwise be self-supporting. With all of the ticket sales, merchandizing, tie-ins to professional sports, etc - that should make it a profit center. Athletic scholarships should likewise be paid from the athletic organization, paid directly to the student as an offset to normal college costs. Nets the same to the scholarship'ed student, and prevents the masses of non-jocks from having to pay for that new stadium.

      In some schools they are. At Ohio State for example, the athletic department is separate from the university from a fiscal standpoint, makes a profit and returns money to the school that funds scholarships for all students; beyond what pays for student athlete's scholarships, most of whom only receive a portion of their tuition as a scholarship, not a full ride. Unfortunately, many schools do not make a profit from the athletic department. Sports do, however, tie alumni to schools and result in donations, sometimes significant ones, so there is a financial impact beyond the actual department budget. For example, at many schools a donation of a certain size ensure you get football tickets, and the more you give the better the seats.

      Th real question is at what point do you stop subsidizing activities that only a few students may use? Many school fund student organizations and you can make the same argument that why should all the non-engineers pay for engineering organizations? Should that brand new engineering lab be paid for only from money the College of Engineering generates or is it ok that theater students pay a part of it via their tuition; and thus engineering students pay for the new theatre as well? If a college can't generate enough grants to run a lab should the lab be shut down or subsidized by the school?

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    7. Re:Include all costs by Improv · · Score: 1

      Your perspective is ignorant then. I spent 10 years working for a university in research, and the administrative overhead was necessary if you wanted to let professors spend any actual time on research. If you imagine removing all the same administrative overheard from a University as from a large business, either would grind to a halt.

      --
      For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
    8. Re:Include all costs by TheSunborn · · Score: 1

      They do it, because they think education is important, but often not funded enough.

      So they move money from "other areas" to Education.

    9. Re:Include all costs by gwolf · · Score: 1

      I work at UNAM, the largest university in Mexico (public, of course), and among the largest in the world. Our university does have some athletic "brands" that produce quite a bit of money (as thet "Pumas" soccer team, among the country leaders, selling a lot of merchandise and tickets and whatnot). However, how can you recoup the investment on lesser-known athletic activities? There are not many sponsors for them. Few people practice the disciplines, and the university provides trainers and fields. But that's part of the social mission of a university.
      Mexico has quite a bit of history of world-known champions of different disciplines that come from quite poor backgrounds. Were it not for the money invested by universities such as ours (that, yes, are funded by taxes that everybody in the country pays), they would have never participated in the sports events that qualified them to improve and excel.

    10. Re:Include all costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the university has any research, the overhead from funded research will help offset the cost of undergraduate education, as well as graduate.

      You are funny. These funds go to more important things: admin overhead and sponsoring the football team.

    11. Re:Include all costs by galabar · · Score: 1

      I guess you would bill the cost of athletics to the courses and degrees that athletes mostly take? So, probably not engineering and hard sciences.

    12. Re:Include all costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the university has any research, the overhead from funded research will help offset the cost of undergraduate education, as well as graduate.

      Why would a university do this instead of using those funds to do more research? This suggestion makes no sense.

      This is what actually happens at research universities now. The university takes overhead (typically 50%!) from research grants to run the departments.

    13. Re:Include all costs by chihowa · · Score: 1

      My perspective is ignorant of what? The value that all of the (multiple!) Vice Chancellors of Diversity, each with their own offices full of support staff, or the university's huge marketing department, or the entire building that's just devoted to executive suites and HR personnel, or... bring to my research? I pay my own salary, the salary of my postdocs, and buy all of my equipment and supplies from the half of my grants that's left after indirects are taken by the university. If I bring in twice as much money and don't take up any more space or electricity, they'll take twice as much also and deliver exactly what they were delivering before.

      Indirects as a percentage of grant income only encourage waste and administrative bloat. Administrators are necessary, but only to a point. If your perspective is that there is no such thing as administrative bloat and that hiring more administrators always adds more value to researchers, then you're going to have to make a better argument than a vague appeal to your own authority on the matter.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    14. Re:Include all costs by Improv · · Score: 1

      There is an "ability-to-pay" thing here that figures into how the overhead is essentially a flat tax. Unless you'd want a university where only big grant-givers can do any research at all, you're going to have a tax structure like this.

      And what few universities actually have people devoted to diversity, there usually are only a few of them and they're cheap, because they're mostly there for show and everybody knows it. The other things you mention, when not overblown, actually help the university. Bloat is possible and there is no general solution to it, but this is just as true in the private sector, or basically anywhere humans need to organise and deal with limited funds and interdepartmental needs.

      --
      For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
    15. Re:Include all costs by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      This is what actually happens at research universities now.

      Not at the one where I work but that's not in the US and the research overhead is way less than 50% and paid out of channel by direct payments from the grant agency to the institute.

  3. Engineering degrees already cost more. by gweeks · · Score: 5, Interesting

    They already charge more for Engineering degrees. It's called "lab fees" rather than tuition. Another good one is "Engineering major surcharge" that I had to pay.

    1. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I was working on EE I got to pay an "expensive course fee" for most of my classes. So yeah, I think at least EEs already pay more at some schools.

    2. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Luthair · · Score: 2

      I always wondered about library costs, STEM at least at the undergraduate level doesn't actually need one.

    3. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by quantumghost · · Score: 1

      I'd also be interested to see how much is contributed back by alum from each major. I'm sure that the liberal arts major who job is to ask "You want fries with that?" will give back a lot less than the engineer pulling 120k while designing chips.

    4. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not all universities have lab fees.

    5. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also an engineering degree requires more credits than other bachelors degrees so you're paying for extra required courses as well.

    6. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      It's normal in other countries that charge too. In the UK the tuition fees are set per course and the university can decide how much they want to charge. There is a cap but it's very high.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    7. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by nedlohs · · Score: 2

      How can you miss the opportunity to use the the "chips" instead of "fries" and be english for a minute there?

    8. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by ray-auch · · Score: 1

      I always wondered about library costs, STEM at least at the undergraduate level doesn't actually need one.

      True, you can get all the research papers you need online these days, just log in with your uni id to get access. If you've ever wondered why it costs $$$ to get the same papers when you're out of university, well the STEM journal publishers give all university students free access, obviously...

    9. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by ray-auch · · Score: 1

      If you think the cap is high, just look at what they charge overseas students (and yes, STEM courses are much higher)

      http://www.undergraduate.study...

    10. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      I'd also be interested to see how much is contributed back by alum from each major. I'm sure that the liberal arts major who job is to ask "You want fries with that?" will give back a lot less than the engineer pulling 120k while designing chips.

      True, but the accounting partner with a business degree, making over a million a year, may give back more than the poor engineer making a mere $120K. Engineers make good money but they plateau after a while unless they move beyond engineering, at that point they need more skills than what is taught as an engineer. Many of my coworkers are recovering engineers, as am I, who left engineering for more lucrative pursuits.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    11. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Joe+Haskins · · Score: 1

      I'll second that. The school I attended found all kinds of creative fees and surcharges. There were lab fees and possibly some form of flat-rate surcharge each semester for being an engineering major. Then, for a lot of the major-related courses there was the per-credit-hour "upper level engineering premium". So while my "tuition" may have been the same as liberal arts major, I'm fairly certain that I was paying more.

    12. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by DickBreath · · Score: 1

      How about charging INVERSELY to the usefulness to society. Degrees that benefit society cost less. Useless degrees cost more. Degrees that are a drain on society cost the most.

      Would that encourage more graduates in useful fields like STEM, and fewer in less useful fields like management, or useless fields like middle management and marketing? We need some people in these fields, but fewer of them, and only the best of them should get it.

      Those who can, do.
      Those who can't, teach.
      Those who can't teach, administrate.
      Those who can't administrate, go to private industry in marketing or management.
      Those who can't make it in the private sector get a government job.
      Those who can't make it in a government job (almost unthinkable) run for political office.
      Those who can't make it as a politician become a lobbyist or work in a think tank.
      And if you can't even succeed at that, then what?

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    13. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      journal publishers give all university students free access, obviously...

      If by "free" you mean "the university pays for access to these and provides it to all students and staff as a 'perk' of being a student/employee," then yes, you're absolutely correct.

      Those databases most certainly are NOT free.

    14. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, you can get all the research papers you need online these days, just log in with your uni id to get access. If you've ever wondered why it costs $$$ to get the same papers when you're out of university, well the STEM journal publishers give all university students free access, obviously...

      This access isn't free, by a long shot. Paying the scientific publishers for online access is what a LOT of those library fees end up going to pay. Getting rid of these questionably valuable and needlessly greedy organizations would go a long way to reducing the cost of doing and disseminating science research.

    15. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by ghoul · · Score: 1

      You are doing the mistake of comparing the top 1% of Accounting majors with the average engineers. Why dont you compare with the top 1% of Engineering majors (5 of the richest 10 men in the world are Engineering majors) Most Engineers may make 120K but most Accounting majors dont make even that.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    16. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The STEM journal publishers do not give the students free access. The university pays for that access. The costs for those journal subscriptions come out of your library's budget.

    17. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by budgenator · · Score: 1

      I took a college course that was 8 Credit hours, they tacked on 24 contact hours and cut back over-time for the employees we were basically working beside.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    18. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      You are doing the mistake of comparing the top 1% of Accounting majors with the average engineers. Why dont you compare with the top 1% of Engineering majors (5 of the richest 10 men in the world are Engineering majors) Most Engineers may make 120K but most Accounting majors dont make even that.

      True, not all accountants become a partner in the Big 4. However, if you look at mid career salaries engineers go from 90 to 180k (I should have been a petroleum engineer); an accounting manager can hit over 4100K and senior managers around $200K. It all depends on the type of engineer or accountant you are and where yo work. A civil might make $90K and a EE(% per BLS. My point is that many non-science majors can make as much as science majors, and the top end of their careers can be much higher than someone who remains an engineer. Engineering is not a bad place to start but plateaus after a while. As one fellow engineer put it: "I was in a meeting with a bunch of old guys wearing white socks, short sleeve shirts with pocket protectors and I decided I needed to get out of engineering."

      Interestingly enough, if you look at Forbes's top 10, you have 4 engineers with actual degrees (2 Kochs, Bezos, and Slim) or 5 depending on the list (Bloomberg), a business major, several dropouts and / or never attended college. Engineering's not a bad starting point but not necessarily the best end point.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    19. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by DickBreath · · Score: 1

      The purpose for lab fees is to recover costs when everyone signs up for the lab but nobody signs up for the lecture. Example: sex education 101.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    20. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by ghoul · · Score: 1

      Typical Petroleum Engineer Expat Salary in Azerbaijan for British Petroleum- Mid Level 35 year old guy

      20K a month salary (Tax free)
      A 5 bedroom Villa paid by company (15K a month market value)
      Full International School education for 3 kids (40K each)
      Full Medical including flying out to Dubai for vaccinations (Easily 60-100K value)
      Car (Land Rover) &Driver (60000 Dollar/yr value)
      2 home trips a year in Business class for full family (40K value)
      Tax Preparation help (10 K value)

      Add that up its over 900K tax free and thats for an European Expat- Americans make even more.

      Petroleum Engineers do make their nut.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    21. Re:Engineering degrees already cost more. by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Yup. To bad they don't build nuke power plants...

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  4. Not all colleges! by bluegutang · · Score: 1, Interesting

    This is just one data point - the University of Florida system. It says nothing about how much education costs at other colleges/universities.

    Logically, education cost should be highly correlated to class size. Does UoF have smaller engineering than English classes by chance? That would explain the difference. But at the university I went to, English classes were the small and labor-intensive ones.

    1. Re:Not all colleges! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to go there and no they don't have smaller engineering classes than English classes not by a long shot.

    2. Re:Not all colleges! by Notabadguy · · Score: 2

      Your English classes were labor-intensive - and I also saw a basket-weaving class working particularly hard and dextrously.

      I'm sure the industriousness of all participants in their respective English and basket-weaving will weigh in during their job-search to offset the fact that they pursued those majors.

    3. Re:Not all colleges! by ghoul · · Score: 1

      A rickshawwalla pulling a rickshaw in Calcutta probably works harder than Bill Gates. Hard work is not that important - the output is more important.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
  5. They already do by damn_registrars · · Score: 4, Informative

    When I finished my undergrad years ago I paid lab costs and other associated costs for the courses in my major that people who primarily took lecture-only courses did not have to pay.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  6. Strange by radl33t · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, but how much are they enabled by non-tuition revenue? Engineering departments can pull in massive public and private research funding compared to English departments. The overhead rate at my alma matter was ~50%, straight into University coffers, "to keep the lights on." Despite the high salaries of some accomplished professors, our department was pulling in millions annually for the school that went to all sorts of education expenses (building, IT, classrooms, and of course, most of the high-flying salaries). Our department received high dollar alumni gifts that I doubt flood all departments equally.

    1. Re:Strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ^^ This. Professors who earn high salaries do so because they bring in significant grant money. I know the public wants to believe that the engineering professor teaches 1 class a week using notes from 1975 and earns three times what the English professor, on the cutting edge of knowledge and feelings, writing a very important novel that will change the world, makes. But the truth is that the engineering professor has $2M in grants and half goes to the university; he covers every penny of us $200k salary.

      It's about as merit based as you can get. In private companies, the value of an employee is impossible to determine. But in science and engineering academia, we know exactly how much a professor is worth because we know exactly how much grant money the university gets because of him. Many of these professors cover their own salaries five times over; the slackers at least cover their own compensation. That makes them profit centers to the university, since the tuition money they get from the students they teach isn't coming with any actual labor costs.

    2. Re:Strange by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Most universities have entire development departments dedicated to bringing in grant money and funding from other outside sources. Those folks get paid a lot less than a $200k/year tenured professor. It would be a lot less expensive for them to do the legwork so that the $200k/year profs can actually do what they were hired to do—teach.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    3. Re:Strange by radl33t · · Score: 1

      I have no experience with that... It is somewhat unfathomable that the PI is not directly responsible for funding applications on any of the several federal and state agencies that have funded research I am familiar with

  7. Increase the price for non-performing majors by CajunArson · · Score: 0

    College majors that don't result in productive graduates need to cost more not less. Do we really need more business majors floating around because it was cheaper?

    --
    AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.
    1. Re:Increase the price for non-performing majors by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      Do we really need more business majors floating around because it was cheaper?

      What's wrong with business majors? A solid background in business can help your career in the long run.

    2. Re:Increase the price for non-performing majors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Business majors like econ majors are in this weird in between area where they get just a little math in their coursework so you cant call them wholly retarded but its basically 1 calc class (maybe 2 if it's a good enough university to mandate multivariate calc), 1 stats class, and 1 class on regression analysis/econometrics and maybe like 1 class in CS where they learn VB or something dumb like that. They generally retain none of it except the econometrics bits which they will need in their future jobs as spreadsheet monkeys at finance or consulting cos.

      Liberal arts grads get 1 math class in their entire 4 years of college and never even take stats or learn regression analysis so those people are just hopeless. They generally will get out of taking calculus altogether and instead take something easy like linear algebra to knock off their math requirement.

      I went to school in Russia. By our standards your liberal arts graduates have an 8th grade education since linear algebra is taught in 8th grade. They would not finish high school in Russia with so little math. They basically are not even high school graduates.

    3. Re:Increase the price for non-performing majors by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      Liberal arts grads get 1 math class in their entire 4 years of college and never even take stats or learn regression analysis so those people are just hopeless.

      I must have done it wrong when I got my General Ed A.A. degree. I took a ton of business, lit and math courses (including intro calculus). Then again, I wasn't focused on a major because I didn't know what I wanted to do. That came a decade later when I went back to school to get my Computer Programming A.S. degree.

      They generally retain none of it except the econometrics bits which they will need in their future jobs as spreadsheet monkeys at finance or consulting cos.

      I work in IT support. My number one tool is the spreadsheet. The funny thing is I never learned how to use a spreadsheet at college. I had to teach myself how to become a spreadsheet monkey.

    4. Re:Increase the price for non-performing majors by ghoul · · Score: 1

      Because Business cant be taught. It has to be learnt by working as a businessman. Any mom and pop restaurant owner knows more about business than a business major.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    5. Re:Increase the price for non-performing majors by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      Because Business cant be taught.

      Someone should tell the business schools that.

      It has to be learnt by working as a businessman.

      Just like everything else in life.

      Any mom and pop restaurant owner knows more about business than a business major.

      I worked for business owner who ran the business the same way his father and grandfather ran the business. One day he learned that he could reduce his liabilities and taxes by incorporating his small business. If he had gone to school and learned about business, he could have incorporated the business earlier and saved himself a significant amount of money. Alas, that change came late in life and the business ended with the third generation as his son was a drug addict.

