Accountability, Education, Education Reform, Higher Ed, Technology, Transparency

Are the Rising Costs of College Tuition Out of Control?

Survey – 92% say yes

  • The rising tuition fees will significantly destroy the hopes of future students from attending higher education to envolve their carrers

    The higher tuitions costs will not improve the teaching quality of the lecturers and brings more stress and debt to sponsored and unsponsored future students. People may as well do self study as an alternative, and if that is the case, higher education insitiutes may as well be abolished because people CANNOT afford the fees and this may create a financial problem to the colleges should they enforce it. Finished students already have a chain of debt to deal with there is simply no need to make it worse.

    Yes Anonymous
  • I agree that the rising costs of college tuition out of control.

    Right now is the time for me to start looking at colleges. I want to go somewhere out of state (preferably around the New York or New Jersey area), but the tuition for out of state students is making it impossible. I’m looking at all my options and I don’t know what to do. The tuition costs are going to lead me in the community college direction.

    Yes MeanGarfield64
  • The cost of higher education is getting to the point where it outweighs the value of that education.

    When you have to spend yourself into so much debt to get an education that doesn’t give you that much of an advantage over others in your future career, then the costs are out of control. If colleges and universities can’t find ways to keep their costs down, then they should stop operating and close down. This would cause the value of the higher education to increase again, because it would stop the dilution of higher education.

    Yes MariaR
  • The cost of tuition is rising because of amenities, competition, and for-profit colleges, and is saddling millions with unreasonable debt.

    College in the United States has become an industry based heavily on student loans. Many students will be paying off their loans for long periods of their lives. But the system has grown to make it normal that students pay for college that they cannot afford. With the willingness to take more than students can afford, there are fewer limits on costs. Therefore, schools compete for students by offering costly amenities, which are often completely unrelated to education. Compounding the problem, for-profit colleges have sprung up which use a business model based on retaining students just long enough to get federal loan and grant money. After being milked in this way, students are often left to languish and fail, and in any case, the education is sub-par even for passing students. The loan industry must be curtailed.

    Yes tacomoon
  • Yes, because students are not getting value for the extreme expenses they incur, and college is being priced out of range of many people.

    The cost of college is obscene, more than its substantial merits can justify. And now with the economic crisis, public universities and community colleges are cutting back, leaving students with fewer and fewer options. Faculty, staff, and administrators should be able to make a decent living, and schools should be able to finance both good instruction and good research, without charging exorbitant rates. This balance is achieved in many other countries, and we should fight for it here as well. Without broadly-affordable higher education, which is not to say everyone “should” necessarily want it, it seems likely that income inequality and social inequality will increase in tandem. This leaves the middle class more fragile, increasing social divisions, and setting us up for a declining standard of living. This problem of educational expenses has been building for decades, and it is past time we addressed it.

    Yes M4I4cFeIine
  • The rising costs of college tuition are definitely out of control.

    The cost of college tuition is considered by many to be an investment, but the job market now does not always award those with degrees, so it is a risk as well. Families already save throughout their children’s lives to be able to afford college, only to find out that the costs have gone up once again.

    Yes CheyanneT
  • College costs too much and many people can’t afford it anymore.

    College costs too much relative to the amount of money you will earn after school. Kids are saddled with thousands and thousands of dollars in student loan debt despite the fact that many will leave college without a job prospect. The fact of the matter is the cost of tuition is not proportional to the value of the education you receive.

    Yes Fr4Giga
  • Where did the money go?

    When health care costs rose at 4 times the rate of inflation for ten years, it became a political crisis solved by creation of socialized medicine in the United States in the guise of Obamacare. Yet college tuition has increased at 7 times the rate of inflation. And student loans cannot be bankrupted as medical debt can be; once acquired, it only goes away when paid off. Tuition increases, yet college class sizes increase. Much money is wasted on climbing walls and fancy dorms, yet professors are increasingly focused on papers and research instead of teaching. This is the equivalent of paying two people to do a job; the TA gets minimum wage while the tenured professor is paid tens of thousands of dollars to do nothing. There is horrific waste and those least able to pay it, starving students and their overburdened parents, receive less concern than a medical industry that was taken over by the federal government.

