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Excerpt: Downscaling the Dreams of Youth

By Tamara Draut, AlterNet. Posted May 31, 2006.


America prides itself on its unlimited opportunity. So why are fewer and fewer young people able to attend college, find jobs and reach the middle-class promised land?
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strapped

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Editor's Note: The following is an excerpt from Strapped by Tamara Draut. Reprinted by permission of Doubleday.

Renee, a white 26-year-old, grew up in St. Paul, Minnesota. Her parents wanted nothing more than to send her to a four-year college when she graduated from high school, but unfortunately, it was priced out of reach. Instead, Renee began taking business classes at a nearby community college that specialized in business training and got a full-time job. She worked during the day and took classes at night.

Some time later, Renee accepted a new job at a nearby printing company. A nice increase in pay was the upside; working the midnight shift was the considerable downside. Suddenly, balancing school and work became a lot more difficult. Renee would work until 8 A.M., sleep in the afternoon, and go to school at night. Eventually, racked with exhaustion, financially stressed out, and supporting an unemployed boyfriend, Renee dropped out of school. Money played a big role in her decision. She had already taken out student loans and burned through a small inheritance from her grandfather. Already $4,500 in the hole with student loans, Renee didn't want to sink any further into debt.

It is now four years later and Renee is still making loan payments. She anticipates it will take at least eight or nine more years to clear the debt. Today, Renee works as a legal secretary, earning $28,000 a year, which must support both her and her son. In the hopes of boosting her earnings potential, Renee has re-enrolled in school, taking correspondence classes with the aim of becoming a paralegal.

When I asked Renee if she wished she could have done anything differently up to this point in her life, she didn't hesitate with her answer: "Number one, I would have finished college. I would have actually gone to a four-year college and had a real degree."

Renee is not alone. This is the story of downscaled dreams.

Soaring tuition costs combined with cuts to financial aid have forced students into massive debt and priced many smart kids out of four-year colleges altogether. Every year, 410,000 college-qualified students -- just like Renee -- from households with incomes less than $50,000 enroll in community college instead of going to a four-year college. Another 168,000 college-qualified students don't enroll in college at all. These students took the SATs, had good grades, and were college-ready. They just didn't have the money. And they weren't willing to play the debt-for-diploma game.

Thirty or forty years ago, skipping college was much less important. While a college degree has always been considered a stepping stone to higher status and greater prosperity, it certainly wasn't expected of everyone. Jobs for high school graduates were plentiful, and many blue-collar workers made good money. Back in the 1970s, an accountant with a B.A. and a steel worker might live on the same block, drive the same cars, eat at the same restaurants, and send their kids to the same public schools. But as the pay difference between high school grads and college grads has widened, so too have the life outcomes. In 1977 there was only a 6 percentage-point difference in home-ownership rates between those with college educations and those without. Today, there is a 20 percentage-point difference. Today the college-haves and the college have-nots live in different worlds.

College: From Nicety to Necessity

Nowadays, entering the real world with only a high school diploma is like going into battle armed with only a squirt gun. Over the last thirty years, earnings for workers with high school diplomas have taken a beating. By 1994, males 25 to 34 without college degrees were earning roughly the same amount as their similarly educated grandfathers earned in 1949.

High school students saw the writing on the wall, and more began enrolling in college. In 1975, just over half of all high school graduates continued their education after high school. Today, nearly three quarters of high school graduates enroll in some type of college after high school. But those numbers are deceptive.

Although young adults may be swarming into college, most are failing to complete their studies. Less than a third of young adults aged 25 to 29 had a bachelor's degree or higher in 2003 -- a percentage that hasn't kept pace with enrollments. The kind of family someone comes from and the amount of money they can pony up exert a heavy influence on whether a student ends up at a two-year or four-year college and whether or not they will complete their degree. Which means that today's bachelor's degree holders are still a rather select group.

During the same time that a B.A. has become the new entry pass to the middle class, tuitions have soared and our federal financial aid system has fossilized. Of the $70 billion a year the federal government spends on student aid, the vast majority is loan-based aid, and in any case it is nowhere near generous enough to help many students pay for college. As a result, nearly two thirds of students graduate with student loan debt, and low-income students are most likely to be borrowing.

