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College Tuition Costs Rise AGAIN

JUSTIN POPE   10/20/09 05:34 PM ET   AP

Colleges Tuition Costs

With the economy struggling, parents and students dared to hope this year might offer a break from rising college costs. Instead, they got another sharp increase.

Average tuition at four-year public colleges in the U.S. climbed 6.5 percent, or $429, to $7,020 this fall as schools apologetically passed on much of their own financial problems, according to an annual report from the College Board, released Tuesday. At private colleges, tuition rose 4.4 percent, or $1,096, to $26,273.

"Every sector of the American economy is under stress and higher education is no exception," said Terry Hartle, senior vice president of the American Council on Education. "It's regrettable, and it's yet another piece of disappointing economic news that affects families."

The price increases came despite painful cost-cutting by colleges on everything from faculty to cafeterias and sports travel. And as usual, the rise in tuition outstripped the overall inflation rate.

In fact, during the period covered by the report, consumer prices declined 2.1 percent. So the latest tuition increase at public colleges was closer to 9 percent in real terms.

"It's only natural for parents to question why colleges are raising their prices yet again, while the rest of our economy is inflation-free," said James Boyle, president of the group College Parents of America.

The news isn't all bad. The estimated net price – what the average student actually pays after financial aid is taken into account – is still much lower than the list price, at about $1,620 at public four-year colleges, and under $12,000 at private ones. Both figures are up slightly from last year but still lower than five years ago.

Community colleges, home to about 40 percent of college students, raised prices, too, but tuition is still essentially free to many, after financial aid is factored in.

A companion report also out Tuesday shows financial aid from Uncle Sam is surging and reliance on often-expensive private loans has plummeted. And while students in states such as California, Florida and New York have seen double-digit tuition increases, some other states have held the line. Maryland and Missouri froze tuition.

Still, this year's increases were bad news for the estimated one-third of students who do not receive grant aid and must pay full price.

At Washington State University Vancouver, where students are facing consecutive 14 percent tuition increases, senior Peter Sterr said students are discovering that scholarships that once covered most or all of their bills don't go as far this year.

A political science major, Sterr wants to work in the public sector, but with $35,000 in loans, he isn't sure he will be able to afford to take such a job.

"Any liberal arts degree – political science, history, English, teaching – you're heading into an already depressed job market at base salaries that just don't pay enough," he said.

The College Board reports come as many colleges face their most challenging economic climate in generations.

State appropriations to public colleges declined nearly $4 billion in 2008-09 from the previous year, even as enrollment grew. Private colleges were forced to offer more financial aid even as their endowments fell by record amounts in the stock market meltdown and philanthropy dried up.

Worst hit is California, whose giant public university and community college systems educate about one in eight full-time college students in the U.S. Facing unprecedented state funding cuts, public colleges there have boosted fees, raised class sizes and furloughed faculty, but still can't balance their books. The University of California system is considering fee increases of more than 30 percent by next year.

In releasing its annual report, the not-for-profit College Board, which promotes college access and owns the SAT, tries to strike a balance. It tries to sound the alarm about rising prices without scaring students into thinking college is out of reach.

The group noted that financial aid makes tuition free for the typical low-income student at public colleges (though room and board expenses may remain). And it pointed out the huge variations in what colleges charge – a quarter of four-year college students attend schools charging under $6,000, while about 9 percent attend schools charging more than $30,000.

The reports also offer a glimpse of what has become a significant expansion of the federal government's role in helping students pay for college.

In 2008-09, 65 percent of the $180 billion spent on student aid came via the federal government in the form of grants, loans and work-study programs, up from 58 percent the year before. Overall, the report estimated, federal grant aid rose almost 11 percent last year. That trend will probably continue because the maximum Pell Grant – the government's main college aid program for low-income students – rose by more than $600 this year to $5,350.

Meanwhile, students also borrowed more to pay for college – but much more from the government and much less from other lenders such as banks. After years of expansion, private borrowing collapsed from around $24 billion in 2007-08 to less than $12 billion last year, the aid report estimated.