    6. Re:Increase the price for non-performing majors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is why most small businesses fail. They try to learn by doing instead of already knowing it.

  8. But... by dbialac · · Score: 2, Insightful

    People in technical majors are going to be subsidizing liberal arts majors the rest of their lives, why not let them subsidize technical majors while they're in college?

    1. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sure, but without movies and music and websites created by liberal arts majors, there's no need for 95% of electrical engineers anymore.

    2. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You.. you don't know what electrical engineers do, do you?

    3. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would appreciate this if 95% of the liberal arts majors (that I know) didn't end up working in some totally unrelated field. Many more end up working at Olive Garden then producing art or content of any sort.

    4. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      People in technical majors are going to be subsidizing liberal arts majors the rest of their lives. Why not let (the people in liberal arts majors) subsidize (people in) technical majors while they're in college?

      Nice run-on sentence there. Also, the subject of that second part/sentence is a little unclear. Perhaps you should brush up on your communications skills. That would be a Liberal Art though, wouldn't it. Sorry. My bad.

    5. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I guess... but the highest paid people at any company sure weren't technical majors.

  9. "Should" implies a moral judgement by MightyYar · · Score: 2

    The word "should" in the headline seems to imply a moral judgement. I don't see a moral case here - the different colleges are free to try different pricing schemes and see what the market bears. If the market isn't healthy enough to pick and choose winners, then lets concentrate on fixing the market.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    1. Re:"Should" implies a moral judgement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >concentrate on fixing the market.
      the market is fundamentally broken. the classic definitions in economic theory assume an infinite market with perfect information for all actors.

    2. Re:"Should" implies a moral judgement by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      OK, but we have many non-theoretical markets that do a pretty good job at being efficient. I've heard some pretty good arguments about some industries, like health care, where it is claimed that it will never resemble a free market and so we should control supply and costs differently. I might buy that, but not for colleges.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    3. Re:"Should" implies a moral judgement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This will mean that people in lower classes will never be able to afford college. Companies need higher educated people, it is part of the infrastructure of a country.

    4. Re: "Should" implies a moral judgement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah like cars or houses, only rich people can afford them

    5. Re:"Should" implies a moral judgement by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I'm legitimately interested in how you think improving the efficiency of a market would hurt the poor. Just kind of guide me there.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    6. Re:"Should" implies a moral judgement by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Except for things like the Monty Hall problem where people "should" switch their choice.

      Language is hard.

    7. Re:"Should" implies a moral judgement by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      While that's true, the summary makes it sound as if this is a moral rather than a simple economic choice. I could be misreading it, because as you say language is hard. But I think I have the context correct.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    8. Re:"Should" implies a moral judgement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OMG. The free market is not the solution to everything. If it were, we wouldn't be here bitching about this stuff. You're as delusional as the libtards you rail against.

    9. Re:"Should" implies a moral judgement by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what your proposal is. If you want efficiency - that is, people getting as much as possible for a given price and simultaneously providers getting as much as possible for a given product - then it's hard to beat a free market. Sometimes, like in healthcare, it is difficult or impossible to set up the conditions for an efficient free market. Sometimes the wild swings that free markets tend to have are unacceptable, as in food prices, so we moderate the market - accepting the decline in efficiency. As long as you have people choosing colleges and colleges choosing students and charging arbitrary amounts for tuition, you have a market - whether you like to call it that or not. I'm suggesting that we change the conditions of that market if we aren't happy with the current results - I said nothing of making it a "free" market. If you don't like to talk about markets, we can frame the discussion in terms of incentives instead.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  10. Sure, but take it to its logical conclusion by DeplorableCodeMonkey · · Score: 0

    English, in most cases, falls under an umbrella of majors that can be politely called "Barista Studies." Outside of college, it will be the engineers shouldering a disproportionate percentage (relative to majors in Barista Studies) of the tax burden to support, among other things, the university system. Now you want us to not only pay our way more, but pay more and more taxes to subsidize your Barista Studies degree? I don't think so. This isn't Animal Farm, and we sure as Hell won't play the role of Boxer.

  11. They could, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Free market economics. If someone wants to pay a college 60k for a English degree, let them. If the demand isn't there, don't offer it.
    Other considerations - School's reputation in that field, technology /equipment requirements, going rate for professors, administrative overhead, general trends in fields.

  12. Apparently the authors never heard of lab fees by Scareduck · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    How much in lab fees does a typical liberal arts major pay for?

    --

    Dog is my co-pilot.

    1. Re:Apparently the authors never heard of lab fees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you talking about fine arts I guarantee much more money is spent on supplies for their assignments then these lab fees everyone keeps going on and on about. They are *nothing* compared to how much it costs to actually be competitive in a fine arts field where they assume you have your own money to finance the biggest, fanciest art project. If you don't spend then you aren't competing with the other people that do.

    2. Re:Apparently the authors never heard of lab fees by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      I paid $10 per semester for two bags of recycled clay when I took ceramics on Saturdays for three semesters. Of course, that was for fun and out of my own pocket. Meanwhile, a $3,000 tax credit that George W. signed into law after 9/11 paid for computer programming A.S. degree.

    3. Re:Apparently the authors never heard of lab fees by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      If you talking about fine arts I guarantee much more money is spent on supplies for their assignments then these lab fees everyone keeps going on and on about.

      When I took ceramics for three semesters, everyone paid $10 per semester for two bags of recycled clay. One student was a fine arts major who bought his own porcelain clay ($25 per bag) to make two-foot-tall vases. He probably went through two or three bags per week. His vases went for $75 each at the student art show every semester, and several vases were donated to the campus art gallery.

  13. Majority of college cost is not for education by jfdavis668 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Long ago, college dorms were more like Army barracks. Now they are private apartments. Food was served in a cafeteria, and you ate what they had today. Now they are more like food courts, and require far more staff. Students expect this kind of service, and if a school doesn't upgrade, they lose students to schools that do. It's overhead that has risen the cost of education, not the cost of professors. The difference in equipment and classrooms between engineering and liberal arts is small compared to the school environment costs.

    1. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Long ago, college dorms were more like Army barracks. Now they are private apartments. Food was served in a cafeteria, and you ate what they had today. Now they are more like food courts, and require far more staff. Students expect this kind of service, and if a school doesn't upgrade, they lose students to schools that do. It's overhead that has risen the cost of education, not the cost of professors. The difference in equipment and classrooms between engineering and liberal arts is small compared to the school environment costs.

      I went to the University of Michigan, and while the cafeterias are pretty good, they are just cafeterias. And, students who get a meal plan commit paying $10-13 per meal 9-20 times a week whether they eat that meal or not. I am sure this is similar at many large institutions. Tuition does not cover meal plans. Those are separate.

    2. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by Salgak1 · · Score: 1

      No kidding. My dorm. for my first three years, was small and tight, with no choice whatsoever of furniture: it was a fitted compartment for two people. Built-in pull-out bed (de-facto sofa by day), set of drawers with mirror, built-in U-desk with two positions and fixed lights.

      Looked at the same dorms now: the desks are gone, the beds are mobile, and you can get a single (it was only doubles in my day. . .)

      Likewise, the cafeteria now offers Vegan, Gluten-Free, International, Kosher, and Halal as everyday menus. Back in the day, only Kosher was available, and that for an extra fee. And I was told is was even WORSE than the regular cafeteria fare of "lump" (sort of hamburger loaves), "scab" (fried breaded veal patties) and "worms" (the vaguely pasta in a vaguely tomato sauce. . .). . .

    3. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're charging premium prices, why shouldn't your punters expect premium services?
      I went to an "Army barracks" university, but I didn't pay that much for it - so I was happy. If I knew I was going to be in debt for most of my adult life, I think I would have expected more...

    4. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by jeff4747 · · Score: 2

      And there is a separate room and board charge for those dorms and cafeteria. This article is about tuition.

      It's overhead that has risen the cost of education, not the cost of professors

      It's primarily
      1) Sports - the "famous" football and basketball teams have coaches and staff paid in the millions/year. Even with teams that are not "top tier", the coaches are paid extremely well. http://deadspin.com/infographi...

      2) Administrators - University administrators are now being paid several times what top professors get. University President/Chancellor/whatever you want to call it is now a six-figure job, instead of a $250k/year job. Deans and other administrators are also getting paid much more than they used to be. Universities have also hired many more professional staff instead of hiring students to push paper around campus.

    5. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Long ago, college dorms were more like Army barracks. Now they are private apartments. Food was served in a cafeteria, and you ate what they had today. Now they are more like food courts, and require far more staff. Students expect this kind of service, and if a school doesn't upgrade, they lose students to schools that do. It's overhead that has risen the cost of education, not the cost of professors. The difference in equipment and classrooms between engineering and liberal arts is small compared to the school environment costs.

      My college went the opposite way. My freshman year, each dorm had its own kitchen but then as a cost cutting measure they removed those and went to a few centralized cafeterias that could serve more students. Likewise on the rooms they had once upon a time been nice and roomy but as the population increased what had been a comfortable double became a very crowded triplet. I've also seen few students pick a college based on the cafeteria.

    6. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Meant to type "seven figure job" instead of "six figure job".

    7. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by dj245 · · Score: 1

      Long ago, college dorms were more like Army barracks. Now they are private apartments. Food was served in a cafeteria, and you ate what they had today. Now they are more like food courts, and require far more staff. Students expect this kind of service, and if a school doesn't upgrade, they lose students to schools that do. It's overhead that has risen the cost of education, not the cost of professors. The difference in equipment and classrooms between engineering and liberal arts is small compared to the school environment costs.

      This is still the case at some schools. You just have to choose based on $/educational benefit. This criteria is not considered by most high school students.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    8. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by Woldscum · · Score: 1

      Please at least do SOME research. The Huge schools with huge expenses make huge money. LSU football for example pays the short fall for ALL other sports. Covers its own expenses 100% AND gives 4 to 7 million to the general fund.

      http://businessofcollegesports...

    9. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Long ago, college dorms were more like Army barracks. Now they are private apartments.

      The Army does it

    10. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      My dorm room had 2 "movable" beds, 2 desks, 2 chests of drawers, a sink with a mirror above it and a small closet. By movable I mean you could disassemble them move the parts around and put them back together in another location. The most efficient arrangement we came up with was to loft both beds with one on each side of the room on either side of the window, put a sofa under one, the 2 chests of drawers under the other so you could put a TV on top of them. Then you put your desk between your bed and either the sink or closet. Under the window between the beds there was just enough space for a mini fridge. The rooms were the standard poured concrete walls and were in the 10'x10' or 12'x12' size range. The only way you ended up with only one person in the room was if you were the one guy or girl who there just wasn't someone to put in your room or if you roommate dropped out and left it vacant for the rest of the semester but even then if there are people in overflow they would move them in as spots became available.

      Sounds like your food was a similar fare to what was offered when I was there. Every thing was over cooked and mostly under spiced and over salted, unless it was crusted in rosemary in which case it was drowned in it. I still can't stand rosemary to this day. The salad bar was the only respite from overly dry food.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    11. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Must be nice to get a dorm.
      Meanwhile I had to pay every cent of rent myself.
      Same for food. (in fact the shitty food at uni was more expensive than homemade food)

    12. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 2

      Please at least do SOME research.

      OK, let's do SOME research, shall we?

      The Huge schools with huge expenses make huge money.

      Only a small minority of them. How about we listen to the NCAA, who probably knows more about college sports (and is an advocate for them) than just about any organization. Here's what they say.

      Only 24 FBS schools generated more revenue than they spent in 2014, according to the NCAA Revenues and Expenses of Division I Intercollegiate Athletics Programs Report. That figure jumped from 20 schools in 2013, but it has remained relatively consistent through the past decade.

      [...] Those 24 schools, at the median, generated about $6 million in net revenue. [...] But those 24 schools are a minority. Many more schools saw their expenses exceed their revenue, requiring their colleges and universities to cover the shortfall. The median FBS school spent $14.7 million to help subsidize its athletics department in 2014, up from a little more than $11 million in 2013. That level of spending isnâ(TM)t unique to FBS schools â" median Football Championship Subdivision and non-football schools spent roughly $11 million to help fund athletics in 2014.

      In other words, out of the 128 FBS schools, around 15-20% actually have profitable athletic departments. Overall among Division I schools, athletic departments tend to run a median deficit of $11 million each year.

      LSU football for example pays the short fall for ALL other sports.

      Yes, in a small minority of programs this is true. Football and sometimes a couple other sports (notably basketball) are frequently somewhat profitable alone in big schools, but athletic departments in general lose money for universities. That's a simple fact.

      And it's worse if you look at schools over time. Each year some percentage of schools are profitable, but a report that looked at these schools over a 5-year span found only SEVEN schools that were profitable in the longer term.

      And it's getting worse over time. If you read the detailed NCAA report in the link above, you'll find interesting facts like how median generated revenues have increased by 94% since 2004, but total expenses have increased by 121% since 2004.

      Basically, college sports have a sort of "arms race" going on. They are increasing expenditures like mad because all schools are, which results in some additional intake in revenue, but the revenue at the vast majority of schools does not keep up. in many states, the highest-paid state employees are college football coaches and assistant coaches, much higher than any politician or any other university official.

    13. Re:Majority of college cost is not for education by rkinch · · Score: 1

      Long ago, college dorms were more like Army barracks.

      They still have those. They're called fraternities. Well, minus the hygiene, discipline, and charm of the US Army.

  14. Sure, if your citizenship rights and privs are bas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I could sign off on charging by major if your rights and privs in society are in turn based on the value of what you produce for society.

  15. Quatify the cost means Itemizing expence by Tempest451 · · Score: 1

    If you want to set a value of a particular degree compared to another, be prepared to establish standards of pricing for everything needed to provide that degree. If we don't have a comprehensive understanding of the cost of education, we get what we have in healthcare where no one knew what their treatment cost until they bought it.

    1. Re:Quatify the cost means Itemizing expence by godrik · · Score: 1

      In practice you often already have an classified expense report because each college and each department typically have its own budget. Expenses are most of the time already classified as full time salaries, assistantship, equipment, ... And they are often already tagged as research expense, educational expense, building maintenance, etc. because different sources of money can only pay for some type of expenses.

      So my guess is that every university has a pretty good idea of the real cost of having students in different majors.
      Though the funding comes from many sources as well. For instance in state schools, professors salary are paid by the state, and not out of tuition. TA positions are typically paid out of tuition. Building can sometimes be paid out of state money, tuition, or even alumni donations depending on the building. Many uncommon hard to classify expenses are often paid out of the overhead charged by the university on federal grants. The accounting of a university is fairly complicated.

  16. Flip that around. . . by Salgak1 · · Score: 1

    . . . . since most students are paying for college via Student Loans, why not link the interest rate and terms on the loan, to the risk of it not being paid back ?? I suspect there would be far fewer students studying for jobs that simply don't exist.

    i.e. Want to study South American Feminist Literature ? Rate on the loan is 21%, No unemployment deferments. Et cetera. Want to do purely academic studies ? Get a scholarship, or pay for it yourself. And on the flip side, very nice terms for areas where we have a shortage of trained personnel. This goes for trade schools as well: we really DO need more welders and machinists, but the classes are half-full. . .

    1. Re:Flip that around. . . by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      This goes for trade schools as well: we really DO need more welders and machinists, but the classes are half-full. . .

      Who was telling you those lies. Every high school teacher and guidance counselor says you will never get ahead if you don't go to a real university and get a 4 year degree. I mean who would want to go to the local Vo-Tech and take a 2 year program and exit it being a journeyman machinists and get paid $150,000+ a year starting likely with multiple job offers as that is just a myth. Same thing with other skilled trades, there is no money in them or jobs to be had. Or that is what all the kids hear when they are in high school.

      Sadly that isn't far from how things are in schools, I remember hearing that in the 90s when I was in high school and I doubt it has changed. I run into a lot of smug people who think that they are better than those who have that training. I then like to trot my neighbors as examples, one is a master mechanic and he is making close to $200k a year, another one is semi retired general contractor who will do emergency plumbing repair on Sunday at hourly rates that rival those of a decent lawyer. As the general contractor one is self employed he gets to keep what he charges. Then there is my brother in-law who does restaurant equipment repair who pulls in well of $100k a year as well. I keep telling my kids that once they are done with high school they will need some sort of additional training be it getting an apprenticeship, going to Vo-Tech, going to a trade school, or going and getting a college degree because just having a high school diploma is only good for wiping your ass with now.

      --
      Time to offend someone
  17. Maybe but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm fine with this so long as people understand that the value of free degrees will likely fall. That is, your probability of having it be a useful component of your job search will drop.

    This has already happened in many professions as people who your for profits and online only colleges have discovered.

