Posts: 1,428
Threads: 83
Likes Received: 627 in 396 posts
Likes Given: 1,139
Joined: Dec 2008
A life-changing surprise gift yesterday for the graduating class of 2019 at Morehouse College in Atlanta. Commencement speaker Robert F. Smith, a hedge fund billionaire with stakes particularly in enterprise software companies, announced that his family is making a donation to pay off student loans for every graduate in the class. "We're gonna put a little fuel in your bus," he put it.
Morehouse College is the all-male Historically Black College that's awarded more bachelor's degrees to African-American men than any other school in the country. Alumni include Martin Luther King Jr., Samuel L. Jackson, and Spike Lee.
Posts: 175
Threads: 7
Likes Received: 55 in 45 posts
Likes Given: 1,028
Joined: May 2016
Wow, that is incredible!
TESU, BSBA-HR Completed December 2020
Completed: B&M CC: 67 units applied to degree Study.com: Principles of Management, Principles of Marketing, Computing, International Business, Library Science, Managerial Accounting, Leading Organizational Change, Finance, Organizational Theory, Strategic Human Resources (30 units) Davar: Organizational Behavior, Managerial Communication (6 units) Sophia: Microeconomics, Statistics, College Algebra, Conflict Resolution, Leading Teams (11 units) Institutes: Ethics (2 units) TESU: Business Capstone, Cornerstone (4 units)
Next up: Researching Master's Programs
•
Posts: 370
Threads: 39
Likes Received: 78 in 53 posts
Likes Given: 245
Joined: Mar 2017
Oh, wow! That's incredible.
Georgia Institute of Technology: MS in Analytics (3/32 Credits)
Boston University: MS in Software Development
Thomas Edison State University: BA in Liberal Studies
•
Posts: 794
Threads: 22
Likes Received: 227 in 153 posts
Likes Given: 10
Joined: Sep 2018
I read about it on google news. How generous of him!!
TESU BALS-Psych. + ASNSM(Math)
TEEX(6): Cybersec. 101/201/301
The Institutes(2): Ethics
Sophia(2): Ess. Of Managing Conflict, Dev. Effective Teams
NFA(1): Comm. Safety Edu.
GED(10): NAS-131, SOC-273, MAT-121, HUM-101 (1)
Study.com(75): Intro to Psych., Soc. Psych.-1, Growth & Dev. Psych., Personality Psych., History & Systems of Psych., Org. Theory, Library Science, Comm. at Workplace, Intro to World Religion, I/O Psych., Ethics in Soc. Sc., Org. Comm., Eng. 104, Eng. 105, History of Vietnam war, Sp. Ed. History & Law, Diff. Ed., Classroom Mgmt., Foundations of Ed., Abnormal Psych., Rsch. methods in Psych., College Math, Intro. to Geometry., Calculus (6).
Saylor (15): Intro. to Mol. & Cellular Bio., Comp. Politics, Corporate Comm., Env. Ethics, Principles of Comm.
TESU (1): Cornerstone, Lib. 495 Capstone.
CSM (3): Quant. reasoning.
Aleks (6): Trigonometry, Intro to Statistics.
MS-Psychology; Walden University
GPA: 4/4
•
Posts: 360
Threads: 18
Likes Received: 210 in 123 posts
Likes Given: 83
Joined: May 2019
I hope someone out there does a longitudinal study on this class to see their outcomes, because this is a golden opportunity both for those students and advocates in general.
Shanghai Intl. School Leadership Team Member, College Counselor, SAT-, PSAT-, & SSD-Coordinator. Reverts to PADI Divemaster when near a coast.
○BS Anthropology (Minors: History, Brazilian Studies) | Tulane (3.90, summa cum laude)
○BA History & Political Science (Minors: Pre-Law, Intl. Studies, Social Studies, Criminal Justice, & Business Admin) | UMPI
○MS Early Childhood Studies: Administration, Management, & Leadership | Walden (3.90)
○Certificate Teachers College College Advising Program | Columbia
○Certificate College Access Counseling | Rice
○Certificate College Admissions Specialist | American School Counselors Association
○Goals: A) EdD/MS in Higher Ed; B) 51/195 Countries; C) Find 3rd good hamburger in Shanghai (accomplished June '19, August '21, and...?)
Posts: 327
Threads: 22
Likes Received: 6 in 4 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Nov 2013
I attended Morehouse College but left as funds for my scholarship dried out during the recession which lead to me to the Big 3. Morehouse is a very interesting place, the guy sitting next to you in class could be a Bill Gates Scholar, the guy behind you an Oprah Winfrey Scholar, while the guy in the front of you parents are struggling to pay 40,000 a year in tuition. I met so many students on campus who rejected Harvard, Yale and other top schools to attend the school. A great number of individuals I started their with are now physicians, lawyers, working at Google or Microsoft or bio-tech companies, some working on their phds ect. They will pay it forward.