As this Red Sea of debt has risen, policymakers have dithered. Every four years or so, Congress votes on whether to make changes to the maximum amount a student can borrow or receive in grants to pay for college. During the 1980s and 1990s, grants to low-income students were bumped up a tad and student loans were made available to families regardless of their income. And yet, the amount of money a student can borrow is still the same as it was in 1992.

The maximum Pell Grant award, the nation's premier program for helping poor kids pay for college, covers about one third of the costs of a four-year college today. It covered nearly three quarters in the 1970s. But only 22 percent of Pell Grant recipients get the maximum award -- the average award in 2003 was $2,421, which covered only a quarter of the costs of a four-year public college. How is it possible that as college has become more important, access to college has become more out of reach?

Perhaps our members of Congress, the majority of whom are Baby Boomers or older, don't remember just how good their generation had it when it came to being able to afford college…

The Glory Days of Financial Aid

America prides itself on being a nation of unlimited opportunity. Go to school. Go to work. Go to Florida and retire when you're fifty-five. That's the theory, anyway. While European countries rely heavily on taxes to fund social policies that minimize inequality, America has historically looked to education as the great equalizer. I don't know where we're looking now. As more people want to climb the ladder of educational opportunity, we're simultaneously sawing off the rungs.

The vast system of public universities that exists today was the result of purposeful action by the federal government. In 1862, Congress passed the Morrill Act, named for its sponsor, Congressman Justin Morrill of Vermont, which provided federal land to the states to establish public colleges. The goal of these first land-grant colleges -- such as those in Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, and Minnesota -- was to educate the entire population and produce research to support emerging industries. In 1890, a second Morrill Act provided land to establish the country's first black colleges.

The nation continued to promote higher education throughout the twentieth century, expanding access to college as a way to redress inequality, foster democratic ideals, and spur economic development. The pledge to kick open the doors to college began in earnest with the "GI Bill of Rights." Officially known as the Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944, the goal behind the GI Bill was to help millions of returning veterans "readjust" to civilian life and provide them with the education, skills, and money to successfully reintegrate into society and the economy.

The GI Bill provided grants to help veterans pay for tuition, books, and health insurance. It also provided a monthly stipend to help college students pay for living expenses. Back in 1948, veterans received a grant of $500 a year -- enough, at the time, to pay for all but $25 of tuition at Harvard. On top of that, they received a monthly stipend of $50 -- that's $400 in today's dollars. As a point of comparison, in 2003 the average federal grant to students was $2,421, which falls $24,000 short of tuition and fees at Harvard.

The GI Bill was key to building the massive middle class that exists today. The hundreds of thousands of accountants, teachers, scientists, and engineers educated under the GI Bill helped fuel the long economic expansion of the postwar era, and as a result changed the social and economic landscape of America. About 8 million veterans took advantage of the GI Bill, and 2.3 million of these attended colleges and universities. By 1960, half of the members of Congress had gone to college on the GI Bill. W

ith the additional benefits of no-down-payment policies and low-interest mortgages, the GI Bill fostered the great exodus to the suburbs and the establishment of a wide middle class that came to symbolize our country's prosperity and the achievement of the American dream. Not a bad payback for a mere $91 billion investment (in today's dollars).

The kids who grew up in this new middle-class security are today's Baby Boomers. Like their fathers (it was mostly men who profited from the GI Bill), Baby Boomers benefited from generous financial aid policies and dirt-cheap tuition at colleges all across the country. But this time around, Baby Boomer women joined the college stampede.

A new law was passed to reaffirm the radical American idea that anyone should be able to go to college -- and be able to pay for it. The Higher Education Act of 1965 (HEA) established the college grants and student loans on which today's system is largely based. Whereas the GI Bill focused on veterans, the HEA sought to ensure access to college for all individuals.

As President Lyndon Johnson said when he signed the bill, "The Higher Education Act of 1965 means that a high school senior anywhere in this great land of ours can apply to any college or any university in any of the fifty states and not be turned away because his family is poor."

As a result of this landmark legislation, the number of low-income students in American colleges and universities nearly doubled between 1965 and 1971. For poor kids, grants were generous enough to cover the cost of going to college. For the middle class, tuition was low enough that most students could foot the bill with Mom and Dad's help and a part-time job.