  18. Educate an engineer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What for? EE is a dead-end profession.

    1. Re:Educate an engineer? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      That must be true. The EE's that I know are in IT, still paying off their student debts, and resentful towards people with less education but more certifications getting promoted above them. A bitter lot.

    2. Re:Educate an engineer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If these EEs were as smart as they like to believe, they'd have done some checking first:

      http://www.computerworld.com/article/3017196/it-careers/u-s-predicts-zero-job-growth-for-electronics-engineers.html

      Oops.

    3. Re:Educate an engineer? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      If these EEs were as smart as they like to believe, they'd have done some checking first:

      The EE's I know graduated 20+ years ago. Ironically, I stopped taking electronic courses in college about the same time. That's when it became obvious that consumer electronics went from being repairable to disposable.

  19. Education should be free by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There should be exactly one deciding factor dictating whether or not you can get a degree: Your brain.

    Most European countries follow that idea. My university gets stormed with new students every September and their solution was quite simple: Radical testing. 3 semesters in about 10-20% of the students remain and most of them actually finish.

    If you got a LOT of people wanting a degree and you're not dependent on them paying you, you can test brutally to eliminate anyone who isn't willing to put in time and effort above and beyond anyone else, and what you get in the end, holding a degree, IS the best you could possibly get. Everyone who isn't perished.

    Who said that "free" cannot end up in ruthless competition that makes any cold blooded capitalist beg for mercy?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Education should be free by Major+Blud · · Score: 3, Informative

      My university gets stormed with new students every September and their solution was quite simple: Radical testing.

      If the States tried that, I'd expect mass lawsuits from inner-city students who fail the test and don't get accepted because of "discrimination".

      --
      If you post as Anonymous Coward, don't expect a reply.
    2. Re:Education should be free by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      Yes, tests discriminate against dimwits.

      But there's a way for them to get degrees. Stuff a thermometer right up your ass, and you'll get almost 100.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Education should be free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If that happens when you are still able to move a thermometer yourself, it is seriously broken. Body temperatures above 43 degrees are almost always fatal.

    4. Re:Education should be free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my humble opinion education should be education not a ruthless competition to the bloody death. Unless, that is, you are learning to be a Colosseum warrior.

    5. Re:Education should be free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that would be immediately shot down in the U.S. as racism.

    6. Re:Education should be free by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      Correct we want the "good" part without the bad cost savings etc. When they hear little Timmy is an idiot they will sue and sue and sue.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    7. Re:Education should be free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you got a LOT of people wanting a degree and you're not dependent on them paying you, you can test brutally to eliminate anyone who isn't willing to put in time and effort above and beyond anyone else, and what you get in the end, holding a degree, IS the best you could possibly get. Everyone who isn't perished.

      This sounds like a way to increase the perceived value of the degree issued without actually increasing services provided to students.

      Who said that "free" cannot end up in ruthless competition that makes any cold blooded capitalist beg for mercy?

      Yeah, it sounds like you feel you're getting ripped off, and that the liberals lied to you. Free college was supposed to make the best use of our fleshy capital, whether to increase their contribution to GDP or to civilization and art or to governance. Instead it's biased toward neurotypicals, and leaves behind the special-snowflake geniuses that thrive in small American liberal arts colleges.

      Is it still true you can take as long as you want to graduate? You have to pay some modest "long-time fees," but you can take five, eight, nine, years, then you declare yourself "Ready," pass one gigantic final exam where five professors sit in stools and grill you, and then you receive the equivalent of Bachelors and Masters degree in one go?

    8. Re:Education should be free by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      This gets to the heart of the issue we have in the states - people want the absolute best of what they *think* Europe has in their "socialist" countries. They think "free college" really means "free college for anybody who wants to show up for however long they want to be there", which is nothing like what Europe has.

      I'm actually all for actual free education like Europe has, but the left would go nuts (okay, that horse left the barn a couple of months ago) if they realized how few people get to go to college, and how few "women's studies" and such courses were available.

    9. Re:Education should be free by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      Didn't you hear? Meritocracy is simply camouflaged racism.

      http://www.salon.com/2015/08/0...

      --
      -Styopa
    10. Re:Education should be free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no such thing as free education. There is only changing who pays for it.

    11. Re:Education should be free by Altus · · Score: 1

      There will still be private universities for those who desire it... and the costs would have to come down since they would be competing wtih highly competitive super low cost state schools.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    12. Re:Education should be free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      competition is unfair for whatever reason, Everyone deserves a prize,

    13. Re:Education should be free by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      We're measuring US dimwits here, they should understand what they're measuring.

      Plus the "IQ lower than your body temperature" joke works better that way.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    14. Re:Education should be free by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      No problem. You can stay as long as you like.

      But for a degree, you have to work. It ain't free.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    15. Re:Education should be free by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      If you claim that it's racist to require smarts to get a degree, you're racist. You're essentially saying that a group of people is intrinsically stupid due to their genetic makeup.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    16. Re:Education should be free by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Sue over what? It's not the university's fault that your little precious is dumb as a doorknob.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    17. Re:Education should be free by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Wrong assumption. Universities here don't provide a service to students, they provide a service to the state. They produce people trained well in their field of studies. This may be you, and you may actually benefit from it, but in the end, it doesn't matter in the least, neither to university nor state, whether it's you or the next guy.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    18. Re:Education should be free by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Where's the racism if getting in requires nothing and getting a degree requires brains?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    19. Re:Education should be free by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Who let the pinko commie in? That's commie talk. Making everyone equal.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    20. Re:Education should be free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that's the athletic program...

    21. Re:Education should be free by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      It's the US bad stats like see kids from impoverished neighborhoods are underrepresented much be racists policies not that their local school are not preparing them for college. People will with a straight face tell you math tests a racially biased. Our current system has massive false equalities to soothe people's perceived inequalities. Or chances of having free college on merit alone are pretty slim. Lets not even start on kids moving out of school far earlier than the end of HS via shifting to trade school programs.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    22. Re:Education should be free by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      The difference is mainly that you pay after you get the degree instead of having to front it. That not only takes the risk off your shoulders (i.e. the risk of having to quit before you get the degree for whatever reason), it also eases the burden. It's way easier for me to now pay the few hundred bucks a month in taxes than it would have been to pay them out of the, well, nothing I had back when I was a student.

      In other words, paying 500 a month now is peanuts to me. Paying 500 a month back when I was a student would have meant deciding whether I want to eat or have a place to stay.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  20. Administrative costs by alexo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    (including professor salaries, facilities fees, administrative costs)

    Maybe it's time to take a good, hard look at those. Especially the "administrative costs".

    1. Re:Administrative costs by Luthair · · Score: 1

      I'd be more curious about the facilities fees. In CS at least its not like 20-years ago when the majority students needed a computer. We really don't need anything beyond the classroom compared to arts degrees which need a library.

      Maybe some physical engineering or science programs need actual tools and materials but math and comp degrees do not.

    2. Re:Administrative costs by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      No can do. Universities NEED these administrators. Regulations have piled on and on, and any university found not in compliance is subject to huge penalties. The administrators won't go away until the regulations do. And that ain't gonna happen.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    3. Re:Administrative costs by phorm · · Score: 1

      A lot of the overhead is also in the shitty systems they use. Just like government agencies, it seems that a lot of them are stuck in archaic and/or specialised systems. When they finally do upgrade, it's a debacle with cost-overruns and screw-ups, which inevitably seems to end up in some other proprietary and soon once-again obsolete system.

    4. Re:Administrative costs by tepples · · Score: 1

      In CS at least its not like 20-years ago when the majority students needed a computer.

      A freshman coming in with only a smartphone and perhaps an iPad or a Chromebook isn't going to be in much of a position to run GCC or the compiler for whatever language colleges are using for introduction to programming nowadays. Or what am I missing?

    5. Re:Administrative costs by chihowa · · Score: 1

      Regulations may be the excuse, but the reason administrators proliferate is because there's money available for them to suck from the institution. This happens to all institutions as they age, even corporations with their bloat of middle management, massive HR departments and such. Administrators hire administrators, who then hire more administrators, ad nauseam. They don't interact with anybody who actually does reasonably productive work, so they don't really have any metric to compare their own work (or the work of their assistant's assistant's assistant's assistant) to.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
  21. You mean "forced to pay, whether you attend or not by raymorris · · Score: 1

    Professors don't work for free. Heat and air conditioning aren't free. Network admins and admissions staff don't work for free. There are three options:

    A) Enslave professors, network admins, etc, to reduce costs.
    B) Those who get the education pay for what they get.
    C) Force everyone to pay for it, whether they go to school or not.

    Currently we have a mix of (b) and (c) - people who go to school pay (back) some of the cost. People who can't amd don't go to school for whatever reason are forced to pay some of the cost also.

    You are advocating (c), force everyone to pay for college, whether or not they attend. Those who actually benefit from getting a college education pay no more than the single dad with two young kids who can't go to university, because he's busy working and taking care of his kids. There is no "free". There's only "if you want it, buy it" and "I'm self-entitled and lazy, make raymorris get a *third* job and pay for my school."

  22. I say go for it, increasing exclusivity by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 1

    is a feature, not a bug. We have too many CS graduates from mediocre schools as it is.

    Still, though, I'm surprised we were weren't already subsidizing feminist basket weaving.

    It seems kind of absurd, given that schools already give things away to the people who add value to the school. It is the STEM majors that add value to the school. So will they do away with scholarships, too? I doubt it.

    1. Re:I say go for it, increasing exclusivity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True. I heard someone called 0xdeadbeef who posts on Slashdot is a mediocre CS graduate from a mediocre school.

  23. Zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I paid Zero since I live in Sweden

    1. Re:Zero by MrLogic17 · · Score: 1

      Oh, you did pay for it. And you'll be paying for it the rest of your life.
      What's your tax rate again?

  24. College could be cheaper to produce by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    College used to be a lot cheaper, and it's not just because of reduced state subsidies. Compared to public schools, class sizes can be bigger, more work outside of class can be expected, and the teacher, or University, can kick out anyone for minor reasons. Me thinks Universities have become too bloated, especially with College Sports.

    1. Re:College could be cheaper to produce by Improv · · Score: 1

      I think College Sports, while not particularly on-topic for education and damaging to how colleges evaluate students, often end up bringing more money into Universities than they cost. If we're focused on saving money, they're not a good thing to imagine cutting.

      --
      For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
    2. Re:College could be cheaper to produce by RabidTimmy · · Score: 1

      Not quite true, only about 20 university sports programs pay for themselves. The remaining 200 programs are subsidized by general revenue. In general, the smaller the school, the larger the subsidy. http://www.usatoday.com/story/... (poorly paywalled)

    3. Re:College could be cheaper to produce by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is objectively not true, it is estimated only 7 athletic programs at public universities break even year over year:
      http://www.acenet.edu/news-room/Pages/Myth-College-Sports-Are-a-Cash-Cow2.aspx

    4. Re:College could be cheaper to produce by Improv · · Score: 1

      Fair. And if they don't pay for themselves, I'd be cool with them going away.

      --
      For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
    5. Re:College could be cheaper to produce by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Statistical bullshit. Big money sports (football, basketball) make money, but the other programs (swimming, soccer, field hockey) suck in down.

      Someone will have to pay for the pools, if the football program stops.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  25. If it's a for profit college by nedlohs · · Score: 1

    Then the costs of providing tuition will impact the cost to students, though it won't be the only factor and is unlikely to be one of the major factors aside from providing a floor to the price in most cases.

    If it is not a for profit college then the relative prices of courses should just be reflecting whatever the goal of that non-profit is.

  26. What is this "free" you speak of? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Do you REALLY think an education is "free"?

    At what point does a person become responsible for themselves? 13 years of education isn't enough?

    1. Re:What is this "free" you speak of? by MrLogic17 · · Score: 1

      Best comment on this post.

      Perhaps there should be a mandatory high school class covering how much college costs, the actual cost when interest and minimum payments are made, and average earning potential of various degrees (gender studies vs engineering, for example). And a little education on how permanent student loan debt is would be nice too: it survives bankruptcy, and is near impossible to get "forgiven" with processes politicians keep talking about.

      A lot like the "truth in lending disclosure" you get with mortgages. A little sticker shock might be the fix many folks need.

    2. Re:What is this "free" you speak of? by cdrudge · · Score: 1

      At what point does a person become responsible for themselves?

      The rest of their lives when they pay back into a system that educated them for ~13+ years.

    3. Re:What is this "free" you speak of? by Crazy+Taco · · Score: 1

      Perhaps there should be a mandatory high school class covering how much college costs, the actual cost when interest and minimum payments are made, and average earning potential of various degrees (gender studies vs engineering, for example). And a little education on how permanent student loan debt is would be nice too: it survives bankruptcy, and is near impossible to get "forgiven" with processes politicians keep talking about.

      I completely agree, but it should be combined into a class that also teaches Dave Ramsey's Financial Peace University program. So many of our debt and financial problems would go away overnight if everyone had to take just a one semester course teaching those two items.

      --
      Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it.
  27. Subsidize via Taxes by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not only should the costs be the same but the article nicely explains why: those getting science, engineering etc. degrees generally earn more and so will pay more tax. This extra tax should be more than enough to offset the cost of their education and is also a good way to justify why higher salaries should attract a higher rate of tax.

    1. Re:Subsidize via Taxes by dffuller · · Score: 1

      But we're not talking about taxes here, we're talking about tuition. Your argument may make somewhat more sense at a public school, but doesn't really work when looking at private schools.

    2. Re:Subsidize via Taxes by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      The flip side of course is you reduce access to less expensive degrees. Which might economically bar some folks from university entirely.

      I would say private schools ought to do whatever they want. Lots of business cross subsidize product lines. One point of university is to produce students with a well rounded education. Even physics students ought have an intro to philosophy, but you probably can't have a really good philosophy professor unless you have some students dedicated to the study. People change majors or to double major, its nice to be at an institution where you have somewhere to go if you decided to do that. I know a guy who did double major in physics and art history. So the universities ability to provide two robust departments that could deliver quality education experiences was of value.

      Universities are not the only 'businesses' to cross subside product lines. It often makes sense to sell the razor at loss so you can sell the customer blades every month for a decade. 'Selling' your degree in micro chemistry below cost might mean you generate some folks who will become captains of industry and raise the profile of your institution making all sorts of other people want to earn degrees of all kinds from your school.

      On the other hand higher base prices for the lest costly degrees might turn some students away, possibly even very well qualified students in terms of academic achievement who you might really want to attend. Lower prices might attract some folks. When it comes to State and Community schools you might allow more marginal students to attend with less financial risk. Lets face it failing to complete an undergrad degree in lots of cases is basically a total loss. It does not thing to increase your employable and if all you took was remedial classes before you washed out you might not have really learned anything you can use.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    3. Re:Subsidize via Taxes by TheReaperD · · Score: 2

      Private schools can choose to set tuition however they want, that's one of the perks of being private. But, if you receive public funds, aka tax money, tuition should be fair to all students, not how much some administrator can gouge out of you. I agree with some of the other posters, that if you're a US citizen then a US college education should be free as it is likely that all citizens with benefit from your education. Society receives a huge benefit from public K-12 schools and if there's a benefit to college education, then it should be included as well. (Yes, I'm aware that not all public education is created equal and that there are problems with it, but that is another topic. The general statement still applies.)

      --
      "Be particularly skeptical when presented with evidence confirming what you already believe." -
    4. Re:Subsidize via Taxes by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      Your argument may make somewhat more sense at a public school, but doesn't really work when looking at private schools.

      We are not talking schools here but universities which are almost always strongly reliant of government funding for student education. All we are talking about here is increasing the government subsidy and reducing the student component of tuition.

    5. Re:Subsidize via Taxes by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      But we're not talking about taxes here, we're talking about tuition. Your argument may make somewhat more sense at a public school, but doesn't really work when looking at private schools.

      Who cares about private universities? They either adapt to a low tuition environment by accepting state funding to provided subsidized positions or they somehow persuade people to pay ten times the tuition cost. At least in the UK there only is one private university I'm aware of and it doesn't exactly have a brilliant reputation and I believe the same is true in Canada. Private universities usually do not get good students because they can only take students from the subset of the population rich enough to afford the tuition rather than take the smartest students out there regardless of background.

    6. Re:Subsidize via Taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with your line of thought is a common one these days. The US is the "United States". Public colleges and universities are run at the state level. You talk about the problem as if it's a federal issue. You've moved the issue from private / public to one of state / federal. Like pushing a rope, it doesn't matter how much you believe you're right, you'll never accomplish any change that way.

      Go complain about the public universities in your own state if you want to change anything.

    7. Re: Subsidize via Taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. It sounds like there needs to be more competition.

