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by nichohel 1052 days ago
What do you mean by "cutting state-level university funding down to nothing over the last 15 years"?
2 comments

I mean exactly that. Every state in the country reduced funding to their public university system during the 2008 financial crisis. 32/50 states have yet to restore that funding. Universities must make up for the shortage by increased tuition and increased reliance on international students (who pay significantly more).

Ivy League colleges aren't meant to educate the masses, but people somehow aren't able to come to terms with that. Your kid is significantly more likely to find a place at the local U, but now they must take crazy loans for it and compete with a rich chinese kid for the spot, all while you are fighting big bad Harvard.

This appears to be your source [0]. I'm posting it because it's easier to have a conversation about the full report than about your extracts from the report.

[0] https://www.nea.org/sites/default/files/2022-10/nea-he-rolle...

"Exactly that" hardly. Reducing funding to a level of a year ago is hardly "nothing" and most states didn't even go that far.
It's not quite that bad, but UC/ Cal State tuition used to be next to nothing. In my mother's time it was effectively free. Now your out 14k for a UC and 8k for a Cal State.
Tuition at uc/cal state is free for residents, by law.

You must mean “fees”

:(