Back in 1977, the largest high school graduating class in the nation's history, the Baby Boomers born in 1959, was headed for college. Their record numbers, in addition to the slumping economy, made it a particularly bad time to be entering the labor market. The good news, though, was that college was affordable. Average tuition in the late 1970s for a four-year state college was just over $1,900, in 2003 dollars. Add in room and board, and the total cost was just over $6,000. For Boomers of more substantial means and grander expectations, the tuition at a private college was around $8,000, and with room and board the total cost was $12,000, again inflation-adjusted. High school graduates hoping to learn a trade after high school could easily fork over $900 for a year's tuition at a community college.

Borrowing one's way through college just wasn't the norm. In 1977, college students borrowed about $6 billion (2002 dollars) to help pay for college, compared to $28 billion borrowed by students in 1993. By 2003, the amount of borrowing had doubled, to $56 billion. … Both the youngest and oldest of the Baby Boomers (and their parents) made it through college without much financial struggle and certainly without the debt burden Gen Xers have on their shoulders.

The Debt-for-Diploma System

To illustrate how nonexistent student loan debt was for previous generations, I conducted a simple Nexis search. When I typed in the words "student loan debt" for the years 1971 to 1980, the search yielded no articles; not a single article on this subject appeared in any newspaper or magazine in the entire country. The next decade brought…only sixty-seven [articles] about student loan debt….

Continuing the Nexis query, I searched "student loan debt" for the decade 1991 to 2000. The search was interrupted because it would yield more than 1,000 articles. The debt-for-diploma system had arrived.

The debt-for-diploma system is a pernicious beast. It stunts young adults' economic progress as they try to start their lives, draining precious dollars out of their paychecks for more than a decade. The evils of the debt-for-diploma system aren't restricted to those who take out student loans. Anytime a bright but lower-income student settles for a two-year institution or forgoes college altogether, the debt-for-diploma system has claimed another victim.

It shouldn't be surprising, then, that many of the gains made during the 1970s in expanding access to college have disappeared. In fact, the gap in college enrollment among whites, blacks, and Hispanic students has actually widened over the last thirty years: in 2000, the enrollment gap between white and black students was 11 percentage points, up from only 5 percentage points in 1972.

The enrollment gap between white and Hispanic students was 13 percentage points in 2000, up from a 5-percentage-point gap in 1972. One result of debt-for-diploma is that the highest-performing students from the lowest socioeconomic backgrounds enroll in college at the same rate as the lowest-performing students from the highest socioeconomic households.

To put it more bluntly, the smartest poor kids attend college at the same rate as the dumbest rich kids. And these days, there are more smart poor kids than ever before.

Excerpted from Strapped by Tamara Draut, Copyright © 2006 by Tamara Draut. Excerpted by permission of Doubleday, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

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Tamara Draut is the author of Strapped: Why America's 20- and 30-Somethings Can't Get Ahead.

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Where's our vision?
Posted by: Urstrly on May 31, 2006 4:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our failure to make education available for everyone in this society is a betrayal of our values. Not only are we wasting the talents of many young people who could contribute to our society, we are embittering them. When Jessica Lynch was injured in battle, I asked myself what she was doing there. The answer was, of course, that she was trying to get enough money to go to college, to be a teacher. Who knows how many Jessica Lynches are in Iraq today. And why is risking your life in a war our leaders don't send their children to fight the price of a college education?

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» RE: Where's our vision? Posted by: fred_53_99
Education Is Now Big Business
Posted by: ChristopherLL on May 31, 2006 6:32 AM   
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I am a boomer who grew up poor but was smart. But it took hard work and money to go to college nevertheless. What I can say was the educational system back then, from elementary to college, was committed to quality and culture. It is not now. Schools, colleges and universities are now run just like any business with productivity and profit the dominant objective. Classes that appeal to the corporations of America are promoted (business, computer, techonology) while those that contribute to the "Big Picture" are neglected (literature, philosopy, art, music). And as long as this society relies upon the military/industrial complex for its existence and business is more important than people the future is predictable

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» RE: Stand up and Take a Bow!! Posted by: ChristopherLL
» RE: Stand up and Take a Bow!! Posted by: ChristopherLL
the corruption and dismemberment of the American university
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 31, 2006 7:31 AM   
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Even the colleges (if you can get into them) are collapsing under the assault of the corporate mobsters. What are the public universities now? Places to do proprietary drug research on the public dime for international pharma companies who want to cut costs so that they can spend more on sales and marketing? Bayh-Dole is the legal apparatus, emplaced in the early 80's, that began this process - a piece of patent and intellectual property law that allowed publicly funded research to be exclusively owned by corporate interests.

