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by cafard 5064 days ago
Back when Mark Edmundson wrote a piece for the NY Times saying that one should attend college for the joy of it, not as a vocational school, I had a look at the University of Virginia tuition about the time he started teaching there, and at the minimum wage. At the end of the 1970s, a summer of minimum wage work would pretty much cover U.Va. tuition and fees, though not room and board. At the moment, the equivalent number of hours falls far short.

A sort of institutional will has taken over the universities, one that leads them to expand at all costs. The area occupied by George Washington University in Washington, DC, has considerably increased over the years, and they have campuses in Alexandria and along Foxhall Road. AU, Catholic, and Georgetown have all expanded--the last, which is hemmed in with expensive real estate, is looking to open a campus several miles away across town. And they all seem to have Schools of Professional Studies (or some such name) where one can earn a credential by the investment of a couple of years of evenings and money that one's employer might pay for.

1 comments

I remember reading an article (can't find a link, it was the local paper) that highlighted that when my mom and dad when to college (1975) the average college student could pay approximately 44% of all their college costs by working part time and during the summer. That figure has dropped to 17% now, and that's why students are taking on more and more debt.

The problem is that colleges know that magic statistic that on average people with a college degree earn about 1 million dollars more than those without. So they can raise costs because it still pays to go to college and they're taking a bigger share of that future 1 million dollars in income.