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College Debt Crisis - Printable Version +- Online Degrees and CLEP and DSST Exam Prep Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb) +-- Forum: Main Category (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-Main-Category) +--- Forum: General Education-Related Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-General-Education-Related-Discussion) +--- Thread: College Debt Crisis (/Thread-College-Debt-Crisis) |
College Debt Crisis - koenigtv - 07-25-2013 Check out these 2 videos regarding college costs and student debt. Both of them really highlight the high costs of college and the potential disaster of a student loan debt crisis. It certainly illustrates what everyone on this forum already knows - there is a better, cheaper way to get educated. College Debt Crisis from CNBC Price of Admission: America̢۪s College Debt Crisis - CNBC College Conspiracy from NIA (National Inflation Association) - this one has a pretty biased slant but its fascinating none the less. College Conspiracy (by NIA, 2011) - YouTube College Debt Crisis - sanantone - 07-25-2013 I think there are usually two ways that students end up with a lot of student loan debt besides going to medical school or something similar: 1. Attend an expensive college that doesn't offer much loan-free aid. 2. Take out more loans than needed for tuition and fees in order to pay for living expenses. One doesn't have to attend one of the Big 3 and/or take a bunch of CBEs in order to save money. Starting at a community college and then transferring to a state university can help save a lot of money. I couldn't get my sister to attend a community college. While the state university she is attending is not that bad at $8,000 a year, our local CCs are about $2,000 a year. She could have saved $12,000 by attending a CC for the first 2 years. Someone told her that there could be issues with transferring credits; the credits taken at a CC might not fit into a degree program at the university. However, there are counselors at CCs who specialize in helping students choose the right courses for the target college. There are also articulation agreements. Of course, in Texas, every public college is required to accept the whole core from another public college. |