The university public relations hamsters call this "generating new knowledge" while they hire armies of lawyers to make sure that the intellectual property rights end up in the hands of their corporate handlers. The universities aren't training a new generation of independent thinkers - they are training cowed tools to do what they're told, at the behest of the corporate slimeballs who run the university system. This means low-quality, corrupt and dishonest science, because the best people are so disgusted that they often leave or are kicked out, and the rest just have dollar signs in their eyes - or they are hamsters themselves.

The University of California is the one to watch if you want to see this rubric in action - and look! now they are joined at the hip to Bechtel - Iraq war profiteering, anyone?

This is more of a problem for those who can get into a university - the people who get by on nickels and dimes in trailer parks, the backs of cars, crumbing city tenements - they can't even get a decent high school or grade school education let alone a college education. How can four years of college counteract 12 years of public education neglect?

Re-establishing the independence of the academic system from the corporate overseers should be high on the agenda of any aware college student. Otherwise things only get worse - look at the situation in the German universities in the thirties - bad juju. Go and read Hitler's Scientists : Science, War, and the Devil's Pact by John Cornwell. You don't want to keep going down this path!

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Boomer Parents' Angst
Posted by: abqbabe on May 31, 2006 8:04 AM   
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As a Boomer who was not able to finish college (my parents could only afford to send my brother, now a vetrinarian), I have felt the lack all my life as I was passed over for jobs and promotions because I did not have "a degree" (despite an IQ of 170). Certainly, I dreamed of my own sons going to college and my husband (also non-college) and I both worked and planned for this for many years.
Unfortunately, the path we chose, a 401K through my husband's work did not work as planned. When the market tanked after 9/11 we lost approximately 85% of our investments value, which has never come close to being recovered.

We practically begged our sons to take out student loans to go to college, but both looked at the staggering debt package and refused. One, with exceptional intelligence and computer skills, decided to use those and started as a part time tech for a major HMO, which he has parlayed into a full time management job. The other has chosen the Army and its offer of college money (if he survives!) and hopes to eventually become a history teacher.

As parents we feel the system has been steadily stacked against us and our children. It is a disgraceful commentary on the widening gap between the Haves and Have-nots in American society, and the obviously intentional creation of a permanent underclass of inexpensive labor who can be easily manipulated or ignored by the elite, as we will forever be without real economic power or the freedom to defy our masters.

Meanwhile we watch as those who do manage to go to college are "educated" into following the corporate mentality, becoming trained to either feel themselves incomaprably superior to the masses of those who cannot afford a degree (and therefore not responsible for them), or trapped in long term debt which renders them meek and pliable in the labor market.

Affordable access to college and university are the hallmarks of an open, democratic society, where education is not merely an economic leveler, but an expander of minds and thinking. Higher education is necessary not only for significant economic advancement, but to teach people how to evaluate and use the entire social system for their advantage. To effectively deny this opportunity to a majority of qualified young people is to destroy the very tools of democracy in modern society, and negate the fundamental purpose of education itself: a better understanding of life, human potential and purpose.

Instead, I see whole generations, my own children included, condemned through present policies to economic servitude and indenture to a corporate orchestrated system, designed to preserve the priviliges of the elite and ensure silence from the rest of us, as our lives are manipulated and disposed of for the profit of a few.

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Community colleges are a solution, not a problem
Posted by: AmyB on May 31, 2006 9:20 AM   
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I am sorry that the example disses community colleges. My advice to young people who can't afford college tuition is, do two years at the community college then transfer to a university. By that method you can finish all the basic course on the cheap with more personal attention, and then transfer to a university and get fancier professors for you upper division classes.

I admit that the value of a college education has led to a problem of fly-by-night "tech" schools that grant bogus degrees. However, a genuine, reputable community college is part of the solution, not part of the problem.

