Aseahawkfan wrote:I don't know why they keep saying free. No one with a brain thinks college will be free. It will paid for with higher taxes for all.
RiverDog wrote:That's only half of the problem with free college, the part where it raises our taxes. The other part is the moral part, where it absolves the individual of any responsibility for his/her own self promotion. They have not had to sacrifice anything, in terms of either money or the effort to earn it, in acquiring a very valuable asset, a college degree.
The man that hired me to the first job I had out of college told me that the reason he hired me was that despite there were others that had applied that had better resumes, ie better gpa's or better colleges. He told me that the deciding factor was that I told him that I worked my way through college.
However, some time later and under the influence of some adult beverages, he claimed that the reason he hired me was because he didn't want to hire someone that was smarter than he was. So go figure.
Aseahawkfan wrote:That could be taken care of by overhauling the system to make it more like Europe or Asia. I guarantee they earn their degrees in those nations. At the same time, you don't get to pick your degree and do whatever you want. You have to score high enough on the requisite tests or you'll be going to trade school. That's the thing the guys like Bernie and Warren never talk about is how difficult college will become. It won't be like it is now where you screw around in High School and then figure out what you want to do in the "free" college system with everyone partying. In most free systems, High School decides what you will do in college. You will take mandatory tests that will decide whether the government will invest in you going to a 4 year degree or a trade school or something else. None of this I'll figure it out when I get there. We'll how Americans enjoy that when the state says, "Your child tested poorly in math and English. Their options for school are taxi driver or mechanic. That's all we'll pay for." Which is what all these socialists never discuss, the method for selection that comes with "free" services where the government weights the cost-benefits using other criteria than can you afford it.
c_hawkbob wrote:There's a difference between "free college" an tuition free college. State Colleges didn't start charging tuition till the sixties. The world as we know it wouldn't come to an end if they began doing so again.
c_hawkbob wrote:BS. State colleges were predominantly tuition free for state residents before the 60's. Period.
c_hawkbob wrote:BS. State colleges were predominantly tuition free for state residents before the 60's. Period.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I know tuition for school was far less in my dad's young days, even compared to what they were making. He paid almost nothing to go to school out of state in California and books were super cheap from what he said.
I still think they should do a full school revamp at this point to make us competitive with foreign nations. This tolerance for lax K1-12 is a bad idea. Every foreign person I talk from even close to an organized education system talks about how rigorous they are at educating kids. None of this Cs and tolerance for low participation or missing homework. You do the work or you get the hammer. If you don't score well on the compulsory tests, then you limit your options. We could use some of that here. From what I've seen of college, you have a bunch of people spending money to retake courses they should have learned in High School. Why are our college kids retaking algebra and composition when that should have been rigorously taught in High School. You could cut a year off degrees by better preparing kids so they don't have to retake the same material they took in High School in college. They can focus on actual job classes and career preparation rather than paying to take High School twice because our K1 to 12 system was lax and poorly structured.
RiverDog wrote:There's no question that when factored for inflation the expense of attending college has increased. Not only that, but with labor laws as they are now, it's nearly impossible for a young adult to have the ability to make the kind of money I was able to and help finance their own education.
But that's not the point. The argument is who's responsibility should it be to fund college education and to what degree?
Aseahawkfan wrote:So as far as responsibility goes, I believe it is a joint responsibility between the government and the citizens to invest in education and ensure the education system prepares people to succeed in life. What kind of society do you want to live in? One where people avoid education if they feel like it producing a lot of ignorant, unprepared rubes that might end up on welfare or a school system that rigorously prepares people for the competitive job market?
RiverDog wrote:It has been a joint responsibility between the government and its citizens. The taxpayers spend billions each year on higher education and have been doing so for decades. But the proposals for free tuition is moving the entire responsibility away from the individual and to the taxpayers.
One of the friends I queried about tuition costs...my bleeding heart/bed wetting liberal friend... had an interesting way to measure the costs nowadays compared to when he was in college in the late 60's. He said that he was making $2.73/hr at summer jobs and that tuition at UW cost him $120/quarter so it took him 44 hours of labor to pay for one quarter's worth of tuition. Nowadays, tuition costs $4500/quarter at UW so at $15.00/hour it would take 300 hours of labor to pay for a quarter's tuition. That's 7 times what it was back in the mid 60's. Plus as I mentioned, it's more difficult for kids to earn money like I was able to.