    Yes Pir4And
  • Yes, the rising costs of college tuition are out of control and have risen each year while peoples incomes have declined.

    Yes, the rising costs of college tuition are out of control because people’s incomes have declined over the past few years and there are many more unemployed people but tuition costs keep going up every year. Maybe the professors should take a pay cut.

    Yes MycCra2ii
  • I think that tuition is out of control.

    College tuition is so high already, even if you don’t attend an Ivy League school. If they’re going to charge so much, then books should be part of the cost to attend school…not an extra.

    Yes WitchSale
  • Tuition is out of control; it has increased faster than salaries or income over the last few decades.

    The rising costs of college tuition is out of control. Tuition has increased much faster than incomes and salaries in the last 20 years. In addition, the value of a liberal arts degree has declined. Tuition is propping up unpopular and useless majors making a good education tough to pay for.

    Yes 54mP5KryPto
  • I agree that tuition fees have gone out of control, there are no restrictions on them by government and they have made colleges a business.

    There are no restrictions on colleges to control their fees structure. They charge students high fees and people do nor realise because of the mentality that higher the fees more good the college is.

8% Say No

Yes

92% of users
  • The rising tuition fees will significantly destroy the hopes of future students from attending higher education to envolve their carrers

    The higher tuitions costs will not improve the teaching quality of the lecturers and brings more stress and debt to sponsored and unsponsored future students. People may as well do self study as an alternative, and if that is the case, higher education insitiutes may as well be abolished because people CANNOT afford the fees and this may create a financial problem to the colleges should they enforce it. Finished students already have a chain of debt to deal with there is simply no need to make it worse.

    Yes Anonymous
  • I agree that the rising costs of college tuition out of control.

    Right now is the time for me to start looking at colleges. I want to go somewhere out of state (preferably around the New York or New Jersey area), but the tuition for out of state students is making it impossible. I’m looking at all my options and I don’t know what to do. The tuition costs are going to lead me in the community college direction.

    Yes MeanGarfield64
  • The cost of higher education is getting to the point where it outweighs the value of that education.

    When you have to spend yourself into so much debt to get an education that doesn’t give you that much of an advantage over others in your future career, then the costs are out of control. If colleges and universities can’t find ways to keep their costs down, then they should stop operating and close down. This would cause the value of the higher education to increase again, because it would stop the dilution of higher education.

    Yes MariaR
  • The cost of tuition is rising because of amenities, competition, and for-profit colleges, and is saddling millions with unreasonable debt.

    College in the United States has become an industry based heavily on student loans. Many students will be paying off their loans for long periods of their lives. But the system has grown to make it normal that students pay for college that they cannot afford. With the willingness to take more than students can afford, there are fewer limits on costs. Therefore, schools compete for students by offering costly amenities, which are often completely unrelated to education. Compounding the problem, for-profit colleges have sprung up which use a business model based on retaining students just long enough to get federal loan and grant money. After being milked in this way, students are often left to languish and fail, and in any case, the education is sub-par even for passing students. The loan industry must be curtailed.

    Yes tacomoon
  • Yes, because students are not getting value for the extreme expenses they incur, and college is being priced out of range of many people.

    The cost of college is obscene, more than its substantial merits can justify. And now with the economic crisis, public universities and community colleges are cutting back, leaving students with fewer and fewer options. Faculty, staff, and administrators should be able to make a decent living, and schools should be able to finance both good instruction and good research, without charging exorbitant rates. This balance is achieved in many other countries, and we should fight for it here as well. Without broadly-affordable higher education, which is not to say everyone “should” necessarily want it, it seems likely that income inequality and social inequality will increase in tandem. This leaves the middle class more fragile, increasing social divisions, and setting us up for a declining standard of living. This problem of educational expenses has been building for decades, and it is past time we addressed it.