College Board economist Sandy Baum called the shift to government borrowing good news, because federal loans generally have lower interest rates and more consumer protections.

On average, about two-thirds of bachelor's degree recipients borrow money, and their median debt is about $20,000 by graduation.

___

On the Net:

http://www.collegeboard.com/press/releases/208962.html

(This version CORRECTS university's name to Washington State University Vancouver.)

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With the economy struggling, parents and students dared to hope this year might offer a break from rising college costs. Instead, they got another sharp increase. Average tuition at four-year public ...
With the economy struggling, parents and students dared to hope this year might offer a break from rising college costs. Instead, they got another sharp increase. Average tuition at four-year public ...
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RRoadrunner
Living in a 'Pro-ignorant culture'
08:15 AM on 10/22/2009
There is another thread entitled “The 10 most expensive colleges” that my remarks would also apply.
I can’t think of anything besides a college education where someone would spend 40k+ on blind faith. Universities should be required to issue a prospectus listing the employment ratio by degree to each freshman class so they can make informed decision. A college degree is not the end all nor does it guarantee success. A diploma is a simply a piece of paper, how it's used determines its true value. No one should be denied the right to an education and there should government assistance, but those entering college should be aware of the full costs.
Good luck to any parent or prospective student who might be reading this. I too had challenges to overcome when both of my children entered college two years apart.
07:20 AM on 10/22/2009
We've just launched a marketplace to solve exactly this problem of not being able to pay for college. Do take a look.

http://innowages.greatmousetraps.com/ :

a marketplace for employers to buy and sell the "right to first refusal" (RFR) to hire you.They bid on you based on your professional profile and you accept the bid you like best. When hiring season comes, the company whose bid you accepted gets to choose first if they want to hire you or not.
02:05 AM on 10/22/2009
make college FREE for all!
-end the prison industry by giving people opportunities
-reduce crime for the same reason
-more educated people vote democratic
-more innovators in society, we won't waste chances to have amazing things created just because the person who could've been a genius couldn't afford to go.
-end student loan slavery
-give hope to all high school students and parents etc........

students must rise up!
09:11 PM on 10/21/2009
Maybe Larry Summers messed up the endowments of all the other colleges and not just Harvard's. And people wonder why the youth wear Che Guevara T-shirts and admire the Cuban Revolution.
03:36 PM on 10/21/2009
Colleges should have to give a guarantee for the education that you pay for. If I paid that much for anything else, you better be sure I'd get a guarantee. Lets see, I pay you 20k/yr and after four years and 80K, maybe I can work where? What is the point? I have two degrees and work at piecing together part time jobs. The cost of education has to come down so the middle class that doesnt get any financial aid can afford to stay middle class or move up (right).

Also, college professors should teach. If they want to consult or write books, let them quit and go do that elsewhere. The state cant support that anymore.

People used to be proud to go to trade school, but there is hardly any place to ply that trade now, unless you open your own business. We really need to start making things in this country again and buy American. It will create jobs. Small businesses need a boost to survive and thrive.
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04:27 PM on 10/21/2009
As far as financial aid, you're better off at a private institution. My friend's daughter attended a private university and her son a public one. Her daughter's tuition, with financial aid, was far less than her son's private education. She didn't get one dime of financial aid at the public school.

Also, people of Native American descent can get tuition waivers at various public institutions. Maine and Mass are two states that offer tuition waivers. I believe Michigan offers tuition assistance for folks who are at least 25% Native American.
12:21 PM on 10/21/2009
For a more perfect unions we must have:

Jobs,job securi.ty, job benefits, universal pre school-K.12, housing, affordable college education affordable health are that doesn't ban.krupt sic.k families

good articles; http://ow.ly/dmzm

a better society is one that creates opportunity & while providing safety nets and welfare programs for disadvantaged
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LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
02:11 PM on 10/21/2009
I am so tired of hearing that a college education is the cornerstone of a successful nation. The reality is that the majority of the jobs that keep our civilization running do not require anything more than a basic education.
This push for college education only does one thing: It produces a large unhappy and unproductive workforce, with large amounts of student debt, working in fields completely unrelated to the degrees they have. There is no sense to this.
08:40 PM on 10/21/2009
Amen! We have long since passed the point where the money spent on higher education bears any rational relationship to the return it provides. While I was growing up I was inundated with the mantra that everyone needed to attend college and, very likely, some sort of graduate school. So, I borrowed a bunch of money for college and law school, got out in the real world and started representing clients, and discovered that...college really has nothing to do with success. The most successful clients I know either have no college education or dropped out early on, and it hasn't held them back any. And I have no shortage of friends who have excellent, $200k plus educations and have been out of work for the better part of a year.

