maybe we an stop treating education as a business?
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I have sympathy for students that went to legitimate schools and have a lot of debt to pay off -- but I'm sure they will make it. It is all about living within your means.
But I don't have sympathy for people that made the mistake of thinking that the University of Phoenix was a real college, and racked up a bunch of debt and got a worthless "degree". -
I have empathy for their predicament, considering that they're probably just the kind of people that both need more education (foremost to know that for-profit college is a scam) and can't afford regular college. They're not the ones who set up the student loan/tuition racket.
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It's fucking insane people haven't caught on to what a racket the education system has become.
Baby boomers convinced millenials that you need to go to college. At one point, when only the middle and upper class went to college that was true. The world changed though. -
Students know. They pile on the debt anyway.
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Not-for-profit for the most part is a scam, too. Why do you hate financed French Literature degrees?doogsinparadise said:I have empathy for their predicament, considering that they're probably just the kind of people that both need more education (foremost to know that for-profit college is a scam) and can't afford regular college. They're not the ones who set up the student loan/tuition racket.
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If colleges actually operated like a business and had to compete for our hard earned dollars through innovation and lower prices instead of being mostly dictated by government rules and having to increase prices to offset the artificially high demand caused by subsidies, then we wouldn't have this problem.
It's like we decided that more people need to go to college, and now we are outraged that it's costing money to do that. Something something eating cake.
And honestly we probably need less people going to college anyway. 20 years ago the people who started their careers in the same position as me didn't have a degree because it wasnt difficult to train them. Now everyone does because that's become the standard. So if you want the job you gotta get a degree or you can't compete with the other applicants. So basically colleges are raking in extra revenue but nobody is really producing more in the workforce for it. That's not a good thing at all. It's a major fucking waste. -
Then why is the college graduate unemployment rate under 3%?Fenderbender123 said:If colleges actually operated like a business and had to compete for our hard earned dollars through innovation and lower prices instead of being mostly dictated by government rules and having to increase prices to offset the artificially high demand caused by subsidies, then we wouldn't have this problem.
It's like we decided that more people need to go to college, and now we are outraged that it's costing money to do that. Something something eating cake.
And honestly we probably need less people going to college anyway. 20 years ago the people who started their careers in the same position as me didn't have a degree because it wasnt difficult to train them. Now everyone does because that's become the standard. So if you want the job you gotta get a degree or you can't compete with the other applicants. So basically colleges are raking in extra revenue but nobody is really producing more in the workforce for it. That's not a good thing at all. It's a major fucking waste. -
Because graduates are getting priority over non-graduates. Getting a degree helps an employer know that you can dedicate yourself, put in work, and aren't stupid. However, getting the degree itself doesn't make you that person, it's just a reflection of it. So tens of thousands of dollars get spent on something that slightly lowers the rate of hiring incapable people. I don't know if that's a worthy investment.
For a lot of jobs that require a degree, the training you get when you're hired is sufficient, and what you learned in college isn't all that helpful. College used to be a place where people went to learn shit that couldn't realistically be taught on the job. Now it's just a lot more general knowledge. Of course, I'm speaking in terms of your average graduate who has a bachelor's degree and is looking for an average entry-level job....not people who are going into medicine or law.
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Respect da bidness. I'm calling the police.
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yet another blatant indicator that 'unemployment rate' is a fictitious manipulated government statistic for sheep.2001400ex said:
Then why is the college graduate unemployment rate under 3%?Fenderbender123 said:If colleges actually operated like a business and had to compete for our hard earned dollars through innovation and lower prices instead of being mostly dictated by government rules and having to increase prices to offset the artificially high demand caused by subsidies, then we wouldn't have this problem.
It's like we decided that more people need to go to college, and now we are outraged that it's costing money to do that. Something something eating cake.
And honestly we probably need less people going to college anyway. 20 years ago the people who started their careers in the same position as me didn't have a degree because it wasnt difficult to train them. Now everyone does because that's become the standard. So if you want the job you gotta get a degree or you can't compete with the other applicants. So basically colleges are raking in extra revenue but nobody is really producing more in the workforce for it. That's not a good thing at all. It's a major fucking waste.