--AmyB

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The Pie Is Shrinking
Posted by: medstudgeek on May 31, 2006 9:25 AM   
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Like it or not, as third world countries emerge as economies and compete with us, they will drive prices down and wages with them; the good old days are over. Throwing up trade barriers woudn't help; they'd stop buying our stuff. The US had a huge advantage in that only we could do manufacturing and sell to the rest of the world, because Europe had destroyed themselves in WWII. That was why the standard of living was so high in the 50s.

so you'd expect things to get worse, both for young people and for old. the only answer is to use the government to spread money from the rich so the pain is shared more equally. But things are not going to get better as a whole.

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» RE: The Pie Is Shrinking Posted by: dave236412
Education Inflation Is Way More Than Double
Posted by: NoPCZone on May 31, 2006 9:41 AM   
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Higher Ed costs have been outpacing the rate in the economy for more than a generation, easily double the core rate every year. What you end up with is something like this:

A urban private liberal arts college (Best Colleges List) I know of had a tuition rate in the early 1970's of $600/year, or $4,800 for a very good BA/BS. The same school today has a tuition of $27,874 per year, $111,496 for the same degree if tuition does not rise.

A medium sized state university nearby had tuition of $240/semester (in-state) in the late 1970's, or $1,920 for a BA/BS degree. That was for an unlimited course load. Today, an 18 hour load costs (in-state) $3,222/semester, or $25,776 for the same degree if tuition does not rise.

By comparison, in the same area a starter house that was $40,000 in the late 1970's sells for about $125,000 today. If real estate had inflated at the same rate the local public university has, that house would cost almost $540,000 today. The $3,000 stripped Toyota Corolla (no A/C, stickshift, no PS) of 1979 would cost over $40,000 today. Clearly higher ed costs are out of control.

The other thing that has raised it's ugly head is fees levied per credit hour. Many public schools hide tuition increases in fees that were not charged or were levied at a flat-rate in the past. Mandatory fees that a generation ago could be easily paid out-of-pocket are now a significant portion of school costs.

Notice that all of this is just tuition. You still have to buy books, eat and all the rest.

I'm 44 and went to school on money earned during a summer job--not having to work during the year, borrow money or take a grant. That's just not possible today for most people.

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So what now?
Posted by: carrie on May 31, 2006 9:52 AM   
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I am a Canadian university graduate, and am fortunate to live in a country where universities are largely government subsidized. However, they are far from being free, and I am now, along with many others, deeply in debt.

I have long felt that charging students money for their degree is the biggest crime of our time...and it goes relatively unnoticed each and every election. So, I want to know, from the experts, what can we do to change this? Education is a right, not a priviledge. It is time to make free education a reality. Just tell me what I need to do and I'll do it.

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Where is the anger?
Posted by: monkeywrench on May 31, 2006 9:52 AM   
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From the article:
"The GI Bill was key to building the massive middle class that exists today. The hundreds of thousands of accountants, teachers, scientists, and engineers educated under the GI Bill helped fuel the long economic expansion of the postwar era, and as a result changed the social and economic landscape of America."

The middle class, at least the working middle class, the class that pays taxes, supports the lifestyles of our representatives, and has provided for decades the structure of what economic – and by inference, social – equality exists in America, is about to die.

The middle class today is, in fact, swelled disproportionately by the Baby Boomers, the democratic "800-pound gorilla." Well, that gorilla will be retiring soon; in fact, the first of the Boomers are already reaching retirement age, so the exodus from the working world by an enormous (and decently paid) slice of america's population has already begun.

Who will replace them? Who will cover the enormous debt burden that the criminally irresponsible Bush administration has bequeathed to our nation's future? We're looking forward to far fewer working adults, working at lower-paying jobs and trying to deal with far-greater personal debt loads, paying far less in taxes – or by that time being taxed so heavily that their living conditions everywhere will resemble those of the ghettos of today. And all of this will be coming at a time when we will face multiple environmental crises due to global warming and weather chaos.

I hate to be so cynical, but I'm convinced that if current trends continue, this nation is heading for an enormous economic, social and environmental train wreck. It has NEVER been so imperative as it is today to get this nation back on the track that once made it great and that will ensure a reasonably secure future – if this is even possible now; and yet, as indicators look ever worse, day after day goes by and nothing changes. We cannot even remove an obviously, provably, corrupt administration with our own laws. Where is the anger? Where are the protests? Where are those who are willing to look at our future honestly and work to fix the problems now, before they become unfixable? Where are those who truly care about the common good?

Certainly not in Washington – so why do we keep sending them there?