College is good for some people, and the advancement of knowledge for knowledge's sake is a noble endeavor. That doesn't mean that everyone should engage in it, or that society is somehow better off if they do.
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LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
10:53 AM on 10/21/2009
Of course tuition has to go up.

The football team needs a new stadium.
The basketball team needs three more massage therapists.
And all of the coaches need another raise.

And we need to do something else....what was that......I knew it a second ago....Oh yeah we need to give these kids an overpriced mediocre education so that they can go out into the world and work at McDonald's.
05:41 PM on 10/21/2009
Better yet, lets max out all our credit cards and loan capabilities to pay for our childrens college, and then you import people to come to our country to work here?? You say that we dont have the proper skills??? We need to shut the gates. The only people I see that have jobs anymore are people from other countries that have come to American for a better life. My life. In many cases, theyve got it now, and I dont.
07:57 AM on 10/21/2009
Parents who are being bankrupted by trying to pay tuition should take a look at the usual Faculty/Administrative listings appended to the school catalog. Check out the ratio of academic bureaucrats to teaching faculty. At our local dispenser of "higher education" there are more "administrators" than faculty, all with their own little office hutch and convenient secretary (or two). Deans, Directors, and "Heads" (all with "staff") have reproduced like the parasites they are. Our college/university has become a plush feeding ground for those who neither teach nor learn. Check it out for yourself, and ask yourself "Why do we have to pay for such drones as an 'Assistant Sports Information Director'?" Our school has one... does yours? Parents, if you don't ASK SOME QUESTIONS then you deserve to be ripped off.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
03:11 AM on 10/21/2009
You dont have to tell me about college prices. Im paying for one right now with my oldest in my household, and what really pi sses me off is that colleges still have this Pius attitude that the students and their parents are dirt and they are Gods. I can not think of any other business that would survive with this type of attitude. Charging tens of thousands of dollars a year for a service, and then treated like crap.. Youd dump that company in a heart beat. But colleges act the complete opposite way, and we still kiss their butts. They would not be there if it wasnt for the students, they should start acting like it. Dont pamper them or kiss their behinds, there are still a lot of kids in colleges and they do need some structure enforcement, but at least treat them like humans, and like they are the customer. Its not like the schools are giving educations away out of their goodwill. They are a business offering a service, and the students are the customers.
01:29 AM on 10/21/2009
You don’t have to pay for your liberal education anymore. Just listen to news that the Obama Administration approves
03:17 PM on 10/21/2009
And you can get a conservative education by listening to Rush Limbaugh.
08:30 PM on 10/20/2009
The rise in college costs was part of the Reaganomic agenda, but it was an attack led at the state-level, since the majority of colleges and universities were state-funded institutions. There have been two problems in higher education driving up the cost to students: 1) decrease in state funding, part of the Republican agenda, and 2) an increase in spending in non-instructional areas like administration and student services.

State legislatures have pursued the Republican agenda of cutting taxes and thus cutting aid to social programs, one of which being, in their eyes, public education, K-University. It was a backlash against the G.I. Bill and other programs that allowed so many Americans to get their higher education in the United States from the late 40s through the 70s.

Then, as colleges and university trustees, most of them NOT being educators, became enamored of putting private sector, non-educators in as administrators--the rationale being that what works for the private sector must work for the public sector--funds started moving away from instruction to administration as these private sector capitalists sought only to capitalize their salaries and surround themselves with more sycophantic administrators who could schmooze the college and university trustees and who saw the actual professors as a cost burden on the system, promoting the hiring of part-time teachers over dedicated, tenured professors.