Obviously something needs to be done, but two things I don't want to see happen is to make it free and to forgive everyone's debt. As the voter that approached Sen. Warren indicated, forgiving debt would be a slap in the face to those parents and students that played by the rules and paid their own way. It would be similar to the feeling one might have in granting amnesty to a draft dodger when you were conscripted and risked your life fulfilling your obligation.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Some of the debt should be forgiven as it was charlatan schools the government should have never paid for. Some of the lending levels are insane. I don't get how they can allow these charlatans to loan money to levels that will take decades to pay off even after they graduate in essence putting this person in the same debt they would for a house for their education. Fiscal responsibility and skills is another area the government is failing to educate citizens. You have all this credit being used and how many citizens could calculate what it will cost them to pay off their debt? It's nutty.
Aseahawkfan wrote:We have a lot of work to do and what I don't like about people like Warren and Sanders is the absences of standards. It's one thing to discuss forgiving debt or lower college costs, but what does that do if you don't force standards on citizens? They make it sound like it's going to be a bunch of free crap rather than a system with a goal. Where is the goal? If you want more money from taxpayers, then stop with the victim talk. People are not victims. They are bad decision makers. What steps will these folks take to prevent bad decision makers from continuing to make irresponsible and costly choices like choosing a degree worth no money to cover using a student loan? When are we going to get hard on people again? The one thing they never talk about with Europe, Asia, and India is the pressure and standards these socialist systems are using to ensure education investment is returned.
It's like they want American freedom with everything free and no standards or expectations for "victimized" citizens. That is just BS. I paid for my college while working back in the 90s while living on my own paying my rent and bills. I worked and did school. I didn't waste my time partying or spending on frivolous things ilke cable, video games, or phone crap. When we will these clowns like Sanders and Warren say to these young people, "how about you step up and act responsibly before you turn to the government for help?" What happened to those types of standards?
I can support more money in the education system if I see some higher expectations of the students. I don't want to toss money so some American kids can go to school for free retaking High School Courses while they figure out what they want do partying on the taxpayer dime. That I do not want. But I am doubtful that these sad "leaders" of America will ever look down at the citizens and have some expectations of them because that doesn't win votes.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Agreed that expectations need to be higher, but, even if that happens, there will always be those who choose to work harder and choose to delay gratification and take responsibility for examining the weight of the decisions they make. That's where the separation happens in what is largely a country with equal opportunity. Any measure of success is usually not just handed to anyone; the boobs like Trump and the kids that River mentioned may catch a break that way, but that's such a small percentage of population. Not who Warren/Sanders are campaigning this legislation for.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I was referring to the kids you mentioned that got to go on daddy's dime, screw off for four years, and still have a cushy job waiting for them. They are an outlier as it pertains to getting through college "successfully" with little to no debt.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:As far as the 60% nation wide average of finishing a degree, I really don't know what that is about. I do remember hearing from some of the leadership at Mississippi State during my time as an RA, that they were concerned with retention rates and thought that if they made the freshman experience better (nicer residence halls, get them plugged in, help them with finding resources), more of these students would stick it out. I really don't know how much that would actually help. I've seen a lot of kids that would simply go to class and come back to the dorm and play video games all day and then go out all weekend. Homework and studying were a foreign concept to them (one could skate by in high school and still graduate) and they paid for it by no longer being academically viable. College is seen too much as an experience than as the start of one's career. Harvard, Stanford, and the like are highly competitive to even get in, so I am not surprised they have high graduation rates. I wonder that state schools are low because entrance requirements are low; you really only have to have a pulse to get accepted and qualify for a loan. The student is no longer under anybody's wing; they are responsible for themselves at that point, and some of them (40% of them) are not cut out for college.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:That probably is true that students that carry significant debt likely stuck it out and graduated, but that includes the kids that went with cake majors in the first place. A degree in japanese studies cost the same as one in mechanical engineer, and we both know who is better equipped to handle that debt after graduation. I am sure they need some relief, but wasn't that a bad decision to begin with?
Ultimately, I think there needs to be some kind of compromise. Not sure how to implement it, but I agree it can't be a blank check that just wipes all the debt out. There's too many people that worked their tails off to avoid or minimize student debt to just turn around and put the cost of others on them. Is there a way to settle some of the debt? Have the Fed offer to "forgive" a certain amount every year so long as regular payments are made but the forgiven amount is taxable as income (not just the public service option they implemented, if it is still there)?
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I am with you on all of that River. What worries me is the issue isn't going away. You'll still have today's youth that want "free" college, and the previous crop of college students are going to keep pushing for relief of their loans. Perhaps there is some merit to the system being completely out of control cost wise and the system itself is stacked against them, but, for crying out loud, they still had to sign on the dotted line. Such a mess.
Users browsing this forum: Stream Hawk and 9 guests