07-09-2017, 09:25 PM
OK, per the US Dept Edu website: $33,500 is average of all 4006 colleges
Capella University, for profit, grads make $66,600
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/school/?...University
University of Phoenix of Oregon, for profit, grads make $66,600
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/search/?...asc&page=0
University of Oregon, State Univ., grads make $41,700
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/search/?...esc&page=0
Reed College (Ivy like) private college, grads make $35,200:ack:
Reed is known for its mandatory freshman humanities program, senior thesis, and unusually high proportion of graduates who go on to earn doctorates and other postgraduate degrees. The college has many prominent alumni, including over a hundred Fulbright Scholars, 67 Watson Fellows, 3 Winston Churchill Scholars, and 32 Rhodes Scholarsâthe second-highest number of any liberal arts college.
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/search/?...esc&page=1
No
Capella University, for profit, grads make $66,600
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/school/?...University
University of Phoenix of Oregon, for profit, grads make $66,600
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/search/?...asc&page=0
University of Oregon, State Univ., grads make $41,700
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/search/?...esc&page=0
Reed College (Ivy like) private college, grads make $35,200:ack:
Reed is known for its mandatory freshman humanities program, senior thesis, and unusually high proportion of graduates who go on to earn doctorates and other postgraduate degrees. The college has many prominent alumni, including over a hundred Fulbright Scholars, 67 Watson Fellows, 3 Winston Churchill Scholars, and 32 Rhodes Scholarsâthe second-highest number of any liberal arts college.
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/search/?...esc&page=1
No
sanantone Wrote:Students who tend to have the most debt, in general, are for-profit college students even though for-profits tend to be cheaper than private non-profits. There are a few possible reasons for this. For-profit college students may take out more loans for living expenses because they tend to be poorer. For-profit college students take longer to graduate. For-profit schools tend to give much less in non-loan aid. A lot of private non-profits have high sticker prices, but give so much in grants and scholarships that hardly anyone pays the sticker price.
Keep in mind that profession has a lot to do with salaries. Medical and health science schools will have high salaries because they're graduating physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants. Schools that graduate a lot of clergy are going to have low salaries.
Non-Traditional Undergraduate College Credits (634 SH): *FTCC Noncourse Credits (156 SH) *DSST (78 SH) *CPL (64 SH) *JST Military/ACE (48 SH) *CBA (44 SH) *CLEP (42 SH) *FEMA IS (40 SH) *FEMA EM (38 SH) *ECE/UExcel (30 SH) *PLA Portfolio (28 SH) *EMI/ACE (19 SH) *TEEX/ACE (16 SH) *CWE (11 SH) *NFA/ACE (10 SH) *Kaplan/ACE (3 SH) *CPC (2 SH) *AICP/ACE (2 SH) *Sophia/ACE (2 SH) and *FRTI-UM/ACE (1 SH).
Non-Traditional Graduate College Credits (14 SH): AMU (6 SH); NFHS (5 SH); and JSU (3 SH).
Non-Traditional Graduate College Credits (14 SH): AMU (6 SH); NFHS (5 SH); and JSU (3 SH).