Of course, the issue is more complex, but this is a good place to start the discussion.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
03:13 AM on 10/21/2009
ah, good old Ronnie Raygun. The biggest difference between Reagan and Nixon was that Nixon got caught.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
glomtt
Terribly Political
08:12 PM on 10/20/2009
Tell me about it, I just got the news from my enrollment counselor today. It's going to cost me more in out of pocket expenses, to finish up my degree. She said the increase was $15.00 per class. Nothing I can do about it, but pay it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ben Cohn
08:11 PM on 10/20/2009
All the college boards arguments about well there are cheap options ect, are total garbage. These schools talk about wanting diversity but then make the cost of tuition so high that any real diversity is almost impossible to get.
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WSUShocker
07:39 PM on 10/20/2009
What's been shown is the disportionately higher earnings of college graduates than non-college graduates. This has been proven time and time again. You get a degree and your wages go up, while those who are cannot attend college are stuck in a vicious cycle earning minimum wage. The difference is $20,000 per year according to CNN Money! That's outrageous! What we need is to tax those with degrees to be able to help those without to be able to attend college. This is exactly what we need to be able to help those who cannot afford college and stem the even burdening cost to attend. I propose a tax of 5% on those with bachelors or associates degrees, 10% with graduate degrees, and 15% for those with Phd's.
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Ben Cohn
08:21 PM on 10/20/2009
Your "solution" would actually only worsen the problem. The more people that go to college, the less that college degree is worth. So with more and more and more people going to college, those people are taking lower and lower and lower paying jobs, pushing those without into even lower ones.

THE REAL PROBLEM:
No one wants to say it because everyone wants to just toe the well stated line that, "were all better off when everyone goes to college". NOTHING COULD BE FURTHER FROM THE TRUTH. The truth is that if you want be an auto-mechanic for your profession, you don't need to go to a 4 year college...well right now you do or your resume will not even get looked at, but in reality you don't need that.

SOLUTION:
If you want people without college degrees to start getting paid more, the solution is not to try and get them to go to college. Its for us as a society to acknowledge that not every job on this earth requires a college education. If you want to be an engineer, or doctor, or lawyer, or politician then yea maybe. But I have many buddies who look back on all the money they spent on college and go, huh ya know I don't think I used 95% of that crap at my job. The reason, they are trained at how to do their job after getting the employment...not at college.
08:56 PM on 10/20/2009
Ben Cohen - you hit the nail on the head. That is the dirty little secret that no one wants to acknowledge. Most college students are too old and borrow too much money to make the cost of the education worth while.
They end up with a degree which on it's own with no relevant experience doesn't give them a high paying job that is necessary to pay the debt they incurred.
Example - you are 37 years old. You get laid off. You take 3 years to get an Associates Degree - you borrow to cover cost of living expense and tuition. You owe over $30,000 when you are done. Your new degree gets you an entry level position with an entry level salary. The numbers don't add up.
This isn't always the case but for a vast majority of adults going back for "retraining" this is what happens.
Buyer Beware.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WSUShocker
09:40 PM on 10/20/2009
What I'm saying is that people like the auto mechanic won't even have the opportunity to attend college with the current trend, so the only option is to even the playing field by taxing those who have already attended. Many corporations only hire those with "college degrees," which makes the problem even worse, which is another reason to dislike them. Those without degrees are shut out of the system and like I said often times end up only making minimum wage. How many CEO's have college degrees? How many people who work at health insurers have college degrees. Those who work at banks have college degrees. Do I have to continue with this list? These are the same people who screwed this country. The least they could do is help out by making the opportunity to attend college more equal for everyone else.
10:30 PM on 10/20/2009
Disproportionate is in the eye of the beholder. Oftentimes the pay is considered justified. High school grads just won't hack some of the jobs needing to be done.
07:38 PM on 10/20/2009
High tuition cost suck especially when you know when you graduate your income will be mediocre. Glad Im getting through grad school before it gets too expensive to be worth it. Hopefully Im not wrong.
10:31 PM on 10/20/2009
Some majors pay better than others.