This Friday students will be assembling at The Pit at 9:30am to begin a march to the UNC General Admin Building at 10:00am. We must stop the tuition hikes! Please if you have the time come out the support your fellow students in the UNC system. We know about the 15% budget cut that is straining our university, but what hasn't been mentioned is that the board intends to spike our tuition up once more. Not only are they crippling the education services by starving it of funding, they are charging us MORE for sub par services! Tell them to stop!http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=170426293003578
2/8/2011 2:03:11 AM
So there isn't enough money to operate the university, but they can't cut the budget or raise tuition... Gotcha! Just eliminate 50% of the humanities and social sciences, pretty much only a self-perpetuating racket anyways.
2/8/2011 2:10:00 AM
Pulling from another thread:
2/8/2011 2:33:45 AM
2/8/2011 7:13:04 AM
Mind if I toss my ignorance into the thread How many worthless projects does NCSU have going? Remodeling the library (years past), Talley, the book store, demolishing Harrelson, etc. Stuff that doesn't have to be done right now, but they are doing it. It's like the people in charge have no concept of wants, needs, and taking care of frivolous things when there's plenty of money to go around and postponing them when there isn't.Sure, that's just NCSU, not the entire system of NC colleges, but I've got to think stuff like that is going on on all campuses. It's nice to have renovations, it's necessary if there are structural considerations, but come on, some stuff can wait until the economy recovers.
2/8/2011 9:33:42 AM
tuition goes up every single year, and every single year students are outraged.
2/8/2011 9:41:02 AM
I haven't been around forever, but it seems like tuition has risen faster and by a greater percentage than in years past. Heck, while I was in school tuition went up something like 250%. I'm fairly certain it didn't go up by 250% in the same time span immediately before I started school. What was tuition like $3.50 in the 60s?The excuse that it has always risen and people have always been upset about it only lasts but so long. Let's raise it by $4000 per semester next year. No worries, it's always gone up, and it's not like you haven't complained before.
2/8/2011 9:48:05 AM
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA'first off. want to fix this? privatize nc state and let it make a profit. unchain the free market.also this is done by a communist group and the Redstar is a communist/socialist symbol.
2/8/2011 10:15:11 AM
you want to stop annual tuition increases and stop the education bubble? dial back student loans.
2/8/2011 11:01:58 AM
I thought for some reason they were assembling at the barbecue restaurant "The Pit"... seemed like an odd place...
2/8/2011 11:08:01 AM
Are the renovations a "color of money" issue? Meaning that renovations are funded out of a different bucket of money (bond money for example) versus the operating expenses of the university which are covered by a different budget comprised of tuition, research funds, and annual state support?
2/8/2011 11:22:28 AM
^^^This.It's comical to me when people rail against tuition hikes and budget cuts without bothering to understand the reasons why they're needed.[Edited on February 8, 2011 at 11:35 AM. Reason : ]
2/8/2011 11:34:46 AM
So how many of you would have ever set foot on NC State campus without federal loans or state subsidies, seriously?I doubt there's a single one of you who payed your way through at the current out-of-state rates or took only private loans on principle.And furthermore, how many of you would have even gotten into a more selective NC State (one that had, let's say, 10,000 students)?[Edited on February 8, 2011 at 3:41 PM. Reason : a]
2/8/2011 3:38:01 PM
i used a federal loan for my second degree, and understand how its a sensitive balance. however, when you continue to loan people as much money as they want for any degree there is no feedback for tuition prices. it fails to be a fair market because as prices increase demand doesn't fall, people just borrow more money. the increase in education prices over the last 20 years should be terrifying to everyone, there is no excuse for the amount of debt that our generation is finishing college with[Edited on February 8, 2011 at 4:33 PM. Reason : to your second point, i know plenty of people who had to use shitty private loans]
2/8/2011 4:32:09 PM
"Sub-par services?" What a joke. The UNC system provides an astonishing value for the money. Even cutting funds and raising fees, we're still getting a pretty good goddamn deal. Unless you go to UNC Pembroke or something, in which case...well, that's your own damn fault.