    Yes M4I4cFeIine
  • The rising costs of college tuition are definitely out of control.

    The cost of college tuition is considered by many to be an investment, but the job market now does not always award those with degrees, so it is a risk as well. Families already save throughout their children’s lives to be able to afford college, only to find out that the costs have gone up once again.

    Yes CheyanneT
  • College costs too much and many people can’t afford it anymore.

    College costs too much relative to the amount of money you will earn after school. Kids are saddled with thousands and thousands of dollars in student loan debt despite the fact that many will leave college without a job prospect. The fact of the matter is the cost of tuition is not proportional to the value of the education you receive.

    Yes Fr4Giga
  • Where did the money go?

    When health care costs rose at 4 times the rate of inflation for ten years, it became a political crisis solved by creation of socialized medicine in the United States in the guise of Obamacare. Yet college tuition has increased at 7 times the rate of inflation. And student loans cannot be bankrupted as medical debt can be; once acquired, it only goes away when paid off. Tuition increases, yet college class sizes increase. Much money is wasted on climbing walls and fancy dorms, yet professors are increasingly focused on papers and research instead of teaching. This is the equivalent of paying two people to do a job; the TA gets minimum wage while the tenured professor is paid tens of thousands of dollars to do nothing. There is horrific waste and those least able to pay it, starving students and their overburdened parents, receive less concern than a medical industry that was taken over by the federal government.

    Yes Pir4And
  • Yes, the rising costs of college tuition are out of control and have risen each year while peoples incomes have declined.

    Yes, the rising costs of college tuition are out of control because people’s incomes have declined over the past few years and there are many more unemployed people but tuition costs keep going up every year. Maybe the professors should take a pay cut.

    Yes MycCra2ii
  • I think that tuition is out of control.

    College tuition is so high already, even if you don’t attend an Ivy League school. If they’re going to charge so much, then books should be part of the cost to attend school…not an extra.

    Yes WitchSale
  • Tuition is out of control; it has increased faster than salaries or income over the last few decades.

    The rising costs of college tuition is out of control. Tuition has increased much faster than incomes and salaries in the last 20 years. In addition, the value of a liberal arts degree has declined. Tuition is propping up unpopular and useless majors making a good education tough to pay for.

    Yes 54mP5KryPto
  • I agree that tuition fees have gone out of control, there are no restrictions on them by government and they have made colleges a business.

    There are no restrictions on colleges to control their fees structure. They charge students high fees and people do nor realise because of the mentality that higher the fees more good the college is.

    Yes delicatepink

8% of users say no

Unfortunately, a first class education has a first class price tag.

While I believe we should continue to support our colleges and universities by contributing wherever possible to scholarship programs and with general contributions, I don’t believe the answer to providing quality education to the most promising students should come at the expense of larger classes, fewer offerings and less distinguished faculty. Colleges and universities need to spend less time bringing remedial students up to grade level and focus more on providing the highest quality education possible for our most promising students.

Discussion

23 Responses to “Are the Rising Costs of College Tuition Out of Control?”

  1. I haven’t completed my BA degree because of my work schedule and health issues. Since I stopped attending college in 2001 the tuition rate has skyrocketed, I am reconsidering the idea of going back and finishing my education. I feel for college students in school now or wanting to attend. Their stress has to be enormous; especially with the US economy has bad as it is and outsourcing jobs overseas.