    8. Re:Subsidize via Taxes by minstrelmike · · Score: 1

      I completely disagree. If we're talking about economics, the universites pay engineering profs more than lit profs already. They know what the difference in value of degrees is. They ought to let the naive 18-year-olds also know it.

      The cost of providing the service ought to show up in the service. Student loans for a medical or Stem degree are often worth it, but the same exact amount of money loaned for a philosophy degree, not worth it.

    9. Re:Subsidize via Taxes by TheReaperD · · Score: 1

      Though the individual states may manage the colleges, the education funding is federal which is why the federal government is allowed to set admission and education standards for public schools and state colleges. The states may add on additional requirements as long as they don't conflict with the federal requirements. If you want the money, you have to follow the federal rules. So, though you're technically right, in practice, you're wrong. As the old sayings go: "Follow the money" and "he, who has the gold, makes the rules."

      --
      "Be particularly skeptical when presented with evidence confirming what you already believe." -
    10. Re:Subsidize via Taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you talking about universities or K-12 education? Because you seem to be mixing them up. What aspect of federal funding are you talking about?

      Federal funding for higher education is mostly through research grants and student loans (e.g., Pell). States fund their own institutions. And if you think that all states are the same, look at what Wisconsin is doing... the horror.

  28. Heh by JWW · · Score: 2

    If they did this then there would be free college for anyone getting any type of social justice "studies" degree....

  29. Yes by Murdoch5 · · Score: 0

    If you choose to take a real degree, you should pay more. Engineering degrees cost more then gender studies / feminist degrees because you have to hire specialists and under go hours and hours of lab times, equipment time and consume, generally, resources.

    Gender Studies / Feminism degrees just involved saying "patriarchy" over and over and mis-defining sexism and objectification.

    1. Re:Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Engineering degrees cost more then gender studies"

      *THAN*, not "then". You'd think someone as smart as an engineer wouldn't be tripped up by grade school level spelling.

      IF ... THEN

      GREATER THAN, LESS THAN.

      Get it?

  30. Look at McGill's tuition "menu." They already do! by mcpublic · · Score: 1

    This might be a new idea in the U.S., but at one of Canada's premier colleges, this is already old hat. Go look at McGill University's "menu" of tuition fees. You'll see that they charge radically lower rates to the art student, English major, or nursing student compared to the computer scientist or pre-med. I hadn't thought of the costs of running these programs, but up in Montreal they almost certainly did. What seemed striking to me is how compassionate this policy is for the student. Is it coincidental that these Canadian tuition rates happen to be scaled to the earning potential of the graduate? So no more crazy high debt for your "B.A. in Barista." But for super in-demand and high-paid software engineers? Sure, they think you can afford to pay off those big loans. Oh, but wait... if you are a Quebec resident, your tuition will be so low that you won't need any big loans! 20/20 hindsight: if only we had moved to Canada, my wife and teenagers would have been way less stressed.

  31. The question is premature. by hey! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The first thing you have to establish is what is the basis you want to judge by: The good of society? The good of the students? The good of the faculty or the administration? The good of human knowledge as a whole? These all lead to fundamentally different ways of evaluating the question.

    I should point out that not every institution of higher learning has the same purpose. A for-profit institution like University of Phoenix exists to turn its proprietors a buck. The very reason for an academic department to exist is to be a profit center, and if it can't pull its weight, either due insufficient pull (Classics) or excessive weight (engineering), it doesn't have a right to exist. At the opposite end of the spectrum are Jesuit colleges which exist to glorify God by cultivating each individual student's God-given talents.

    I see no intrinsic need for all majors to cost the same. But the whether it's a good idea depends on your mission, your strategy for accomplishing it, and the resources at your disposal. It may well come down to what you can afford to do.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    1. Re:The question is premature. by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      "A for-profit institution like University of Phoenix exists to turn its proprietors a buck."

      You're telling me every university isn't like that? Why do the state universities charge MORE ?

    2. Re:The question is premature. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The first thing you have to establish is what is the basis you want to judge by...

      There is only one: what the market will bear.

    3. Re:The question is premature. by hey! · · Score: 1

      Yes. For one thing, non-profit universities don't have proprietors to retain earnings. The ultimate management authority in any corporation is the board, and the boards of non-profit universities are unpaid.

      That doesn't mean money isn't important. It's very important.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    4. Re:The question is premature. by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      I hear that isn't true for public universities ... but interesting. I learned something.

      Thanks !

  32. High school should be harder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    College should be harder. So should high school. I think there should be 3 types of classes: honors, regulars, and inferior. The names might need to be changed. Inferior should be subdivided into 'disruptive' students, and nondisruptive students. Nondisruptive Inferior will include the less intelligent, and the lazy.

    1. Re:High school should be harder by Altus · · Score: 1

      I don't know where you went to high school but we have 4 levels. Remedial, Normal, Honors and Accelerated. Accelerated was taking a class, generally with students your age, but the stuff you would be learning would be for a full grade up. Not every class had Accelerated for every subject as I recall but it was the path to taking AP exams.

      Places with lower populations have trouble managing so many classes per grade though, there just aren't enough students to break them up.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    2. Re:High school should be harder by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      A few random things...

      Skipping grades is no substitute for providing properly matched education for a group of students. It's not the higher grade they are looking for it's the greater depth, the faster pace they can handle, at some schools all that the premature grade promotion means is that the student winds up skipping some content (in the grade they were promoted over) or runs out of high school math classes before 12th grade

      For a grade school with fewer students, I have never understood why a math teacher could not split a class into two groups and informally just push one group a little harder, give them more challenging work. The idea is to give each student equal time and attention, with all the modern aids available in the classroom I don't see why that has to mean equal assignments for each student, even the textbooks I see have "challenge" questions in them, I'd like to see more of that.

      On the subject of who pays for college, I see proposals each year that graduates should pay more if they earn more. That's fine to an extent and I'm sure they already do to an extent. But to push that so far that effectively only Engineers and Scientists are expected to pay to get everyone through their liberal arts degrees is an over-reach and will lead to that group calling the shots, a degree of control I'm sure the other faculties won't want to relinquish

      I studied engineering and typically my classes had hundreds of students in them, even if there were more classroom hours and more expensive professors (I have no idea) that's a lot of students to dilute that cost in. I'd like to see a better breakdown of the figures before I declared that colleges had significantly higher costs to create an engineer than a fine artist, there are all sorts of ways to allocate overheads of one sort or another to one program or another to make a point.

      As I'm not one of them, I think football players that received scholarships and subsequently made it big should pay for it all

      --
      Nullius in verba
    3. Re:High school should be harder by Altus · · Score: 1

      keep in mind, Accelerated was not skipping a grade, it was learning a year ahead of your peers and it only applied to a single class. You could be in Accelerated math but a normal level english class.... This was particularly nice because it let you get ahead at the things you were good at while not punishing you for not being exceptional at everything.

      You could try to divide up classes at schools that have fewer students but the fact of the matter is you are not going to serve either group as well as you can when you have enough students to really sort them out by ability. Different schools of different sizes do different things. Its not perfect but we don't live in a perfect world. Many rural areas use area high schools to get around this, combining the students from several towns to get enough to be able to split them up for advanced and remedial classes.

      I agree with you on the college thing... it would be awful if someone who could be an excellent engineer studied something that they were not as skilled because they couldn't afford the engineering degree.

      I disagree with you on Football scholarships mostly because schools that give those out end up making more money per athlete on the games (which are attended by a ton of people who all buy tickets and concessions and then there are the TV rights as well, even video game rights where the students appearances are used with no compensation to them, only the school). Those kids play hard for no money while the school makes a ton off of them. Its a good deal for the schools as it is.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    4. Re:High school should be harder by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 1

      Perhaps athletic scholarships should be outcome-based. The jocks who don't succeed and don't end up with megabucks to pay a bunch of money back to the college they 'attended' (ahem) should become indentured for life to the grounds crew.

    5. Re:High school should be harder by parkinglot777 · · Score: 1

      I disagree with you on Football scholarships mostly because schools that give those out end up making more money per athlete on the games (which are attended by a ton of people who all buy tickets and concessions and then there are the TV rights as well, even video game rights where the students appearances are used with no compensation to them, only the school). Those kids play hard for no money while the school makes a ton off of them. Its a good deal for the schools as it is.

      Just want to clear out this part. I think you misunderstood GP. I believe GP said the Football scholarships give opportunity to those who receive to later on make big money in professional league. Though, I think only very small percentage of those who could make to NFL would make big money. Also, even smaller percentage actually make fames...

      Also, I think students who got Football scholarships actually have somewhat equally return even though they do not get paid in monetary. They already have their audition to the whole nation. If they are really good, then they would stand out and subsequently being drafted into NFL. If they aren't, then they would already know that they should look for other career to pursue. It is quite a good deal to have a chance to be an intern (playing football) while being in school.

  33. The Tax Office would like to have a word with you by raymorris · · Score: 1

    If you're working in Sweden and aren't paying for the universities, the Tax Office would like to have a word with you.

  34. Medical education is very expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At my wife's alma mater, the University charged the "market rate" tuition at the law school and sent all of the extra money (~50%) to the medical school in the belief that keeping tuition as low as possible in the medical school was a public benefit.

    I tend to agree.

  35. I *did* pay more for engineering. by Chirs · · Score: 3, Informative

    At my university (in Canada) 20 years ago they charged different rates depending on the college offering the class. I just checked the current fees and they continue to do this. At the low end is Arts at $192 per credit unit, Computer Science is $219, Engineering is $227, Applied Music is $290, and interestingly Law is $420.

    1. Re:I *did* pay more for engineering. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Applied music $290? How much is it for Theoretical Music?

    2. Re:I *did* pay more for engineering. by pijokela · · Score: 1

      They are not charging based on the costs of each subject, they are charging based on the market value of the subject. Teaching law is pretty cheap for the university, while art is probably not.

    3. Re:I *did* pay more for engineering. by hawk · · Score: 1

      Over the last two decades, schools have increasingly come to see the law school as a cash cow, to turn profits for other university projects.

      Tuition has been doubled, tripled, and more, which is possible due to the instant availability of huge student loans (similar to how sloppy underwriting and loan-flipping was the primary cause of the housing bubble).

      Students now leave law schools with hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt, and payments that suggest burger flipping might have been a better idea.

      hawk, esq.

    4. Re:I *did* pay more for engineering. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      and interestingly Law is $420.

      That's not surprising, in America a lot of law schools are just money grabs.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:I *did* pay more for engineering. by istartedi · · Score: 1

      One of these things is not like the other, namely Applied Music. I'm guessing the price has less to do with earning potential, and more to do with the limited supply of teachers who are actually good.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    6. Re:I *did* pay more for engineering. by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      Someone also mentioned things like lab and material costs not captured in tuition.

      Books (and their inflated prices also) are another vector. In the sciences there seems to be a new textbook edition you need to buy every year. Each book ranges in the 50-200$ range. Case in point I went to College one year while at University, and my books ridiculously actually cost MORE than my College tuition. How stupid is that. Again if you're study is classical lit, you can probably go to a used bookstore and pick up a copy of whatever book you need for 3$ if you're feeling frugal.

  36. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You will just have super cheap social justice courses being taken, because all you need is an ideologue and a room. it will further wreck these kids.

  37. Re:You mean "forced to pay, whether you attend or by nedlohs · · Score: 1

    Sure. And lots of people think that C) is a perfectly reasonably option. You don't have to agree of course with any of their ideas of course, but they tend to think things like:

    * A better educated population benefits society as a whole. So those who don't attend university benefit when other do - they get better doctors, better engineers designing and building their infrastructure and so on.
    * The part of the role of government is the pooling and allocation of resources. Pooling some of everyone's money so that the best suited (indicated by better grades, etc) can be educated.* Part of that philosophy is more extensive welfare systems which serve to prevent the situation you describe from occurring in the first place. That single dad can finish his degree on welfare. Or since university is usually a straight out of high school thing and he chose to be a dad instead he can simply do his degree a little later when the kids are in school
      - there's plenty of life after 30...

    There are numerous other things of course.

    The US applies this view to primary and secondary education. Some other countries include tertiary education.

    It is a collective rather than individualistic view of the world. You likely don't share that and that is fine.Others do and don't usually prevent people from bailing out if they really don't like the deal - see the large number of "tax exiles" from places like the UK. Since unlike the US the rest of the world (I'm sure there's an exception or two) doesn't charge taxes to their citizens who have left the country thus allowing them to choose not to participate without burning down that bridge entirely.

  38. Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is 2017, right? 17 years ago when I was in college the government subsidized X number of openings for a particular major, Y for another major and so on. We had the option of having really good grades and paying a fixed co-pay for any major or be admitted in the "extended" allowance (20% additional openings on top of the government subsidized). Because the government subsidy varied by major and the copay was fixed the extended allowance students had to pay to total cost - subsidy and copay and that varied. For a "desk job" like CS it was cheaper than for day something like aviation tech or veterinary school where there were a lot of consumables. However it was capped to something like $4k/Year and the CS I did was half of that with tuition, dorm and books. I was making around $8k after taxes at that time and stated working second semester of freshman year, so I only had to take a loan from my parents for 1 semester.

  39. Taxes by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    You are advocating (c), force everyone to pay for college, whether or not they attend.

    This sounds fair when you look at taxes. Those earning more pay more tax and usually at a higher rate too and generally a university degree leads to higher paid jobs. Even those who make lots of money without a degree e.g. Bill Gates etc. need to be able to hire people with degrees to do so so they still benefit from having those people available. Indeed all of society benefits from having nurses, teachers etc. with degrees even though these are not high paying jobs.

    Indeed the UK which recently tripled university tuition costs to 9,000 pounds/year is now having trouble recruiting maths and physics teachers because people with those degrees are going into finance and industry where they can earn enough to pay off their loans. Society benefits when higher education is cheap and accessible becuse there are some jobs which pay poorly but for which you need a degree. You fund this by taxing those with higher incomes so the single dad with two young kids does not have to pay for this (unless he happens to have a really good job) and yet he still benefits because his kids will get taught by someone who knows the subject and if needs medical care there will be nurses to help provide it etc.

    1. Re:Taxes by Crazy+Taco · · Score: 1

      Indeed the UK which recently tripled university tuition costs to 9,000 pounds/year is now having trouble recruiting maths and physics teachers because people with those degrees are going into finance and industry where they can earn enough to pay off their loans.

      That's not a valid argument for making college free. All that example shows is one of two things:

      1. Your college costs too much, and maybe you should be looking into what is driving the prices up (if it's anything like the US, probably way too many administrators compared to teachers).
      2. You don't pay your math and physics teachers what they are worth, in which case you should pay them more so that you are competitive. We have that problem in most of the US because teachers unions force schools into contracts that pay people by time in the job, with no differentiation for harder degrees or special skills like math and physics. Maybe the UK is similar, but regardless, you need to pay people a competitive wage, not make college free. If you don't, they'll get a free math degree off of your taxpayers and continue to take jobs in finance and industry. They aren't taking those jobs *just* to pay off their loans, they're taking them because they pay more period.

      Nothing gets fixed by more government involvement and making everything "free".

      --
      Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it.
  40. Inevitable by Sqreater · · Score: 1

    This is bound to happen. But it is merely a thin veneer argument covering the real intent, and that is to reach into the future to pocket the future earnings of students seeking an education. The education business considers the value-added life of their students to belong to them. I point out that there is a Macroparasitic (government, finance, business) infection abroad in the country today of such virulence that I'm afraid it will not be stoppable short of collapse and violence by the mass of people. The Macroparasite, aided by technology, is targeting any asset of the mass to transfer it to its own pocket. The result of this will be the complete devaluing of a STEM education, damaging this country. Why would anyone get an education if no benefit can be expected from doing so? Do they expect people to go through the effort and expense of getting an education for the good of society alone, gathering to themselves crushing, un-payable debt in the process?

    --
    E Proelio Veritas.
  41. Re:You mean "forced to pay, whether you attend or by The+Real+Dr+John · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't have kids, but I pay taxes for other people's kids to go to grade school for free. I have paid those taxes all my life, and I get nothing for it myself. In fact, much of my property tax on my house goes to pay for local education. But I am perfectly happy with this because education should be free in a civilized society. It is too important to to make it something people have to go into debt for. If we were not spending around $600 billion a year on bombing the middle east and occupying the rest of the world with military bases, it would be very easy to make community college free for everyone.

    --
    A brain is a terrible thing to waste... Mind? That's debatable.
  42. Missing the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    STEM majors are the disciplines that actually bring in grant money, 50% of which goes to the university. Which of course is not mentioned in the little blog post.