2/8/2011 8:36:16 PM
^lol
2/8/2011 11:14:28 PM
2/9/2011 12:00:34 AM
Drain the beast. Take everything you can from government, give back nothing they do not forcibly demand, and all the while laugh about it to your friends. Maybe after showing everyone how ungrateful we are for the entitlements, voters will have a change of heart and take them away. We can only hope. Until then, never let a government program go by without applying for it, no matter what it is or how much time it costs to apply, for you are draining the beast for the good of humanity.
2/9/2011 12:31:09 AM
Parents paid out of pocket for my me, same with other sister that graduated from State and another sister from UNC....they didnt want us to be buried in debt right after college.
2/9/2011 1:14:30 AM
^Same here. But our tuition was still subsidized by the state.If my tuition wasn't subsidized, I probably wouldn't have a college degree. Parents woulda pulled the plug after spending a boatload of money for me to get multiple semesters of Fs, and I wouldn't have been motivated to take out loans to continue with school.
2/9/2011 1:39:12 AM
I too was dependent on student loans and in state tuition. I had a couple of scholarships, and I worked part time during college, but there was no way a public school teacher & half-blind mechanic could have paid a lot towards twins going to college at the same time. And they started saving for my college by the time I was born.
2/9/2011 3:19:54 AM
Why are you protesting both at the UNC General Administration? It seems they will need to do one or the other. Did the General Assembly starting meeting there and I didn't hear about it?
2/9/2011 6:31:13 AM
^^ I was only referring to programs I disagreed with politically. The vast majority of what the city and county do on a daily basis, I agree with, so no beast to drain there. And yes, education is ungodly important and deserves subsidization, which is why I am annoyed that America doe ssuch a terrible job at it. My complaint is not that we spend too much, but that what we spend we spend so horribly. My biggest complaint is with primary education, but also NCState at this point is too expensive. for the same money the state is spending to subsidize NCState students, for the same money could be sending twice as many students to cheaper community colleges.
2/9/2011 9:17:06 AM
2/9/2011 10:27:09 AM
then what is the explanation for this?
2/9/2011 10:31:14 AM
I am not arguing against the overall trend but I think the acute problem is the state budget cuts. Of course these budget cuts are a symptom of the economy and shortfall of revenue to the state as a function of unemployment.
2/9/2011 10:49:18 AM
2/9/2011 11:56:18 AM
And, similar to encouraging home buying during the housing bubble, it's paired with government and educational policies encouraging everyone that they need to go to college. Everyone does not need to go to college. Now we've created this bubble and also raised the standard so that post-graduate degrees are generally recommended now in most professions. And there is no walking away from student loans, no bankruptcy and starting over option. The debt our generation is graduating with is going to cause problems for a long time.
2/9/2011 12:23:33 PM
2/10/2011 8:43:45 AM
2/10/2011 9:24:12 AM
i don't think that would work either
2/10/2011 9:26:28 AM
There are plenty of scholarships and non-government grants that require minimum GPA's to keep your award.
2/10/2011 10:15:44 AM
don'y you already have to be making academic progress and be in good academic standing? i would probably be ok with raising the bar some, but if we are offering student loans i don't want to penalize someone because they chose some engineering or science degree instead of PRT. i wonder how well a program would work that determined the amount you could borrow based on your degree. graduating with $40k in debt with a nuclear engineering degree from some top-tier program is different than graduating with $40k in debt with a communications degree from some random state school. i don't know that this would help the problem of skyrocketing tuition, but maybe dialing back loans just that much would help.
2/10/2011 10:30:15 AM
When we look at the spike in tuition costs, I think we would be utter fools to ignore the role of for-profit "universities" in that trend.LoneSnark wants us to drain the beast. Well, they are. And they're getting rich off the rest of us in doing it. Of course, the for-profits are just a response to persistent problems in education and current issues in the economy. By response, I mean ruthless, cynical, short-sighted money grabs.[Edited on February 10, 2011 at 5:13 PM. Reason : ]
2/10/2011 5:12:35 PM
2/10/2011 5:23:36 PM
2/10/2011 5:47:50 PM
2/10/2011 6:50:07 PM
2/10/2011 8:48:49 PM
To the main point of the thread:http://www.wral.com/news/education/story/9092521/
2/10/2011 11:12:56 PM
2/10/2011 11:59:40 PM
Just as a brief correction to the thread:
2/11/2011 12:25:50 AM
^^ well no shit they existed then, but they were hardly the market they are today. even today i don't see their enrollment numbers or tuition being sufficient to effect an average
2/11/2011 12:27:16 AM
^^I don't think we're in any disagreement. What you've said is not so different from the things I've already quoted like "state lawmakers must give final approval" and things I've already said like the part about the General Assembly being important and that they should have started their advocacy earlier during election/voting season.