    Posted by Tim M. | June 30, 2011, 8:30 am
  2. University of California Berkeley Chancellor Birgeneau hijack’s all our kids’ futures. I love University of California (UC) having been a student & lecturer. But today I am concerned that at times I do not recognize the UC I love. Like so many I am deeply disappointed by the pervasive failures of Regent Chairwoman Lansing, President Yudof, Chancellor Birgeneau from holding the line on rising costs & tuition increases
    Chancellor Birgeneau has molded Cal. into the most expensive public university. Paying more is not a better education.
    Californians are reeling from 19% unemployment (includes: those forced to work part time; those no longer searching), mortgage defaults, loss of unemployment benefits. And those who still have jobs are working longer for less. Faculty wages must reflect California’s ability to pay, not what others are paid.
    Current pay increases for generously paid University of California Faculty is arrogance. Instate tuition consumes 14% of Ca. Median Family Income!
    Paying more is not a better education. UC Berkeley(# 70 Forbes) tuition increases exceed the national average rate of increases.
    UC President Yudof, Cal. Chancellor Birgeneau($450,000 salary) dismissed many much needed cost-cutting options. They did not consider freezing vacant faculty positions, increasing class size, requiring faculty to teach more classes, doubling the time between sabbaticals, cutting & freezing pay & benefits for chancellors & reforming pensions & the health benefits.
    They said such faculty reforms “would not be healthy for UC”. Exodus of faculty, administrators? Who can afford them and where would they go?
    We agree it is far from the ideal situation, but it is in the best interests of the university system & the state to stop cost increases. UC cannot expect to do business as usual: raising tuition; granting pay raises & huge bonuses during a weak economy that has sapped state revenues & individual Californians’ income.
    There is no question the necessary realignments with economic reality are painful. Regent Chairwoman Lansing can bridge the public trust gap with reassurances that salaries & costs reflect California’s ability to pay. The sky above UC will not fall when Chancellor Birgeneau is ousted.

    Opinions? Email the UC Board of Regents marsha.kelman@ucop.edu

    Posted by batonsonucstudents | November 28, 2011, 2:03 am
  3. Helpful info. Lucky me I found your web site by accident, and I’m shocked why this coincidence didn’t happened in advance! I bookmarked it.

    Posted by mortgage jobs | December 10, 2011, 9:45 pm

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Pingback: Students to Get Best-buy Facts and Consumer Rights « Times of Texas - June 24, 2011

  2. Pingback: Doing Students and Parents a Favor: Publicizing Criticisms Higher Ed « Times of Texas - June 24, 2011

  3. Pingback: ASU tuition, Fees Will Increase 9.9 % « Times of Texas - June 24, 2011

  4. Pingback: Are the Rising Costs of College Tuition Out of Control? | Γονείς σε Δράση - June 24, 2011

  5. Pingback: $37 In Interest Weekly on $60,000 Student Loans – No Job Offer « Times of Texas - June 24, 2011

  6. Pingback: Our Universities: How Bad? How Good? « Times of Texas - June 24, 2011

  7. Pingback: Tell Them How Much it Costs to go to College. « Times of Texas - June 26, 2011

  8. Pingback: College Tuition: Getting The Most Bang For Your Buck « Times of Texas - June 27, 2011

  9. Pingback: Opportunities for Efficiency and Innovation: A Primer on How to Cut College Costs « Times of Texas - June 27, 2011

  10. Pingback: College tuition up 392% Since 1986! It’s Time to Have a Voice « - July 11, 2011

  11. Pingback: Making College More Affordable, Accessible « - July 12, 2011

  12. Pingback: Middle Class Held Back – College is Becoming Too Expensive « - July 15, 2011

  13. Pingback: How to Combat the Cost of Rising College Tuition « - July 15, 2011

  14. Pingback: Tuition Inflation. « - August 9, 2011

  15. Pingback: Pop Quiz: Why Are Tuitions So High? « - August 10, 2011

  16. Pingback: The Self-Exam That Higher Education Would Rather Not Conduct « - August 10, 2011

  17. Pingback: A Bubble in Higher Education « - August 18, 2011

  18. Pingback: President Powers Steers UT in New Directions « - August 26, 2011

  19. Pingback: Chart of the day: College Tuition is Out of Control « - November 7, 2011

  20. Pingback: 15 Surprising Side Effects of Rising College Costs « - November 14, 2011

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Watch videos at Vodpod.

 

June 2011
M T W T F S S
« May   Jul »
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  

RSS Texas Insider

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

Twitter Updates