Posts: 10,296
Threads: 353
Likes Received: 60 in 22 posts
Likes Given: 1,406
Joined: Mar 2007
05-21-2019, 01:40 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-21-2019, 01:41 PM by cookderosa.)
(05-20-2019, 12:23 PM)PrettyFlyforaChiGuy Wrote: I hope someone out there does a longitudinal study on this class to see their outcomes, because this is a golden opportunity both for those students and advocates in general.
I'm such a synic.... but I don't think this morally obligates the students to "do" anything different than they were planning. His speech hinted at an expectation of paying it forward, but what does that mean? To take a job in a certain sector? To earn a certain income so you can donate back to a scholarship fund? To dedicate your career to service?
While I love the generosity, it's not a gift if it has strings. The recipient may or may not look at their career any differently than if they had their debt to repay.
And to Exfactor's point, I think the college culture will be a more important contributing factor to whether or not students pay it forward and what that looks like.
•
Posts: 610
Threads: 19
Likes Received: 133 in 96 posts
Likes Given: 37
Joined: May 2013
(05-21-2019, 01:40 PM)cookderosa Wrote: (05-20-2019, 12:23 PM)PrettyFlyforaChiGuy Wrote: I hope someone out there does a longitudinal study on this class to see their outcomes, because this is a golden opportunity both for those students and advocates in general.
I'm such a synic.... but I don't think this morally obligates the students to "do" anything different than they were planning. His speech hinted at an expectation of paying it forward, but what does that mean? To take a job in a certain sector? To earn a certain income so you can donate back to a scholarship fund? To dedicate your career to service?
While I love the generosity, it's not a gift if it has strings. The recipient may or may not look at their career any differently than if they had their debt to repay.
And to Exfactor's point, I think the college culture will be a more important contributing factor to whether or not students pay it forward and what that looks like.
Hey J!!! I have been traveling so much (currently living not in China) that unfortunately, coming into the forum has not happened too much. However, I am back in SoCal for a month and why not spend some free time checking in With regard to the generous offer from Robert Smith, all I felt during the offer was a joy for each of the students and did not see a handcuffed expectation for the students to give back. However, I did feel a challenge to the highly successful Alumni in the front row who Mr Smith gave a direct challenge to step up and give back to a school that he felt has given a tremendous value to them. I would say that I agree with your overall position and also, did not see your position stated in the offering.
I do feel back for the class of 2018 & 2020!!!
•
Posts: 1
Threads: 0
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: May 2019
05-22-2019, 10:45 AM
(This post was last modified: 05-22-2019, 03:30 PM by Merlin.
Edit Reason: link removed
)
Graduates of this class are very lucky. Since student loans are a big problem for many students. Debts for which remain for many years after graduating from university or college. But the cost of education is high and many have no other options than to take a student loan ... Personally, I began to pay a student loan from the first year, for this, I used a student credit card. But I managed to pay only half of this debt. I had been paying this loan for a few years after graduation. Therefore, the guys are very lucky!
•
Posts: 10,296
Threads: 353
Likes Received: 60 in 22 posts
Likes Given: 1,406
Joined: Mar 2007
(05-21-2019, 02:49 PM)RANSOMSOUL Wrote: (05-21-2019, 01:40 PM)cookderosa Wrote: (05-20-2019, 12:23 PM)PrettyFlyforaChiGuy Wrote: I hope someone out there does a longitudinal study on this class to see their outcomes, because this is a golden opportunity both for those students and advocates in general.
I'm such a synic.... but I don't think this morally obligates the students to "do" anything different than they were planning. His speech hinted at an expectation of paying it forward, but what does that mean? To take a job in a certain sector? To earn a certain income so you can donate back to a scholarship fund? To dedicate your career to service?
While I love the generosity, it's not a gift if it has strings. The recipient may or may not look at their career any differently than if they had their debt to repay.
And to Exfactor's point, I think the college culture will be a more important contributing factor to whether or not students pay it forward and what that looks like.
Hey J!!! I have been traveling so much (currently living not in China) that unfortunately, coming into the forum has not happened too much. However, I am back in SoCal for a month and why not spend some free time checking in With regard to the generous offer from Robert Smith, all I felt during the offer was a joy for each of the students and did not see a handcuffed expectation for the students to give back. However, I did feel a challenge to the highly successful Alumni in the front row who Mr Smith gave a direct challenge to step up and give back to a school that he felt has given a tremendous value to them. I would say that I agree with your overall position and also, did not see your position stated in the offering.
I do feel back for the class of 2018 & 2020!!!
Hey! You sound great, hope you and the family are doing well.
I think his generosity is amazing and I do sincerely hope the students do pay it forward in some way.
Be well my friend!
•
|