2/11/2011 12:38:32 AM
^^They represent like ten percent of the student population, and they take out over a quarter of the federal loans, and it's estimated that by next Fall, they'll be receiving more money in federal Pell grants than all traditional schools combined. Since for-profit schools suck/or prey on people who don't finish (they've used high pressure recruiting tactics at homeless shelters), they're also responsible for almost half of the defaults on those federal loans.According to law, only 90 percent of their revenue can come from federal loans...they have to get the ten percent from somewhere else. In order to do this, some schools have to raise tuition high enough such that grants and loans will not cover a student's expenses so that the student will have to take out private loans (these loans count towards the ten percent). Of course, it's hard for folks to get a loan these days so the school itself will lend you the money to pay for your tuition, knowing that you most likely won't be able to pay it back.It's all just an illusion of ten percent so they can get the 90 percent from the federal government....and that 90 percent is so much money that they don't even care about the half of the ten percent that they will have to write off. And despite the fact that they're rolling in enough free money to make ridiculous profits, they still managed to get 2.2 billion in stimulus money...in exchange, they ran institutions with an overall 50 percent first-year drop-out rate and a 40 percent six-year graduation rate. Of course, many of those graduates will still default on their loans because they aren't actually prepared for a career, and the tuition was too damn high anyway.According to wiki, for-profits began booming in the mid-90s. And I believe the problem is growing. The current recession is giving them more jobless prey, and more legitimate, accredited universities are having to sell out to for-profits. Overall, for-profit universities now receive 75 percent of their revenue from the federal government (up from around 50 percent in 2001). I'm not saying they're entirely responsible for the trend, but they've certainly contributed to part of it.And at least when you overpay for education at a traditional school, you get a more comfortable dorm, more technology in the library, more employees getting paid more money, kids graduating with a decent education, a nicer cafeteria, some cutting edge lab stuff, whatever... You overpay at a for-profit school, you get nothing for it, and some smug jerk get richer.[Edited on February 11, 2011 at 3:34 AM. Reason : unnecessary cursing]
2/11/2011 3:21:53 AM
sources
2/11/2011 8:51:38 AM
Supplanter: We're not, I was just using your quote to illustrate the point because you were the last person to make the comment explicitly There seemed to be a perception in the thread (and in NC generally) that the UNC Board of Governors is an all-powerful body when it comes to tuition. They might have bona fide tuition-setting power when budget times are good (and the NCGA just goes along with their recommendations so legislators don't catch political heat for rising tuition rates), but when the state budget is in bad shape the NCGA does what the hell they please.It's part of why I can't stand Governor Perdue, who during her time as a legislator justified huge year-over-year tuition increases by saying it was just "beer and party money" anyway -- increases that forced me (a guy who had neither drank nor partied during my first 2 years at NCSU) to drop out at the end of my sophomore year.
2/11/2011 9:47:58 AM
Are "for-profit" universities the ones like U. of Phoenix, Miller-Motte, and Ashecroft??My roommate is receiving federal loan money to attend Ashecroft (maybe its Asheford), on-line. I can't beleive they will actually dispense money for such crap institutions.
2/11/2011 11:35:58 AM
^^^?Pell Grants:
2/11/2011 9:03:45 PM
Well done Redstar, the protest was a huge success...http://blogs.newsobserver.com/campusnotes/at-unc-a-protest-too-late
2/12/2011 5:41:28 PM
BridgetSPK, that's a lot of information.Could you also put up some kind of link that shows how much tax payer money goes to educate people who live here illegally?kkthx
2/12/2011 9:24:24 PM