11/19/2009 8:12:53 PM
^^^^As usual, I would tax the rich.And shut down most of the prisons and put the savings towards education.And legalize drugs and use those revenues for schools. "Drugs for Schools," if you will.Maybe eliminate farm subsidies and put that money towards schools.I'll even go after small change. Shit, let's cut food stamp benefits and use that for schools.[Edited on November 19, 2009 at 8:16 PM. Reason : ]
11/19/2009 8:15:33 PM
11/19/2009 8:27:22 PM
I didn't even apply for financial aid because I wouldn't have qualified for any money. My parents have covered everything.Maybe your parents should have thought twice before popping out babies on shitty middle class incomes, thinking the government would bail them out when college time came around. How's that feel?
11/19/2009 8:39:13 PM
my biggest problem is that if your parents have been laid off and are pulling out of their retirement to pay tuition that is counted as income. i was never eligible because my parents, despite neither of them having a job, had too high of an income while they were paying my tuition. (and since ive been on my own my salary is too high )
11/19/2009 9:16:04 PM
I'm sympathetic to both your plights. It's a little silly that someone would complain that they don't qualify for enough because their parents make too much money (be it in salary or retirement funds). I mean, would you go back in time and grow up poor just so you could qualify for more financial aid?But, still, you're right. They do expect people's parents to pay a lot when they determine financial aid. More money for college is always good.But HUR should have been excluded from FAFSA altogether; whatever he got, I want it back. I can't believe his folks got access to a "'public option' for parents to get out of paying for pre-school college."
11/19/2009 9:30:59 PM
11/19/2009 10:00:11 PM
11/19/2009 11:24:51 PM
because they want to penalize you b.c your parents are complete tools without lives and wants to take out a 2nd mortgage to fund your college tuition when at the same time they pay $1000's in taxes each year to fund welfare checks and "need based" grants for "underprivledged" children. Of course "underprivileged" could be like some kids i knew down the street who lived in the same middle class neighborhood in the suburbs that I did. Their single mother did not work, thus had 0 or minimal income, so they qualified for "need" based grants. How may you ask did their mom survive??????Luckily she is a trust fund baby and daddy paid for 300K house; an ample allowance, as well as hooking up the grandkids.[Edited on November 19, 2009 at 11:43 PM. Reason : l]
11/19/2009 11:42:50 PM
11/20/2009 1:01:01 AM
[citation needed]I couldn't find any hard data on what effect even the Harlem program had on poverty in Harlem.[Edited on November 20, 2009 at 9:59 AM. Reason : .][Edited on November 20, 2009 at 10:00 AM. Reason : zeig heil grammatick!]
11/20/2009 9:58:32 AM
bttt
1/21/2010 5:36:34 PM
2/20/2010 1:06:28 PM
source?because the census apparently says it's less than half that (at least as of 4 years ago):http://www.examiner.com/a-1315414~D_C__schools_rank_third_in_nation_in_per_pupil_spending__census_says.html[Edited on February 20, 2010 at 1:51 PM. Reason : fixed link]
2/20/2010 1:50:49 PM
http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/wp-content/uploads/Coulson-DC-Ed-Spending-FY2009-Budget.xlshttp://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2010/02/19/do-you-still-think-dc-spends-only-15000pupil/
2/20/2010 2:31:47 PM
^ are they putting costs to build more classrooms to handle capacity into that?
2/20/2010 2:47:19 PM
I would suspect so. Which begs the question: does the $6k+ for vouchers include costs to acquire more classrooms to handle capacity? Which is one nice thing about privatization: it puts a price to invested capital, which the government all-to-often considers free.
2/20/2010 3:07:39 PM
^ but it makes that comparison to harvard tuition very disingenuous.
2/20/2010 3:14:30 PM
harvard cost per pupil is a lot more than the tuition. Endowment folks...
2/20/2010 3:25:42 PM
I'm doubting those harvard numbers, a coworker of mine has a son who goes there and he has stated several times that he pays $50k in tution alone, then you have to add on books and lab fees and such. I'd guess that minus endowments and subsidies a Harvard education costs at least 3-4x the price listed here.
2/20/2010 3:41:18 PM
http://www.provost.harvard.edu/institutional_research/Provost_-_FB2009_10_Sec03_Tuition.pdf
2/20/2010 6:10:13 PM
^ wow, that even makes it clearer that the harvard comparison is really dumb to make.I think there is a definite point to be made that merely throwing money at schools is not going to fix the problem, but the CATO institute could at least try to do so honestly.
2/20/2010 7:15:05 PM