Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Forgive all student loans. Make college low cost. Done.
They already have. It's called community college, and it can land you a much higher paying job than an ivy MFA in film. It is not the government's responsibility to make elite private colleges affordable for everyone who wants to go there.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Forgive all student loans. Make college low cost. Done.
They already have. It's called community college, and it can land you a much higher paying job than an ivy MFA in film. It is not the government's responsibility to make elite private colleges affordable for everyone who wants to go there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally agree with pp who said Columbia is a bad actor here. It is crazy that they are allowed to do this. Where is Elizabeth Warren.
It's actually the government's fault. They backed these crazy loans that are essentially sub-prime loan-holders and the Universities just lined up to line their pockets with the proceeds. The students were the bag-holders. Meanwhile the economy is now also a bag-holder because all these young people are off to a slow start which ultimately places a drag on the economy. The government charged ridiculous interest rates on these sub-prime loans and has made a lot of money off of them. The loans should not necessarily be forgiven, but the interest should be forgiven and suspended indefinitely. The loans were made unscrupulously. Many more people would be out of debt if not for the interest.
Anonymous wrote:Not to be cruel, but there's a lot of fake colleges out there that don't pay off too. Basically any of the for profit colleges and a lot of small, expensive private colleges. I don't see why any of those should be forgiven. If you can't get into a great state college, you should rethink going to college. We need to make trade schools a viable, normal path for kids too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally agree with pp who said Columbia is a bad actor here. It is crazy that they are allowed to do this. Where is Elizabeth Warren.
It's actually the government's fault. They backed these crazy loans that are essentially sub-prime loan-holders and the Universities just lined up to line their pockets with the proceeds. The students were the bag-holders. Meanwhile the economy is now also a bag-holder because all these young people are off to a slow start which ultimately places a drag on the economy. The government charged ridiculous interest rates on these sub-prime loans and has made a lot of money off of them. The loans should not necessarily be forgiven, but the interest should be forgiven and suspended indefinitely. The loans were made unscrupulously. Many more people would be out of debt if not for the interest.
Anonymous wrote:Not to be cruel, but there's a lot of fake colleges out there that don't pay off too. Basically any of the for profit colleges and a lot of small, expensive private colleges. I don't see why any of those should be forgiven. If you can't get into a great state college, you should rethink going to college. We need to make trade schools a viable, normal path for kids too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to one of these programs at a different Ivy and have several family members who did the same. None of us are trust fund wealthy but our parents were well off enough to just pay our tuition without us taking out loans. Most of my peers were the same.
I agree that the people who took out loans for these programs only have themselves to blame. Perhaps there should be more scholarships or need based aid but not loan forgiveness!
Of course you do. Degrees are for the idle rich; not for thee!
If it's a useless vanity degree, then yes, that's accurate. Part of the problem is that people who are perpetual students are asking for advice from professors who have never worked outside higher ed. That is how someone I know ended up with a PHD in Organizational Leadership. Her actual work experience in leading organizations is zero.
+1 There are a lot of things that the idle rich can do that us normal people can't.
Caveat Emptor.
The student is the buyer who should be aware.
[b]I also blame parents for not teaching their children BEFORE they go to college about finances and the cost of living, how borrowing and compounded interest works. We've been drilling this into our kids since the were 12.
You’re able to do this because you’re financially savvy. What about the academically advanced student who is the first in the family to go to college?
Exactly. I went to a parent discussion touring SVA in NYC for my DD (now at another art school)—they were telling parents to look into ParentPlus loans if tuition ($70,000?)! was a stretch. I wanted to stand up with a bullhorn and shout “No!! Don’t do that they can go elsewhere!!” I could not believe what I was hearing. My DD did not apply there, we could not swing that tuition and would not take loans.
Anonymous wrote:Totally agree with pp who said Columbia is a bad actor here. It is crazy that they are allowed to do this. Where is Elizabeth Warren.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to one of these programs at a different Ivy and have several family members who did the same. None of us are trust fund wealthy but our parents were well off enough to just pay our tuition without us taking out loans. Most of my peers were the same.
I agree that the people who took out loans for these programs only have themselves to blame. Perhaps there should be more scholarships or need based aid but not loan forgiveness!
Of course you do. Degrees are for the idle rich; not for thee!
If it's a useless vanity degree, then yes, that's accurate. Part of the problem is that people who are perpetual students are asking for advice from professors who have never worked outside higher ed. That is how someone I know ended up with a PHD in Organizational Leadership. Her actual work experience in leading organizations is zero.
+1 There are a lot of things that the idle rich can do that us normal people can't.
Caveat Emptor.
The student is the buyer who should be aware.
[b]I also blame parents for not teaching their children BEFORE they go to college about finances and the cost of living, how borrowing and compounded interest works. We've been drilling this into our kids since the were 12.
You’re able to do this because you’re financially savvy. What about the academically advanced student who is the first in the family to go to college?
Anonymous wrote:Forgive all student loans. Make college low cost. Done.
Anonymous wrote:The arts are such a racket.
I work in theatre/film/TV
Many of my coworkers come out of NCSA
They graduates those kids with 100K of student loans
Then they try and get them hired outside of union contracts (which weakens the CBA) that of course lowers pay.
So they are dragging industry pay down by encouraging kids to work without an contract, after they graduate them with huge debt.