  43. No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ridiculous. That would only compound inequality, and quickly. Something like med school is supremely long and arduous. By comparison, most majors are fairly equal in terms of what is required. This is caste system nonsense. Look no further than India or China to see the lasting results of such a boneheaded idea.

  44. How do you spin that? by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

    So the newspaper headline would be 'poor students excluded from STEM'? I don't see that going very far.

    1. Re:How do you spin that? by tepples · · Score: 1

      They'd spin it as "local business sponsors STEM scholarship for students of color".

  45. Cut the filler and fluff classes to save time and by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    Cut the filler and fluff classes to save time and cost. Mandatory classes range from a joke to an cash grab.
    For most a Mandatory PE is pay way more then a 2 year mid to high end gym for just 1 class. Some still have the swim test that you have to pay for.
    Well rounded is nice to have but not at to days costs and time. Do to classes filling up / not being offered all the time it can be hard to get done in 4 years.

  46. More trades / tech schools are needed and not 4 ye by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    More trades / tech schools are needed and they should not be locked in to the 4 year system.

  47. Cost vs. Value to the University by kwiecmmm · · Score: 1

    Of course if you just just judge the cost of course it would seem that science and engineering would be more expensive, but the problem is that this is not looking at the entire picture. Many science and engineering professors do research which ends up being beneficial and profitable to the University, I don't think most liberal arts professors have that ability.

    And an advanced degree in science and engineering tends to be worth more outside academia than an advanced degree in liberal arts, so paying those professors more makes the most sense.

    1. Re:Cost vs. Value to the University by ghoul · · Score: 1

      When an Engineering professor does some research and patents something the royalties off the patent are shared with the college. When a literature professor gets inspired by his discussions with students and writes a novel the royalties from the novel are not shared with the University. Exactly which department is sponging off which?

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
  48. We need an College GED by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    http://articles.chicagotribune...

    There are to many people who just go for the piece of paper and others who work in fields where it's an trade where 2-4 years pure class room is overkill.

    1. Re:We need an College GED by ghoul · · Score: 1

      College is meant to train you to think. That training takes time. A Piece of paper (GED) cant replace that.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    2. Re:We need an College GED by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Then it is doing a crappy job, because most people who go to college still can't think when they leave...

    3. Re:We need an College GED by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      That's a fine ideal, and it probably works great for people who come from relatively affluent families with existing networks and support structures. There is also a huge need for professional training. "College" does not need to be exactly the same experience for everyone.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    4. Re:We need an College GED by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      as long as at least some learn to think the goal is accomplished. we don't need or want every one thinking.

    5. Re:We need an College GED by ghoul · · Score: 1

      A piece of paper is even more useless for learning a trade. Learning a trade takes hands on experience - an apprenticeship program would be more usefull than a college GED

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    6. Re:We need an College GED by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Presumably, a "college GED" would be for people who already learned the trade and just needed the paper to prove it. It wouldn't replace an apprenticeship, it would formalize it.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    7. Re:We need an College GED by ghoul · · Score: 1

      For Trades it would be better to have a certification exam like the Bar exam. Being certified by your peers has way more value than a piece of paper from a college you never attended.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    8. Re:We need an College GED by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Fair enough - same spirit. It doesn't need to be called a "college GED".

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    9. Re:We need an College GED by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      I know a 'master mechanic' who claims to have a 'masters degree'. Nobody argues with him anymore, it sure makes you cringe.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  49. Deja Vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I periodically look back at older Slashdot articles, happened to find this one today just shortly after I read today's: https://slashdot.org/story/07/07/29/1811255/higher-tuition-for-an-engineering-degree

  50. Overpriced? by Mister+Mudge · · Score: 1

    Leaving aside the question of whether a university education ought to be free (that is, taxpayer-funded, rather than paid for by the student), the numbers leave a big question - if an 'expensive' degree like on in Engineering costs about $60K, why is the cost to attend a typical university closer to $60K PER YEAR? Even if one assumes that half the annual student cost is for room and board, that still suggests there's at least a 100% markup on the tuition. Sure looks like someone is being ripped off here ...

    --
    Mudge

    In theory, theory and practice are the same.
    In practice, they're not.

  51. Cut loan amounts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cutting the loan amounts would decrease the inflation. It would cause these schools to curtail their spending.

    If the government offsers a 100K loan for a year of university, then the price is 100K backed by the governemt.

    It gets worse when advocates then want "free" education. Now they effectively want to force 100K loans on everybody! Socialism is when monopoly becomes law.

  52. What a brilliant idea! by chmod+a+x+mojo · · Score: 2

    Force even MORE people out of STEM, you know since we have such a glut of STEM grads... and don't have tons of companies looking to fill positions that have people retiring at a faster rate than graduates are coming.

    That STEM equipment that they complain costs so much? Yeah, that's the stuff used to produce research that the schools WANT from professors. You know, to get the name of the school out, and the reason professors HAVE to publish stuff alongside teaching classes. It's just an added bonus that it can be used to teach students as well.

    --
    To err is human; effective mayhem requires the root password!
    1. Re:What a brilliant idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you trying to be sarcastic? There actually is a glut of STEM grads overall hence why PhDs are basically screwed outside of a handful of specialties. Go get that PhD in organic chemistry and enjoy the plethora of $70k offers in dangerous industries where you will make all of $30k more than the night janitor. Electrical engineers are making good bank but civil engineers are on unemployment. And even the electrical engineers...the money is great until you hit 40-45 and magically become too old to work.

    2. Re:What a brilliant idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trump is putting an end to H1B madness. If they want to hire cheap labor they have to make sure not americans qualify.

    3. Re:What a brilliant idea! by FeelGood314 · · Score: 1

      Well funded research by professors adds value to undergraduate degrees.
      I got my degree from a well funded math faculty. That math department is now studying quantum computing. This makes the engineering faculties expenses look tiny. It also increase the prestige of degrees that come out of the university, increasing student life time earnings. AND! the professors actually do teach the leading edge stuff to their undergraduate students. 10 years from now when this new leading edge stuff becomes mainstream those students will now have an advantage over their peers.

      Students are better off going to a university with better professors and professors that are working on new, well funded projects. Should society make them pay more? I don't know, but from an individuals perspective it would make sense to be willing to pay more.

  53. Re:Cut the filler and fluff classes to save time a by chmod+a+x+mojo · · Score: 1

    The mandatory "PE" class at my University is 100% online.

    I don't know how they think that even 1% of the students actually do the stuff they fill out on their "exercise logs". The "quizzes" are also taken direct from the powerpoint slides that you download for the class, no book textbook required ( still tell you that the $25 book they recommend is required for the class though). They might as well just hand out note cards with the quiz questions and answers on them... or better yet, sell the cards in the book store as the required textbook.

    The class is a joke...

    --
    To err is human; effective mayhem requires the root password!
  54. Let's look at credit hours by daveywest · · Score: 1

    I'm a returning student currently enrolled to earn my B.S. two decades after completing my A.S. My course plan for my degree has several electives that frankly don't matter to my field of study. Knowing that every science course I took had lab fees to cover the additional costs, I also wonder if some degrees should require more class time than others. The standard 120 credit hours seems like the real source of lower cost/lower paying fields subsidizing the STEM fields.

  55. Amazed at man of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow. So mush misdirection in here today...

    NOTHING is free. Ever. Everything has a cost and it comes down to, especially in this day and age, how much we are going to rob Peter to pay Paul.

    Many schools have some horrendous track records in regard to some professors teaching very little but earning huge salaries. This has to stop to make tuition sustainable. To facilitate making schools more efficient tenure has to be eliminated. Tenure is purely a benefit to teachers, not students and certainly not to tax payers.

    Sustainable tuition does NOT mean saddling tax payers with the burden of paying huge salaries to professors that actually teach very little. Those professors' productivity is abysmal and in no way reflects productivity in the real world, the private sector. In the real world positions of low productivity are eliminated to make the company sustainable. If it is not sustainable then it fails. That is one of the most significant defining economic differences between the private sector and the public sector.
       

    1. Re:Amazed at man of the comments. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NOTHING is free. Ever.

      Bullshit and wrong.
      You can't make up your own definition for the word "free". If the consumer receives a product or service without cost to the consumer, than it was free.
      The fact that someone else had to pay for it is irrelevant. It was free to the consumer. When people are talking about 'free tuition", they're talking about the cost to the student.

      Many schools have some horrendous track records in regard to some professors teaching very little but earning huge salaries. This has to stop to make tuition sustainable. To facilitate making schools more efficient tenure has to be eliminated. Tenure is purely a benefit to teachers, not students and certainly not to tax payers.

      Sustainable tuition does NOT mean saddling tax payers with the burden of paying huge salaries to professors that actually teach very little. Those professors' productivity is abysmal and in no way reflects productivity in the real world, the private sector. In the real world positions of low productivity are eliminated to make the company sustainable. If it is not sustainable then it fails. That is one of the most significant defining economic differences between the private sector and the public sector.

      Sounds good, except that the top universities are private sector. All you're doing here is showing your ignorance.

  56. Wrong Focus by sycodon · · Score: 2

    The biggest problem I can see is that Universities have become status symbols for the states and the employees of the University.

    The focus isn't on providing a quality education to the students of that state, but on Bling. Bigger stadiums, prestigious facility, glimmering campuses, etc. Eighty percent of the students at a university do not benefit from these things one iota.

    What use is it to your average student have Nobel Prize winner at your University? They likely only "teach" one or two classes and those will be at the Graduate level. Yet the university will spend hundreds of thousands funding that professor, his graduate students, and their projects.

    Look at all the other facilities that your average student never sees, enters, or otherwise benefits from.

    Universities have become small kingdoms with the top and highly paid jobs being defacto patronage jobs.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    1. Re:Wrong Focus by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The whole point in getting a degree is Credentialism. So a more prestigious University gives a shinier credential.

      Quality education? Be careful. If they catch you acting like you actually want to know stuff they'll accuse you of being a nerd. If you take 5 years to get a four year degree because you take extra courses that don't match your 'degree track' your counselor will be upset about it because it will statistically count against the school.

    2. Re:Wrong Focus by ghoul · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Most superstar Research professors bring in money through NSF grants rather than use College money (besides their salary). Those grants are used to pay the college for the tuition of the grad students working for the professor so the college actually makes money from superstar researchers. It also helps to attract undergrads to a college who are attracted by being able to attend a class with a Noble laureate.

      Similarly large college teams make money from the ticket sales and are net profit for the colleges.

      College education costs are going up because they are beginning to reflect the real cost. Earlier academics were underpaid for their worth (they were paid in respect) and govts picked up a large portion of the tab for colleges (these direct grants to colleges as opposed to research grants are disappearing)

      Also with a large strata of society which never went to college beginning to go to college a lot more scholarships are being handed out. This is compensated for by charging higher tuition to the rest so the sticker price of college tuition is going up. Many of these students have gone through low quality high schools and are not ready for college and end up taking 6 years to pass what used to be 4 year college hence also driving up their costs. Sad part is even those who could graduate in 4 take 6 so as to enjoy the party atmosphere of college and these folks are not on scholarships so end up paying for 6 years all of it at the higher sticker price.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    3. Re:Wrong Focus by dgatwood · · Score: 2

      ... so the college actually makes money from superstar researchers.

      You were correct up to that point. The cost of tuition for a student is about the same as the resources that he or she consumes. So adding more students doesn't cause the college to "make money". It just causes them to have more students. Even if one extra student doesn't cause an increase in the number of faculty required to teach them, by the time you fill a lab with students, you'll end up bringing in extra resources, making the benefit at most a small fraction of what they pay, at most. And when you consider that the superstar researcher, by not teaching a full course load, is costing the university money on additional professors or instructors, it is very unlikely that the university breaks even, much less makes money, unless you start from the assumption that the university would have done that research anyway and would have paid for the costs out of their own pockets.

      Don't get me wrong, research is a good thing, because it drives the state of the art forward, and in some cases, the research itself leads to patents that make money for those universities on an ongoing basis, and the (mostly graduate) students that participate in academic research are presumably better off for having done so, but don't kid yourself by thinking that it is break-even or better. It's a giant money pit. That's why research universities invariably cost so much more for tuition than non-research institutions.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    4. Re:Wrong Focus by sycodon · · Score: 1

      I am skeptical that a Nobel Laureate ever teaches an undergraduate class.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    5. Re:Wrong Focus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They likely only "teach" one or two classes and those will be at the Graduate level.

      So? Do you have any idea how freaking much work it takes to teach "only" two classes at the graduate level?

      Yet the university will spend hundreds of thousands funding that professor, his graduate students, and their projects.

      HAHAHAHA. Except perhaps startup funds, universities don't spend anything on graduate students or their projects. This comes from other sources (government organizations or companies, mostly). And graduate students on their "salaries" in some cases even qualify for welfare! So you complain that universities spend money on... salary for the professor?

      Administration costs at universities have skyrocked in recent years. Professor salaries... for the amount of training required, the salary is often a joke.

    6. Re:Wrong Focus by WarJolt · · Score: 1

      His grad students do. Trickle down education.

    7. Re:Wrong Focus by chainsaw1 · · Score: 2

      Dr. Richard Smalley taught Chem 102 at Rice. (Nobel Prize, Buckminnister Fullerene). his Co-Laureate (Dr. Curl) taught freshman chemistry lab

      --
      - Sig
    8. Re:Wrong Focus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You were correct up to that point. The cost of tuition for a student is about the same as the resources that he or she consumes. So adding more students doesn't cause the college to "make money". It just causes them to have more students.

      Absolute horse shit. I work at a tier-1 state school and I know exactly how it works.. mainly by bringing in more adjuncts who are paid peanuts, then raising max cap of the lectures to between 200 and 600 students per section (anatomy and physiology I and II, anyone?), and then leveraging TAs in the labs. In addition, if you hire a few Chinese or Saudi professors with connections, you can get an influx of under qualified foreign students who will pay FULL PRICE for tuition with no financial aid provided by anything linked to the US. (*hint: I've seen so-called uber-mensch from China who are supposedly awesome fail a 300 level chem course they were supposed to take as remedial for a fucking MASTERS in ChemE, TWICE! and..yes.. more than one instance)

      It's funny how it's more difficult to get into some programs as a US citizen than it is as a well-monied foreigner.

      One example (of many) from where I work:
      Got a law school? Want free money? Bring in a bunch of inept entitled Middle Eastern students with a law degree from their own country (normally an undergrad bestowed because they're the children of somebody important) and have them sit through a master of laws (LLM) program for a year. BLAM! Instant 40-60k, AND when they blow the bar exam it doesn't count against the metrics that count: your US Juris Doctor student bar pass rate.

    9. Re:Wrong Focus by ghoul · · Score: 1

      Seems like a win-win. Rich foreigners pay a full tuition which allows the college to give scholarships to poor Americans. What is the harm? As for getting into courses its a first come first serve or a lottery - how much tuition a student will pay plays no part in it as the foreign student needs to take 15 credits every semester so its not like if he/she doesnt get the course of his/her choice he/she wont spend the money. The college will get 15 credits worth of tuition at the full rate regardless.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    10. Re:Wrong Focus by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      ... mainly by bringing in more adjuncts who are paid peanuts, then raising max cap of the lectures to between 200 and 600 students per section (anatomy and physiology I and II, anyone?), and then leveraging TAs in the labs.

      ...resulting in a lower-quality undergrad education in exchange for that better grad education. Yes, I'm aware. But even if the adjuncts cost a quarter as much per unit as the full-time people, that's still money that the school wouldn't have spent if the full-time faculty taught more classes.

      In addition, if you hire a few Chinese or Saudi professors with connections, you can get an influx of under qualified foreign students who will pay FULL PRICE for tuition with no financial aid provided by anything linked to the US.

      Although out-of-state and foreign people do pay full price, that's because in-state students are subsidized by the state. Much of the difference in how much they pay is replacing that subsidy—not all of it, mind you, but a big chunk of it. You really can't count most of that as "making money".

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    11. Re:Wrong Focus by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      Universities don't make money by teaching. They make money by recruiting. They don't get paid to give people degrees, they get paid by having luxurious freshman dorms and fitness complexes.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    12. Re: Wrong Focus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think the GP went to graduate school. You are right on. Professors get paid rather poorly, but make up for it on excess salary recovery through subcontracts. So the ambitious profs typically do well and the lazy ones live on tenure.

    13. Re: Wrong Focus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget college football and merchandising. Education is second fiddle to a CFP title.

    14. Re: Wrong Focus by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      Except for maybe the top 10 programs in the country, the only benefit of sports is for recruiting. Most schools sports programs are a net loss.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
  57. Quartz report? by asylumx · · Score: 2
    Is it just me, or does the quartz report referenced in the summary have nothing to do with what the summary is referring to it for?