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» It's back in 2003 Posted by: axolotl_helix
» RE: Where is the anger? Posted by: chomsky
Perhaps our deams/expections are unreasonable?
Posted by: staicnoise on May 31, 2006 10:34 AM   
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Why are we surprised when dreams need to be downsized when those dreams are based on unreasonable expectations? This world has limited resources. A current generation should count themselves lucky if they are able to live as well as the previous generation. The bad news is it seems we have reached the point where business as it once was can't continue. Unless there's a will to change how the pie is divided, the human race will remain on a downhill race to the bottom.

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Read this... This is what it's all about.... $$$$$
Posted by: albiegf13 on May 31, 2006 1:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How Not to Ruin Your Life
by Ben Stein

After Enron, Corporate Wrongdoing Still Thrives
by Ben Stein

http://finance.yahoo.com/columnist/article/yourlife/4780?p=1

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Things Have Changed
Posted by: Sandra on May 31, 2006 2:56 PM   
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I worked my way through college and paid off my college loan, which took me years and years. I was also a single mom for much of that time. It wasn't easy and I think that it's even harder today. What's also disturbing is that a young person can't be sure of what jobs to train for. Jobs are being outsourced and everyone is participating in a global economy. The people who are in Congress and the White House have money and don't understand what's it's like to struggle. We all need to advocate for public financing of political campaigns, because that's the only way we may get people in office who understand real world issues that impact most of us who are not wealthy and connected. We will also need to rethink our lives and expectations. We won't achieve the quality of life that our parents had. We'll need to think more about our lives, what's important to us and how many resources we need to live a quality life.

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Automating Education
Posted by: CourtneyGQuinn on May 31, 2006 4:54 PM   
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What happens in a future where almost everything is automated and done with robots/computers/software? Higher education is the perfect example of a job that could become much more productive with computers. How cheap, quick and easy would it be to record, archive and translate every teacher/prof's lecture onto the internet for everyone to benefit from? The highly paid, unionized baby boomer academics who occupy positions of influence in universities/colleges aren't interested in providing free education to each and all via the internet. The media and unions say we- the western world- are competing with the likes of Chinese and Indian workers and we're facing a losing battle.....nonsense, even the lowest paid workers oversees can't compete with a robot worker. Political, business and media "leaders" aren't facing up to the fact that a highly automated future is coming into existence. A new "New Deal" needs to be established that recognizes jobs being outsourced to robotic workers.

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» dude, that time is here Posted by: sln70
» RE: dude, that time is here Posted by: CourtneyGQuinn
Interesting quote from article...
Posted by: Ayla87 on May 31, 2006 8:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
" Average tuition in the late 1970s for a four-year state college was just over $1,900, in 2003 dollars."

Hmmm, how convenient, that's pretty much what my tuition for community college is, once you add in the cost of my textbooks. And yet I still read people responses to articles simular like this, denounce two year institutions.

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A proposal that could work
Posted by: paul_revere on Jun 1, 2006 1:47 AM   
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I have been telling others about an idea that I think would work and that I would put into action if I were President.

Our country needs to redeem itself. One way would be to revive a true peace corps organization. The idea is to send young people abroad to teach others how to maintain a more healthy and productive way of life, and, in return, reward the peace corps workers with free college tuition.

Follow me on this ...

If a high school student is interested in attending college, in the senior year, that student can enroll in a class that specializes in some aspect of life improvement -- plumbing, construction, farming, sanitation, food preparation, etc. Then, after the student graduates high school, he or she undergoes a six-month training program in the desired field, and then that person is sent to a particular place in the world where help is needed.

For every year that "student" spends abroad in the peace corps, the student receives one year of paid college education after returning home to the states. This would include tuition, room and board at the university. The limit can be set at four years of service to acquire four years of college. The college would be a state university where the student attended high school. The federal government would direct funds for education to the state colleges instead of wasting billions on unneccessary invasion/wars and tax cuts for the rich.

This idea, of course, needs some refining (maybe not), but it would expose the high school graduate to the rest of the world. The service to others, I feel, would build character and promote a more peaceful and loving view of life rather than the more militant and selfish view that many young people now hold.

This is how you "guarantee" high school graduates a quality education. After a four-year degree, then the college graduate can pay for extra higher education (masters/doctorate) on his/her own. But at least we can stop burdening our young people with debt and discouragement.

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