The Cost of College in 4 Minutes - YouTube

Channel: Thought Monkey

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I’m a lucky guy.
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I didn’t do so well in high school and didn’t meet the requirements to go to university
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right off the bat.
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Instead, I went to Community College, lived at home, worked a part time job, and saved
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a sh*t load of money.
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Afterwards I went to a public University and saved even more money.
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I graduated during a huge recession without debt thanks to my privileged circumstances
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which allowed me to think less about the money I’d earn after college and more about my
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interests.
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That being said, tuition to even state Universities has increased dramatically since I graduated
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- making the once realistic American dream seem a distant memory for many of us youngsters.
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Hello everyone.
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Today we’re going to explore the topic of why in recent years college has become so
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expensive.
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Just how expensive is college?
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The website Collegedata.com states that one year at a public University will cost on average
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roughly $25,000 while at a private University it will cost $50,000.
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This hasn’t always been the case.
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From 1984 to 2014 tuition for public universities has increased 225%.
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And to make matters more daunting, only 19% of students actually graduate at a “4”
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year university within 4 years – making the majority graduating within 5 or 6 years.
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And while tuition goes up and it takes longer for students to graduate, on average it takes
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longer for college grads to earn back what they’ve spent on tuition which on average
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is at 36 years old.
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Moreover college grads has been earning less and less over the past 10 years while the
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cost of college is skyrocketing.
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But why?
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High education is just like a business.
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In fact some say that the U.S. Department of Education makes $15 billion dollars in
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profit from student loans every year.
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If students stopped taking out loans and going to college, our economy might just collapse.
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Universities want to attract students, just like businesses want to attract customers.
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To do this need to hire the best professors who can conduct research in the most up to
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date and technologically advanced labs.
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This is not cheap.
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The average salary for a professor is $100,000.
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A lab?
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Probably a lot more expensive than that.
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Universities also need to have beautifully built campuses.
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Again not cheap.
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Not only do the buildings need to be architecturally aesthetic, but the grounds need to be taken
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care of and the buildings maintained.
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Universities also must have attractive amenities like career services, health centers, and
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even psychiatric availability.
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All of this costs a sh*t load of money and creates a load of competition between the
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universities.
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Consider it like an arms race education style.
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But that’s not all.
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In order to pay for such expenses, universities create high tuition and use financial aid
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to help those who can’t afford it on their own and take as much as possible to those
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that can afford it.
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This is called the Bennett Hypothesis – our government provides loans and financial aid
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to students, and colleges get their money whether it’s from students who take out
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loans, get financial aid, or can pay for it out of pocket.
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If schools know that students have more money to spend, they can raise tuition, and make
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their campuses more attractive to potential students, which causes more competition between
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schools.
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So when the government is providing subsidies for its citizens to go to college –there
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is more demand for education now that more and more people can afford to go to college
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– and this in turn encourages colleges to charge more for education and they can increase
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their marketability by spending that money on professors, campus beautification or improved
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amenities.
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The real question however is - is college worth it?
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That I cannot answer.
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But I will say that going to college has made me widen my perspective and allowed me to
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pursue ideas that I probably wouldn’t have if I had not gone.
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College is about your education and an investment that will last you a lifetime.
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The only answer I can give you is to think about what you are passionate about and do
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it.
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If you don’t need a college degree to pursue your passion, don’t go.
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But if you think college will enrich your life and help you obtain mastery in
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your passion, then go.