    Quartz has a chart embedded in its report that shows the cost of education by major at the University of Florida.

    I mean, I searched that entire article for any mention of 'education', 'tuition', or even 'florida' and found nothing. Did someone post the wrong URL?

    1. Re:Quartz report? by Verdatum · · Score: 3, Informative

      It is NOT just you. WHY is no one mentioning this? I know Slashdot always jokes about not RTFA, but this just bizarre. Here's the correct link: https://qz.com/884450/which-co...

    2. Re:Quartz report? by asylumx · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I was wondering about myself for a minute there.

    3. Re:Quartz report? by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Is it just me, or does the quartz report referenced in the summary have nothing to do with what the summary is referring to it for?

      Quartz has a chart embedded in its report that shows the cost of education by major at the University of Florida.

      I mean, I searched that entire article for any mention of 'education', 'tuition', or even 'florida' and found nothing. Did someone post the wrong URL?

      Yup. For some reason the /. editor added the summary and then put the wrong link in the summary. I had left it out since TFA had the link already in it.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    4. Re:Quartz report? by asylumx · · Score: 2

      Interesting -- if you scroll to the bottom of that article, the one the summary links is actually next, and notice that the URL in your location bar changes once you scroll down to it. I bet that's how they got the wrong URL in the summary.

  58. Student loan rates should reflect unemployment % by mpercy · · Score: 1

    If, say Gender Studies, graduates are unemployed to the tune of 12.5%, why on earth should we subsidize the creation of more Gender Studies grads? If they *really* want to get a degree in Gender Studies let them pay for it themselves or at least be prepared to pay through the nose at 12.5% interest.

    OTOH, if you want a degree in chemical engineering, your interest rate would be below 2%. If you graduate with a chem-e degree, you are not going to be unemployed in today's market.

  59. Pay Afterwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My personal preference is that tuition costs should be paid in arrears. The school should accept students using a business mindset: accept the students most likely to absorb the information and land a job in their major afterwards, and then the student pays the school back by paying a percentage of their gross income for perhaps ten years. A contract between the student and school would stipulate that the school would provide top-quality instructors and room and board for their length of stay, and the student would be expected to study full-time.

    This is somewhat similar to the way the military academies function, except that those students repay the cost through a service commitment (though those who refuse a commission owe the school the full cost at the end).

    The school has an incentive to select only the best students, not offer useless majors, and to help the students find the highest paying jobs afterwards. This also avoids the distractions of working through school and predatory loans.

  60. Tuition should be set by free market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The cost of tuition should be set by a free market engine, not a bunch of government bureaucrats.

    High demand majors like CS and Comp-E should be allowed to have tuition that mitigates that overdemand. This maximizes income for the school and also maximizes the value of the degree for the student, because only the most fiscally responsible rich kids would be able to get those degrees, and we all know rich people are just better.

    1. Re:Tuition should be set by free market by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      The cost of tuition should be set by a free market engine, not a bunch of government bureaucrats.

      You have obviously never bought a textbook that costs more than the actual class. Or sold back a $100 textbook for $5 because the publisher sabotaged the used book value by issuing annual editions with superficial changes. Or paid $85 for a TI graphing calculator because it was required for a mathematics textbook (I owned three different calculators in college). When it comes to textbooks, the free market engine has gone wild.

    2. Re:Tuition should be set by free market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Textbooks are not a free market because of copyright, and because students can't use the textbook of their choice for a given class.

      Students should be able to choose whatever book they want to use for a class, and there should be no way one publisher can copyright the factual content of a textbook.

  61. College is a waste of money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A total waste.

  62. Exactly. If government offered coupons for $10 by mpercy · · Score: 1

    If government provided hungry people with coupons for a "free" McDonalds combo meal up to $10, what will the cost of a combo mean almost immediately rise to?

  63. "Free"? You keep using that word, I do not think by mpercy · · Score: 1

    it means what you think it means.

    Inconceivable!

  64. Hell No by Revarg · · Score: 1

    We should be encouraging STEM and medical degrees, not making them even more difficult to pursue.

  65. Either free or loans indexed to starting salaries. by zerofoo · · Score: 1

    Education should be free - it's a country's investment in its citizens and its future.

    However, if we are going to have people pay for their education, then the cost of that education should reflect both the costs of supplying that education and the loan amounts should be indexed to starting salaries for work requiring that education. Lower starting salaries should mean lower loan amounts available for a particular degree program.

    The indexing part is important - that's the feedback mechanism by which the market can signal what educational programs are required by society. Also, this would help reduce the risk of someone paying too much for a degree with little market value.

    These policies would force colleges to reduce the cost of degree programs that have little market value.

    None of this would prevent an individual from self-funding their education independent of the market, or prevent a college or university from using endowment money to subsidize less popular degree programs.

  66. Re:Either free or loans indexed to starting salari by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't that result in pressure from low income folks to major in less lucrative degrees? Why is that good?

  67. College Tuition shouldn't vary. by pjv936 · · Score: 0

    College Tuition should be zero. College should be free for the same reason public education is free. And that is because education is the investment that has the greatest return in the long run.

  68. CS degrees, anyone? by zakonchen · · Score: 1

    I am a little confused why the article focuses entirely on the high cost of engineering. It seems to me that someone should be pointing out the huge ROI for CS degrees. They cost way less than engineering and make more than every other degree except engineering. Why are we not pushing the idea that computers are still the way of the future and the best way out of poverty invented in the past 100 years?

    1. Re:CS degrees, anyone? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      Probably because computers isn't the money major it used to be. When I saw a study that the IT industry would have 1M+ unfulfilled job openings after baby boomers retire and foreign workers stay home in 2030, I went back to school to learn computer programming after the dot com bust. Healthcare became the new money major at that time. People told me I was crazy go into computers. My friends who switched from computers to healthcare make great money but they hate their jobs in wiping other people's asses. Meanwhile, I'm enjoying my career in IT support and, ironically, hospitals are my best paying contracts.

    2. Re:CS degrees, anyone? by zakonchen · · Score: 1

      Everything you said seems to reinforce my argument that we should be talking about computer jobs. Look at the number of CS people the US brings in from India in order to meet demand.

    3. Re:CS degrees, anyone? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      Everything you said seems to reinforce my argument that we should be talking about computer jobs.

      Or skilled trade jobs like carpenters, electricians and plumbers. With the current workforce retiring and foreign workers have gone home, future job openings will go unfulfilled.

      Look at the number of CS people the US brings in from India in order to meet demand.

      That will change when foreign workers discover that they don't have to leave their country to have a middle class lifestyle. A recent study predicts 1.5M+ unfilled jobs in IT.

  69. Adam Smith thought so by jader3rd · · Score: 1

    He mentioned in On The Wealth of Nations that the price for an unskilled laborers education should be proportional to how much that person will make.

  70. Not in the public system by ErichTheRed · · Score: 1

    I went to a large, well funded state university and got a degree in chemistry back when dinosaurs roamed the earth (1997.) Even for undergrads, with the ancient lab equipment we had, I'm sure the actual costs to educate me were many times higher than a business or philosophy student, for example. Scientific instruments, even basic ones like gas chromatographs or IR spectroscopy machines are extremely expensive. Universities have to pay STEM professors more than English professors. In most cases, the humanities professors who are lucky enough to get tenure are happy enough to be working in their field; finding a stable job teaching English or Philosophy is not easy. Science professors need to bring in massive grants for their research, go to conferences all over the world, and operate a real running lab doing science. Even if you are using postdoc slaves, there's still a cost involved that's much higher than a humanities professor who basically needs an office, access to library collections and classroom space.

    However, I don't think it's fair to charge more for expensive-to-grant degrees. Don't we want more technical people in the world these days? And on the other end, I think most people understand the need to balance science and humanities, and that most people benefit from an exposure to both. Even my cursory exposure to the non-science courses in my otherwise heavily science oriented degree made me a better individual. Also, from my experience the science students were much more serious about their work than business or English students...you really have to want to work to actually major in a hard science and it's very difficult to just skate through.

    Funding public colleges seems to be to be the best investment possible, regardless of whether your degree cost the university $100,000 or $25,000 to give you. Even with the extraneous programs and expensive add-ons, college remains a time where 18 year old kids get the opportunity to grow up. I know it helped me, and yes I know that some people never grow up regardless of college attendance. But on balance, I'd rather have more people educated than fewer. Not to get political, but the presidential election we just had shows what happens when people don't objectively verify claims and let their emotions make their choices. Having more people that take the time to pick apart both sides' arguments and actually think about the choice they're making is a good thing. In addition, having more educated people may finally make companies stop complaining that they can't find any domestic workers.

    1. Re:Not in the public system by ghoul · · Score: 1

      Companies dont complain about not finding people who can work, they complain about people who dont want to work but still get a salary - the folks who have been trained by college that it is OK to skate along and still get a degree. Colleges need to flunk out more people not everyone is built for a professional life.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
  71. Summary/Article simplly wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The cost of ENTRY level classes may be the same but the costs of the classes that a student takes to differentiate themselves is certainly different. If a college/University isn't charging different prices for say a 4th year 'Statistical Mechanics' class vs a 'Study in Platonic Thinking' or some such liberal arts class than that college/University simply has no idea how to run a business. English 101 (introduction to English where I'm from) was/is & SHOULD be the same price for all students because they extract the exact same VALUE from the class.

    More leftist propaganda trying to prop up liberal arts degrees.

  72. Yes, generally... by thunderclees · · Score: 1

    The career potential and earnings could also be factored in to put a control on junk degrees. High school in the US is mostly useless since most have to relearn everything as a frosh in college so why not cut it down to two years and maybe make it an extension of grammar school.

    1. Re:Yes, generally... by ghoul · · Score: 2

      Because 16 and 17 year olds are not mature enough to go away to college. Rather the standards for High schools need to be pulled up and kids need to be held back in grade till they are at the level that they can go to college without needing remedial courses.

      --
      **Life is too short to be serious**
    2. Re:Yes, generally... by thunderclees · · Score: 1

      Nah, have you ever been in a college dorm?

      Besides high school is not supposed to be daycare

      Why waste 4 years of the kids life with high school when freshman and sophomore years are identical to high school?

  73. English majors should have higher tuition by billrp · · Score: 1

    since their unemployment will have a burden on society

    1. Re:English majors should have higher tuition by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      Unless, of course, they're in tech.

      Throughout the major U.S. tech hubs, whether Silicon Valley or Seattle, Boston or Austin, Tex., software companies are discovering that liberal arts thinking makes them stronger.ïï Engineers may still command the biggest salaries, but at disruptive juggernauts such as Facebook and Uber, the war for talent has moved to nontechnical jobs, particularly sales and marketing. The more that audacious coders dream of changing the world, the more they need to fill their companies with social alchemists who can connect with customers--and make progress seem pleasant.

      http://www.forbes.com/sites/georgeanders/2015/07/29/liberal-arts-degree-tech/

  74. Switching Majors by SeattleLawGuy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Not only should the costs be the same but the article nicely explains why: those getting science, engineering etc. degrees generally earn more and so will pay more tax. This extra tax should be more than enough to offset the cost of their education and is also a good way to justify why higher salaries should attract a higher rate of tax.

    Eighty Percent of students switch majors at least once in the United States. The more of an obstacle you create to that, the less likely you are to have people studying what they want to study. Also, the more expensive you make it to teach chemistry or computer science, the fewer kids will take a side class in chemistry or computer science.

    There would be some advantages, though. It would make it easier to take a few early, basic courses where they take one professor and have 80+ students in the class. And it would make it easier for someone to get a minimal degree in something that doesn't cost the school much to run. But that's a small set of people you're helping, at the expense of STEM education and the ability to switch majors, etc...

    The best solution is probably to have a few inexpensive-degree-only schools for people who absolutely know they want to major in Shakespeare, but still keep tuition flat across majors or relatively flat at most schools.

    --
    Real lawyers write in C++
    1. Re: Switching Majors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because a science degree was too tough and you change to art and basket weaving doesn't mean everybody is like you. People like you just make up statistics without any kind of basis at all. 80% of students do in fact go through counseling and planning for their degree. You are obviously not somebody that plans anything so you had trouble

    2. Re: Switching Majors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not even a little bit true. Most 18 children entering college have no clue what any job entails. They don't know what they want to do because they have no reference point to make a decision. Changing majors or being undeclared early on makes perfect sense when you finally get some inkling of what's out there. High school counselors do an abysmal job of preparing students for understanding their options. Most incoming freshman pick a major for ridiculous reasons ranging from "sounds easy" to "sounds like it pays well" to "my parents told me to be this". If you know what you want to do with your long term career at 18 years old you are absolutely in the minority.

    3. Re:Switching Majors by minstrelmike · · Score: 1

      Eighty Percent of students switch majors at least once in the United States. The more of an obstacle you create to that, the less likely you are to have people studying what they want to study. Also, the more expensive you make it to teach chemistry or computer science, the fewer kids will take a side class in chemistry or computer science.

      I think that's one aspect to logic. Here's another one folks currently use. Why not take the easiest courses, especially if they all cost the same amount of money, and especially if I'm a naive 20-year-old not really that concerned with the future?

      Pricing courses by value/cost lets the student _know_ more about values and costs. We don't sell a sedan and a sports car for the same price, but we really do sell university degrees for the same list price (all credit hours cost the same and fees are not displayed on the menu).

    4. Re:Switching Majors by TechnoJoe · · Score: 1

      Eighty Percent of students switch majors at least once in the United States. The more of an obstacle you create to that, the less likely you are to have people waste their time on a very expensive, taxpayer funded soul-searching trip to find themselves.

      Fixed that for you.

      Seriously, if you're switching majors, it means you don't know what you want to do with your life. There are less expensive ways of figuring that out. Join the Peace Corps, become a missionary, join the military, or get a high school level job. The last two will PAY YOU while you're finding yourself. People who are spending an average of $9,000 (in-state public college) to $32,000 (private college) per year, on tuition alone, should already know exactly what they will get for that money.

    5. Re: Switching Majors by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      30 years ago every smart Engineering major switched to 'undecided' for at least one semester. The prof that ran the giant English 101 'freshman comp' required class was known to _hate_ engineering students. Change to 'undecided' and don't carry 'give away' books or get a guaranteed D or worse.

      After having all the Engineering advisors do this for a couple of years, statistical evidence was produced and he was quietly 'promoted' to someplace he couldn't fuck up.

      Even those who were 'born to code' had to change majors at least once.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    6. Re: Switching Majors by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      This was obviously at one particular school...

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  75. Engineering Depts Subsidize the University by dv82 · · Score: 1

    At a research universities, the overhead charged by the university on engineering research grants goes into a general fund that supports the other disciplines, directly or indirectly. The flow of cash is from engineering to the other programs, not vice versa. The university engineering school often also must pay the university liberal arts college based on enrollment of engineering undergrads in required courses taught in the liberal arts college (such as some basic math and science courses). The suggested tuition differential, if justified on the basis of costs to the various departments, would have to take into account these facts of university finance. It's not nearly as simple as suggested.

  76. Food courts pay the Uni, not the reverse by phorm · · Score: 1

    In general, it's not the schools running the food booths, and it's certainly not *costing* them anything (at least not around here). Instead, they rent space to Starbucks, McD's, etc etc. It's pretty much the same as a food court in a mall. Those merchants pay staff, do their own cleaning, buy their own supplies etc etc. If anything the Uni may be paying less as they don't need to keep a full cafeteria staff on-hand.

    The only costs to the Uni would be in created the space in the first place, and general maintenance/cleaning.

    At the worst I would expect this to break even, but in any cases I know of it's somewhat profitable.

  77. Just, no. by Macdude · · Score: 1

    This plan would drive more people into liberal arts degrees and away from STEM degrees, it's a bad plan.

    --
    "Grab them by the pussy" -- President of the United States of America
  78. Re: Cut the filler and fluff classes to save time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PE classes can actually be useful. If it involves real activity that the student may not have convenient access to otherwise, like swimming, it works out well. If it's an academic class that's actually useful, like a first aid class that gets you a Red Cross certificate in CPR, that's fine as well.

    If it's an absolutely useless class that just gets you off your butt for an hour a week in exchange for a PE credit, like Roller Skating (regular and advanced!) that's a waste of your money and time. And, yes, I took all four of these classes. (I couldn't get into Bowling classes, dammit!)

  79. You get quite a bit out of those taxes by gwolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You get a better society, a society where your neighbours' kids have a better understanding of the world, a better future, better job prospects, less likelihood to rob you, and a long great etcetera.

    1. Re:You get quite a bit out of those taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, that was true until the most recent variant of the education system.

    2. Re:You get quite a bit out of those taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in a low-income neighborhood, and my taxes pay for all the wonderful things you mentioned. And in return we get vandalized on a regular basis. If you ever suggest that I make a voluntary donation to support these people, please step over here so I can laugh directly in your face.

    3. Re:You get quite a bit out of those taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. "You get a better society" is an argument concocted in the Ivory Tower. Come on down to ground zero and you'll see exactly how much "civilization" your government programs have achieved. The truth is that some people naturally have less respect, on average, for other people -- and for whatever reason, those people are concentrated in low-income neighborhoods. It's something you'll never experience as a member of the middle class.

  80. Engineering degress bring in research $$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Research grants bring a lot of money to universities which in turn take a cut of the action.

    https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/20141012030806-161640750-top-engineering-colleges-by-research-dollars-federal-state-and-industrial-support

  81. Make the colleges pay for low value educations by quietwalker · · Score: 1

    As long as we are going to treat education as a commodity - and we are, since it's so tightly coupled with the more lucrative careers and degrees exist as a primary requirement for those positions - we need to bring that into focus at all levels.

    The easiest way I can think of doing that is simply to require the college itself to co-sign the student loans, so they're on the hook if the student defaults or it's not paid off after a certain period of time - say 10-20 years.

    This should have the following impact:
        - The college will not accept students who select majors which do not have the potential for a valuable career, who must also take out sizable loans
        - Colleges will adjust their own actual costs downwards, since they are in effect, potentially charging themselves.
        - Colleges will be more invested in each individual student's academic success, both in quality and completion of education.
        - Degrees will increase in value as the effective supply is restricted.

    Now, for those who think that effectively removing non-payout educations is a bad idea, consider this: the students who follow those majors and accrue massive debt are indulging in a luxury. They are buying something they cannot afford which does not have a reasonable potential to afford them a chance to pay it back, much less provide a means to a livelihood. Remember, education is a commodity. This is no different than an 18 year old buying a 100,000 dollar car, on credit. It has no real potential for return on investment, even if you feel it's personally enriching.

    Yes, if you're rich, you can afford a luxury like a fancy car or art history degree. Or seen from another angle, you can take riskier investments because you have a better safety net.

    *record scratch*
    Ok, stop, I know what you're thinking. That makes certain degrees only accessible to the elites, and that's unfair.

    Well, you're wrong. It's fair. It's a LUXURY. It's not necessary. An education has a finite, specific value, an estimable potential, and it's tied strongly into the socio-economic environment. So many participants - students and faculty alike - fail to realize this very important part.
    *music continues*

    Of course, if someone were to break the education/commodity relationship, perhaps by making education free, we could reap the benefits to society that education in non-lucrative majors purport to provide - such as art and music - which do not financially enrich the individuals. However, that doesn't seem to be happening, and besides, there's no measurable way to claim that these individuals DO contribute their potential to society in any greater amount than those who are not similarly educated.

    1. Re:Make the colleges pay for low value educations by toadlife · · Score: 1

      Value to the economy is not necessarily value to society.

      However, that doesn't seem to be happening, and besides, there's no measurable way to claim that these individuals DO contribute their potential to society in any greater amount than those who are not similarly educated.

      Of course there is. You could analyze societal data (like crime rates, school quality and performance, voter participation, healthcare outcomes, etc) among populations with varying education levels and fields.

      --
      I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
  82. More BS, piled higher and deeper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All this would do is create vast numbers of jobs for bean counters.

    Meanwhile, it's totally bogus. Engineering depts get govt grants that cover some or all of salaries. So, while they might pay more, they also get more from outside. For decades, universities have been complaining that unlike engineering and science, they have to pay humanities profs out of endowment, not grants.

    This is just a bogus argument to extract more money from students, and it's also bad for the society, because society really does not need more scholars dissecting the early work of Ezra Pound, who don't know the difference between a kilowatt and a kilobyte and are willing to believe that magic is evidence for UFOs.

  83. Already a cost difference? by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    When you consider the costs of text books, and lab fees.

  84. Salary Information Misleading... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you can access salary information for a university or 4-year college, browse salary by academic department. I don't refute that engineering professors are well paid, but not all "sciences" are paid equally. In addition, some non-sciences are paid very well: some of the highest salaries are in Business and Accounting, while some of the lowest salaries are in Biology.

  85. They already do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Very few English majors have experience "lab fees" as a cost. It is common in many fields of study to charge lab fees and material fees. And then their are fields with remote trips, like geology or archeology.

    So a big "NO" is in order. As STEM is pushed as a needed field with a lack of students, charging them more is not likely to encourage more participants.

  86. TANSTAAFL by way2slo · · Score: 1

    Making it "Free" to students only shifts the burden to all taxpayers.

    Which kicks-in another consequence. No barrier to entry.

    Remember back to your High School days? Now imagine instead of graduating after 12th Grade, next year you simply took the bus over to a new school building next door and attended 13th through 16th Grades with the same classmates and pretty much the same type of teachers.

    That's where it would be headed. Since it's free and most employers would want it, most students would go. In order to handle that sort of demand, the local Community Colleges could never handle it (if taxpayers pay for it, then everyone will be allowed to go), the States would have to supply it just like they do K-12. (and only a matter of time before States start passing laws, with the help of the Union, making it mandatory like K-12.) Mostly, because that is what they know how to do. The teachers would be Union and the Union would make sure it happened this way. Also, the increased demand coupled with the low salaries (compared to current college professors as a tax payer funded system would pitch the tax payers vs. the teachers just like K-12) would make people think twice about being teacher in that system. Also, who would be the "Inner City" College Teacher? It is highly likely they would have the same problems as their 9-12th counterparts.

    There will still be "Private" colleges, just like there are Private Schools but they will be the "real" colleges that we know today. But their costs will remain unchanged and taxpayer dollars only used in States that have passed the "voucher" system.

    There is a high probability that the end result of a "Free" college education for all will result in most people getting an 8 year High School education for free while the few students that can pay or get loans for a Private College will get a more advanced education with superior teachers and materials. So, only changes are forcing non-college students to take 4 more years of classes and making all taxpayers pay for it.

  87. what about science? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Equipment needed to run a wet lab is much more expensive than equipment needed to run an electrical engineering department. And scientific careers take longer to startup and pay less than engineering ones. Wouldn't this make scientific education impossible?

  88. how about by expected return on investment? by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

    I'd paying for what you are actually getting or using as long as availbllity of loans are actually tied to the likelyhood you will be able to pay them back when you graduate with a degree and your chances of success in a given program.

    --
    âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
  89. Baumol's Cost Disease (was: Re:No ) by erikscott · · Score: 2

    The real answer is Baumol's Cost Disease, and it's why all services get expensive faster than overall average inflation. It's also why products get expensive slower than overall inflation. $6 T-Shirts at Sears are cheaper, inflation adjusted, than they were when I was a kid in the 70s (6 bucks today was 2 bucks in 1981 and pennies before 1974). Meanwhile, have you hired a couple of musicians for a wedding lately? Freaking expensive. Education is a service, not a product, and there have only been the slightest productivity improvements. The National Science Foundation and the National Institutes for Health set the overhead rates, and they've barely changed since the early 90s. Incidentally, the number one driver of university costs has been faculty and staff health insurance - like every other labor-intensive business.

    1. Re:Baumol's Cost Disease (was: Re:No ) by bluegutang · · Score: 1

      But in the last few decades, real wages for professions outside the university have NOT increased. So why should university wages have to rise to remain competitive with them?

  90. Re:More trades / tech schools are needed and not 4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There isn't a shortage of trade schools and IT related skills can almost be completely learned through self-study. What there is a shortage of is people going to trade schools and HR people willing to hire trade school graduates. We don't need any more schools. We need people to use the ones we have. No one is locked into a 4 year system, especially if you go to a trade school. I don't know of a single school that makes you sign a contract saying you can't drop out or switch majors.

  91. Re:You mean "forced to pay, whether you attend or by budgenator · · Score: 1

    Professors don't work for free.

    They say they do, somebody is getting the big-bucks and you can be sure it isn't the professors, the TAs, or the interns.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  92. Already taken care of by nycsubway · · Score: 1

    That's why the sciences have "lab fees" of $35/semester.

    But in reality, all disciplines should be charged the same. Charging different rates depending on department would create worse infighting between departments than already exists. Plus you can generally take any class outside of your major if you have the prerequisites, which is great.

  93. Re:More trades / tech schools are needed and not 4 by dwpro · · Score: 1

    The fact that this has always been there yet has not caught on despite being cheaper shows that the market for employees that lack a broad (dare I say liberal arts) education are not in demand. This surprises me but I support it because I want an educated citizenry.

    --
    Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
  94. Cost Should Equal Value / Banks Can Help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An English degree costs less because an English professor costs less, and the earning potential is less.

    An Engineering degree costs more because an Engineering professor costs more, and the earning potential is greater.

    If I need a loan from a bank to go to school, I would expect the bank to be willing to loan me more based on future earning potential.

  95. I lived through that 'european' system. It sucks. by lamer01 · · Score: 1

    As a teenager growing up in Europe, I had to compete for those limited spots. For many reasons, I was out-competed. The effort required to get into the top 'free' institutions was more than I was willing to put forth as I was a kid and wanted to do kid things not spend all day studying. Luckily I ended up in the USA where I got a decent education without the cutthroat competition. I became a very successful professional in a STEM field. I think the USA system costs a lot but gives opportunity to kids to become something without facing life-sucking competition at the age where they should be kids.

  96. Do you really want to fix the college problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The answer is in labor laws. Specifically, if a specific degree is required as a condition of employment, the job must start out AT LEAST X percentage above min wage.

    For example...

    If the job doesn't require even a HS diploma, you can pay minimum wage.

    If the job requires a HS diploma, it must pay at least 150% of min wage

    If the job requires an AA degree, it must pay at least 200% of min wage

    If the job requires a BA degree, it must pay at least 300% of min wage

    If the job requires a BS degree, it must pay at least 350% of min wage

    If the job requires an MA degree, it must pay at least 400% of min wage

    If the job requires an MS degree, it must pay at least 450% of min wage

    If the job requires a terminal degree (MFA, PhD, ect), it must pay at least 500% of min wage

    Such a system would eliminate the requirements for jobs that don't really need a degree, and would make the job market a lot clearer for those seeking a degree. It would also make it easier to pay off those student loans.
     

  97. No, because costs are only half the story by Comrade+Ogilvy · · Score: 1

    The other half of the story are revenues.

    STEM professors bring in substantially more grants and prestige to the university. Undergrads and grad students are part of the package of taking advantage of those professors who rake in the grant money.

    If the university actually considered the full financial picture, they might well charge more tuition to the English major because the English department is a greater burden per student in the major. But even that idea is foolishness, because a university cannot be a university without a properly staffed English department that serves the entire undergrad student body.

    A university can learn useful lessons from the business world, but running a university exactly like a business is idiotic.

  98. Re:You mean "forced to pay, whether you attend or by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 2

    I get nothing for it myself

    That is not really true. Government by mere existence protects property. People with more property use more of the government protection. I am not just talking about homes. The financial instruments you own, the retirement funds you have saved, etc are protected by government enforcing contract law and settling civil disputes. People don't write rubber checks a lot because, they are scared they will end up in jail. It makes all businesses efficient, that improves your stock market returns and improves your ability to earn.

    People who earn a lot, people who own a lot, use lots of government services. They have a lot to lose, if the government falls. So they should pay lots of taxes, and do everything to improve faith in the government and make sure the government works well and works efficiently.

    Denounce government corruption, inefficiency, apathy etc. But not the government itself. Fight the unreasonable levels of taxation. But don't start going around saying "all taxation is theft". Such talk is very counterproductive.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  99. Re:More trades / tech schools are needed and not 4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's probably true, but I wouldn't trust those for-profit universities with it (and I'm right-wing; libertarian economic theory was a terrible idea). A lot of community college already have automotive repair and similar courses. They're probably the best location for such courses.

    Word verification: palliate

  100. No. It should vary on it's usefulness. by Chas · · Score: 1

    Pointless shit that allows you lots of time to think about being unemployed?

    Liberal Arts?
    Sociology?
    Lesbian Dance Theory?

    Charge money like money's going out of style.

    STEM?
    Law?
    Business degrees?

    You know, USEFUL jobs? Charge the bare minimum.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  101. Well make the first 2 years at the same cost as HS by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    Well make the first 2 years at the same cost as HS and at the end of 2 years you get an degree. You should get both an AA/AS and an BA/BS for a 4 year school and all 2 year plans should give an AA/AS.

    It ad's a true point from Some College to 4 year degree and makes it 100% across the board.

  102. dual track education system can help as well downs by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    dual track education system can help as well downsizing college into more an badges based cert system where it's not big long years to get the next badge / next level.

    Also moving people from college to trades / apprenticeship setting is better for people who learn that way and for skills that go better hands on / need less theory based learning.

  103. Re:More trades / tech schools are needed and not 4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are they, though?

    Are electricians, welders, etc. actually in short supply?

    If so, why haven't more trade schools appear to fill that demand or why haven't existing schools started to offer trade programs? Schools respond to real market demand on two sides - what students want to learn and what industry demands. If one or the other market force is absent, the programs don't appear.

    Saying what higher ed. should do is the wrong way to think. They respond to two outside forces for the bulk of their degree programs. Either make trades appealing to students (high pay, good work environment) or make the market have demand for skilled tradesman.

    Don't pin the tail on the wrong donkey.

  104. Re:You mean "forced to pay, whether you attend or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not being either a professor or network admin. I don't see a problem with A.

  105. Re:More trades / tech schools are needed and not 4 by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    More trades / tech schools are needed and they should not be locked in to the 4 year system.

    The current 4-year system is preferred because it makes things easy for resume readers (people and machines) to know what your degree really means. A typical opening will receive hundreds of resumes; readers don't have time to figure out obscure education descriptions. If new custom types of degrees/certificates are invented, it will complicate resume reading.

    "Oh look, Bob has a Snockular degree. That's nice, but what the hell is a Snockular degree?"

    We'd have to come up with simple, common, and certified conventions if we want to replace or improve on the existing conventions.

    I propose year-level-based system for a topic (major) and general education. The "general" level group would be for language, history, sociology, communications, art, etc.

    General Levels:

    1 = High-school or equivalent.
    2 = equivalent to general ed. you'd get from an Associate degree.
    3 = equivalent to 3 years of general ed. from a 4-year university.
    4 = equivalent to the general ed. from a 4-year degree.

    Topic (Major) Levels:

    1 = A single training course or class.
    2 = equivalent to major-related education you'd get from an Associate degree.
    3 = equivalent to 3 years of major-related education from a current 4-year university.
    4 = equivalent to the major-related education from a current 4-year degree.

    (6 may be equiv. of a Master's degree, but I'm not sure we need 5 and 6 yet.)

    A resume could then say something like: "Education: Software Programming & Engineering: level 3, general level: 2"

    Other than clarifying the level 3's, it's not really much different from the existing system. But it allows a wider mix.

    A typical trade school would probably give a level-3 of topic education, but one wouldn't need the general levels, although "1" may be expected or required. That would be a lot cheaper than the education for a 4 general and 4 topic level.

    Employers can decide how much value they attribute to general education. I agree general ed. is good, but it's expensive.

  106. Re:Exactly. If government offered coupons for $10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "free". Why would you put "10$" on the coupon? Is the rest of your personal philosophy equally as muddled?

  107. So .... you need my address? by raymorris · · Score: 0

    I'm not quite clear - are you saying that the benefits to people other than the student are great enough that it makes sense to pay for 100% of someone else's time in college?

    That is, if you pay $50,000 - $150,000 (whether via taxes or any other mechanism) for me to get a degree, it'll be worth it you, because you'll have another more educated member of society around?

    If so, I guess you need my address, to send the check? No need to wait for the politicians to force you to pay for my school. You can start today, if you truly think it makes sense to do so.

  108. Re:More trades / tech schools are needed and not 4 by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    More trades / tech schools are needed and they should not be locked in to the 4 year system.

    There isn't a shortage of trade and tech schools. There's a shortage of jobs with realistic education expectations. Oh you're "only" an electrician? We only employ electrician / instrument dual technicians who also have a business degree. There's also a shortage of expectations. We're told at school to be anything in life we need to go to university and get a good job. No one is told about trades, that they pay well, that they are cheaper than a university degree, and that many of those degrees you can do are completely worthless.

  109. Re:I lived through that 'european' system. It suck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a teenager growing up in Europe, I had to compete for those limited spots. For many reasons, I was out-competed. The effort required to get into the top 'free' institutions was more than I was willing to put forth as I was a kid and wanted to do kid things not spend all day studying. Luckily I ended up in the USA where I got a decent education without the cutthroat competition. I became a very successful professional in a STEM field. I think the USA system costs a lot but gives opportunity to kids to become something without facing life-sucking competition at the age where they should be kids.

    What country are you talking about? In "La Belgique" where I grew up, anyone could study whatever they wanted. Only engineering, dentist, and medical doctor had an entrance exam, and that was just a) a basic IQ test and b) test of math you would need to pass the first year anyway.

    The UK is not exactly the EU anymore, if it ever was one of us...

  110. Re:More trades / tech schools are needed and not 4 by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    Well some trades works was good but there less jobs now days. Like construction being an ditch digger used to be good paying now days you need to know how to run the backhoe and there are less jobs / hours in that.

    Back in the 90's you got like $15/hr just to do the stop / slow sign in a work zone and that was good pay for the time.

  111. Should be about three fiddy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for a post graduate in basket weaving

  112. Re:The Tax Office would like to have a word with y by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're working in Sweden and aren't paying for the universities, the Tax Office would like to have a word with you.

    He said he lived in Sweden, he didn't claim to have a job.
    http://www.tradingeconomics.com/sweden/youth-unemployment-rate

  113. "state" university doesn't mean much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My university is a "state" university, technically public, but only 5% of the funding comes from the state itself.

    What makes more sense is for education pricing to be different based on major, but for federal grants to cover the full cost of tuition and implement higher standards for entry into technical programs in order to reduce attrition (in my program the attrition rate was high because the introductory classes were graded too leniently and it set students up for failure).

    Engineering degrees cost more because the technology, supplies, and teachers are more expensive (as they should be, poor wages compared to industry are already a huge incentive against teaching as a career for engineers specifically). Why should students getting an easy degree that's worth little more than the paper it's printed on have to subsidize us engineers? If you really want to make it equally priced to promote equal opportunity, it makes more sense to create special mandatory work/study programs that offset the cost.

  114. Wrong by Tyrannicsupremacy · · Score: 0

    All college degrees should cost $500,000 because we know they're totally worth it.

    --
    http://i.cubeupload.com/T6cyLu.png
  115. Re:You mean "forced to pay, whether you attend or by Crazy+Taco · · Score: 1

    A better educated population benefits society as a whole. So those who don't attend university benefit when other do - they get better doctors, better engineers designing and building their infrastructure and so on.

    That's a nice sounding little statement from an emotional perspective, but is unlikely to be true. Someone who is paying for their education is likely to work harder, so as not to waste their money, which will lead to them becoming better educated. And someone who has no desire for more learning after high school is unlikely to spend their money on college. On the other hand, make it "free" and then all those same people who may not be interested in learning will start going, because who doesn't want a four year party free from parents and working a real job? Just because more people show up, doesn't mean "society is better educated" (and given the insanity going on right now at places like Mizzou and Yale, where students are calling for repealing the first ammendment, having safe spaces, etc, I'd argue society is becoming less educated at college, but that's a topic for another day).

    The part of the role of government is the pooling and allocation of resources.

    Unless you are a communist like Marx or Lenin, that is not the role of government. Government's role is to keep us free and preserve our rights, including our core rights of life, liberty and property. Taking people's property away by force to redistribute it and spend it how the government deems "best" is most assuredly not a valid role of government, especially under the US constitution.

    --
    Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it.
  116. You're making 6 figures and you get nothing? by Brannon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    1. nobody has killed you and taken your stuff
    2. your savings [denominated in dollars] isn't subject to rampant inflation
    3. your job exists because of a large, diverse, functional economy
    4. no other country has invaded ours and destroyed our economy

    If you think #1-#4 are easy, then please point me to the other country which manages all of these at lower taxes.

  117. No, just no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Degrees should be separated into hobby and career.
    Career degrees are those with a job future that doesn't involve complaining online about what lousy tippers people in your area are.
    Hobby degrees are jobs with ~0 employment chance (beyond what you already had in HS). Philosophy, women's studies, Art appreciation, Gym, etc as your only potential job is to replace one of your teachers when they retire. What are you going to do become a door to door philosopher or work at an art crisis center?
    All loans should illegal for hobby degrees. You are just creating slaves by allowing people to take out massive loans to find there is no job waiting for them at the end of college.
    Hobby degrees should also cost at least 5x as much as career degrees, just in case some people wanted to make a bad life choice even without loans.
    As it is Youtube can teach you your hobby degree better than your college can for some fields art.
    Worried about not enough women in STEM? Fixed!
    Worried about the debt students carry coming out of college? Improved!
    Heck, if you want to make career degrees free go for it but watch the colleges so this is not used to jack tuition through the roof on the tax payer's dime. They try it, their board goes to max sec prison, for life.
    We are competing with the Chinese here, this is a war, we need all the STEM students we can get. In the long run the public helping fund it is a smart plan.
    If you are worried about tiny fields who do need a few people. Those will either be filled by the wealthy who can afford hobby degrees or you have a lottery for x students per year to fill the available jobs.

  118. I think Europe should get rid of soccer. by Brannon · · Score: 1

    People there watch way too much soccer. There are fistfights in stadiums and public drunkeness. It's a distraction for their workforce. I don't personally enjoy soccer, and America seems to get along without it [for the most part], therefore I can't understand why different countries (with different cultural and historic factors) need it.

    Also, why so much tea? get rid of that, too.

  119. What about research? by rmullig2 · · Score: 1

    How much money in research grants do English professors bring into the university?

  120. Re:You mean "forced to pay, whether you attend or by nedlohs · · Score: 1

    That's a nice sounding little statement from an emotional perspective, but is unlikely to be true. Someone who is paying for their education is likely to work harder, so as not to waste their money, which will lead to them becoming better educated. And someone who has no desire for more learning after high school is unlikely to spend their money on college. On the other hand, make it "free" and then all those same people who may not be interested in learning will start going, because who doesn't want a four year party free from parents and working a real job? Just because more people show up, doesn't mean "society is better educated" (and given the insanity going on right now at places like Mizzou and Yale, where students are calling for repealing the first ammendment, having safe spaces, etc, I'd argue society is becoming less educated at college, but that's a topic for another day).

    You seem to have a strange assumption that "free" means everyone gets to go. But that isn't the case, instead of allocating places based on ability to pay they are allocated based upon results in previous education (high school usually) - that doesn't change the number. And yes all things else the same the student with straight As in high school is more likely to do well at college than the student with straight Cs whose parents are richer.

    You don't want more people showing up. You just want to pick the people that do attend based upon performance and not wealth.

    SJW idiocy is irrelevant.

    Unless you are a communist like Marx or Lenin, that is not the role of government. Government's role is to keep us free and preserve our rights, including our core rights of life, liberty and property. Taking people's property away by force to redistribute it and spend it how the government deems "best" is most assuredly not a valid role of government, especially under the US constitution.

    I clearly prefixed who would consider those the role of the government. And that you are free to disagree. But you jump to the extreme instantly and dismiss alternative views with "communist" rather than considering for a moment that maybe the made up by people concept of government might be thought of differently when made up by different people?

    Numerous governments that exist in the world today and are not communist consider the pooling and allocation of resources to be a role of the government. The US constitution is irrelevant, given that other countries is specifically ("like is it in ..." comparing other places with the US) what is being discussed and it means as much to them as theirs do to the US.

    The US clearly considers the pooling and allocation of resources to be a role of the government, since that is what the military is. The pooling of resources in order to allocate communal defense rather than having each individual do whatever they think is needed for the military defense of the nation.

    The US is famously more individualist than most other countries. But that shouldn't stop you from at least being able to comprehend how and why other people might see things differently without instantly labeling them with bogyman (well in the US) terms like communist. You don't have to agree with people to understand them.

  121. when did you go to college by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the late 70s, when I went to college, UCLA cost about $1000/yr - total.. student fees, books, etc. The minimum wage was $2.50/hr at the beginning, and up to about $3/hr at the end. One could feasibly work a summer job to cover those fees (say, 3 months, 12 weeks at 40 hrs/week @ 2.50/hr is $1200). Yes, dorm & meal plan added $155/month, but you have to feed yourself and house yourself regardless.. The "increased" cost for school *could* be met by a part time student job at minimum wage. At 2.50/hr, you could pay the $155 with 60 or so hours spread across the month. (and, of course, if you really were minimum wage, you'd qualify for a grant in aid.. you wouldn't be paying full boat. None of this student loan as financial aid thing you see today)

    This is not the case today- It's about $20k/yr to do UCLA these days, and that same 480 hours summer work will get you all of $4800. Assuming such a job exists. There aren't "student compatible" part time jobs - with worker hour management software, the store/retail/fast food outlet wants you there for 2 hours during rush, then off for 3 hours, then there for 2 hours, but maybe, depending on the weather forecast, etc. There are people with families to support who are working/juggling 2 or 3 of these "who knows what the work hours will be more than 24 hours in advance" jobs.

    1. Re:when did you go to college by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the high cost of paying for college is a problem, you are right. If we can, I would like to help with that.

      That wasn't the topic though: the topic was whether someone should have to work a part-time job in college. My answer is: yes, that is absolutely fine, stop being lazy.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  122. College has been Hijacked by PC Agendas by LeftCoastThinker · · Score: 1

    Having paid for everything as I went and gotten an AA from a junior college, BS from a 4 year, as well as MS and PhD and then teaching for 4 years as well as working in the private sector for 17 years, the entire college system is out of balance.

    - JCs have become a second chance at high school for many students (I did it because I had to pay for everything myself, but saw the mentality first hand).
    - 4 year state schools are filled with students who are distracted by constant partying and/or perfecting the art of the hookup.
    - Post graduate education is essentially indentured servitude of degree holding adults who could be making $60k/year in the private sector teaching themselves and teaching undergrads because their professor hates teaching and wants to spend all of their time doing research.

    We need to revamp our high schools similar to the way that Japan runs them, where if you screw off and get shit grades in junior high or high school, you get kicked out and have to go to vocational school to learn a trade (which can often be just as lucrative as a 4 year degree, but requires less brains). You don't get to go to college unless you get a diploma or a GED and maybe some minimum score on the SATs. This reduces the overcrowding at the university level, as well as the party mentality currently found there.

    To reduce college costs, all student housing and meals should be run privately by lowest bidder every 3 years and pricing should be tied to market surveys for the city in which the university exists. i.e. if the average local 1 bedroom apartment costs $500/month and you have 3 roommates, you should only pay $125/month for housing. If the local sit down restaurant charges $4 for a Caesar salad, the college can't charge $9, especially for an inferior product (this happens and its ridiculous).

    First and foremost we must force our colleges to refocus from BS PC agenda majors/GE requirements to the core goal of college: providing the tools for students to get jobs. GE requirements should be eliminated completely and each department every 3 years must be forced to show justification that they are creating professionals for actual job market needs and getting a 75% or higher placement rate in those fields, otherwise they no longer get any tax payer funding. Actual tuition should be 50% paid for by the state through taxes if you maintain a 3.0 or higher in a degree field that is profitable (when you apply for your college, you have to present a plan and a market study on the job market you are targeting when you graduate, how much you will make in 1-5-10 years and how much debt you will cary and when it will be paid off). The other 50% should be loans/grants out of pocket etc. However, since the tax payer is footing the bill for your degree, if your GPA drops below 3.0, you go on probation, and if you drop below 2.0, you get expelled and have to go to vocational school or get a job. Today, we have far too many people educated beyond their intelligence who can't understand why they can't get a job with their English/liberal arts/poli sci/Chicano studies/underwater basket weaving degree and are being crushed under mountains of student loan debt that they should never have taken on to begin with. Unless you are independently wealthy, you should be doing a cost benefit analysis to see if your degree is worth anything near what you are paying for it.

    Sate run colleges should be focused on teaching and eliminate the practice of tenure. Professors who consistently score low in the quality of their students reviews and/or subsequent performance should go on probation and if not improved, termination. They should have a separate branch that is dedicated to research. If a professor can pull in enough grant money to cover his salary, (s)he can move over to the research branch and the college can hire a new professor to teach. Thus the professors who are teaching must be focused on teaching, and the professors focused on research can focus on their research. Students and graduates who want to work on research must be paid prevailing wage for their qualifications and they can get credits for working on the project.

    --
    If you disagree, please post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like
  123. Liberal Arts doesn't bring in money by dprimary · · Score: 1

    Engineering, medical and so on bring in donations and partnerships. Very few people have any interest in funding liberal arts buildings and programs.

  124. Re:Either free or loans indexed to starting salari by zerofoo · · Score: 1

    It probably won't affect the choice of degree.

    If a high starting salary warrants a higher loan amount - then colleges will raise the price of that course of study (why leave money on the table?). A lower starting salary would result in a lower loan amount - this would force colleges to lower the cost of those degree programs - or lose enrollment numbers in those degree programs.

    I doubt a policy like this would push an English major to study medicine.

    What this will do is prevent colleges from charging the same amounts for English and medical courses of study.

  125. No way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are no engineering jobs! I know this because I studied engineering and can't get a job. There can't possibly be a problem with me!

  126. Re:I lived through that 'european' system. It suck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why o why do I have a hard time believing any of this? Your description of education in Europe versus the USA sounds almost exactly reversed compared to reality...

  127. Re:You mean "forced to pay, whether you attend or by bluegutang · · Score: 1

    If we were not spending around $600 billion a year on bombing the middle east and occupying the rest of the world with military bases

    That money is intended to secure our oil supply, secure trade corridors, and prevent terrorism at the source. The economic effect of those goals is vast. Now you can argue that the money is not being spent effectively...

  128. Recurring revenue by infernalC · · Score: 1

    I would think you would have to consider how much money the grads of the more expensive programs contribute to the endowments, spend on football tickets, and pay in taxes later. I bet an engineer will pay a lot more back to the state in taxes than an art teacher.

  129. A common scenario by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You've implied that you're smart, but apparently you're not quite smart enough to rise above the pleasures of arrogance. Seems like a common scenario here on slashdot.

  130. Re:Either free or loans indexed to starting salari by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

    But it increases risk to the student to pursue the more lucrative degree. I knew a guy who started medical school, then family health problems sprang up and next thing you know he's a regional manager at a McDonald's because that was the most lucrative job he could get quickly. That's not terribly common, but the onus of paying back loans is on the student, not the school, so the risk/reward effect there would need to be considered.

  131. Re: You mean "forced to pay, whether you attend or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you are forgetting the long term payback - those children will be the workforce that pays for your Social Security pension.

  132. Re:I lived through that 'european' system. It suck by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    So, you prefer money instead of brain power as the deciding factor who gets a degree. Well, to each their own, I guess. Back in the Soviet Union the deciding factor was how good a Marxist-Leninist you were.

    In the end, I have a hunch that I'd prefer the doctor that is the brightest instead of the one that has the richest parents or can recite Lenin while preparing for his malpractice suit.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  133. Clearly you aren't paying attention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It already costs more for any Engineering/Science degree than it does for an English major. How much does any Calculus textbook cost? Any Physics textbook? Do English majors pay Lab fees? All lab courses have extra fees added at every school I have been to.

  134. Shortcuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lumping engineering and science degrees together is completely asinine. Hooray for shortcut science.

  135. Safe Space NeededRe:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So we got Trump because Special Snowflakes called things they don't like names?

    Wow so sensitive. Good thing we made the White House a safe space for those Corporate/Conservative folks.

  136. racers gonna race by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let that racism flag fly! trump said it was ok. Go ahead, tell us how ya really feel. Drop the N bomb. You know you want to.

  137. Modern government roles needs to be redefined... by martinfb · · Score: 1

    Modern government roles needs to be redefined.

    In today's society, most needs differ than those in 1776.
    Sure, we still need freedom of speech, yet as it was intended. Back in 1776, blatant lies were relatively rare. Today, lying is the norm - especially for politicians.

    So, in line with this thought, it seems our government "by the people" needs to be "FOR the people" - people of contemporary times.
    Provide protection and freedom.
    Today, we need protection and freedom - from terrorism - like from shootings and bombs and biochemical threats.
    And that means health care for those victims.
    And that also means education to provide abilities to handle threats and health care.

    Beyond that small scenario, it still makes sense to have peoples as smart as possible, as health as possible.
    Seems like a right to me. A right that I can choose to take or not.

    --


    Self-importance and self-indulgence is the root of ALL evil.
  138. What "should" means by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

    In order to answer this we need to know which meaning of "should" is intended.

    Is this a prediction, made according to theory or experience? Apparently not.

    Is this a moral imperative, as in "you should do what you agreed to do"? Apparently not.

    Is it in a sentence with an implied clause -- "in order to" -- about something to be attained or avoided? Apparently.

    Leaving that up to the reader to fill in makes for a more free-ranging discussion, I suppose.

    If you want an actual answer, you should not leave that part out.

    --
    There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.