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Craig
10-02-2002, 11:38 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2002/EDUCATION/10/02/gr...n.ap/index.html (http://www.cnn.com/2002/EDUCATION/10/02/grading.education.ap/index.html)

Report: College even more unaffordable

Wednesday, October 2, 2002 Posted: 12:51 PM EDT (1651 GMT)

(AP) -- A report card grading each state on its support for higher education found that colleges have become less affordable in most places compared with two years ago, the last time the report was issued.

The nonprofit National Center for Public Policy and Education, based in San Jose, California, dropped the national affordability grade from a C- to a D. Faced with declining revenues because of the troubled economy, many public and private colleges have raised tuition.

California was the exception to the trend, according to the center. It received an A grade for affordability, which the center attributed to a program that provides tuition breaks to underprivileged families.

Patrick M. Callan, president of the center, hopes the report cards will gain attention from the winners of state elections around the country in November, resulting in more government support for higher education.

"The fact that this is the start of a new state political cycle means perhaps people will see this as part of their agenda," said Callan.

Besides affordability, the center graded each state in four other categories -- how states prepare students for college, how many people attend college, graduation rates and the benefits of a college-educated population. There was little change nationwide.

Advanced placement courses and the introduction of algebra to eighth-graders helped boost grades modestly in 14 states for college preparation.

A total of 42 states recorded slight improvements in one category or another; all 50 states saw grades drop in one or more categories. No state received straight A's.

"You seldom see anything revolutionary happen in two years. There is movement, but it's not going to change dramatically," Callan said.

The center used both federal government data and statistics from independent national sources, such as the College Board -- the administrator of the SAT -- to fashion the report cards.

The center is funded primarily by charitable trusts. It released its first 50-state report card two years ago.

deez nuts
10-02-2002, 06:01 PM
This is the one case where I am glad that I'm an old fart and that I went to college back in the day, than today.

kasia
10-02-2002, 07:27 PM
i'm surprised california is the exception. over here, we're constantly having discussions about why we spend so much more on building and maintaining prisons than on higher education.

amietron
10-02-2002, 08:04 PM
well, we DO spend lots on prisons. do you want the state to work for the good of students seeking higher education or convicts serving time? narf. ideally both, but we don't live in an ideal world.

AliBabaIncorporated
10-03-2002, 11:13 AM
my uncle always said the government should just put all the kids in jail and send convicts back to school.

Craig
10-03-2002, 11:20 AM
Originally posted by AliBabaIncorporated@Oct 3 2002, 07:13 PM
my uncle always said the government should just put all the kids in jail and send convicts back to school.

I think a lot of the convicts may get more out of it and appreciate the opportunity more. It would also save a lot of money for many of the student's "mommies and daddies".

However in the interest of breaking an overly rash generalization, I think the jailing decision should be implemented based on the student's major.

By the way, excuse me for a minute while I find a desk to hide under. :D



<!--EDIT|Craig|Oct 8 2002, 05:07 PM-->

ChinaLama
10-05-2002, 02:16 PM
that's why I love Uncle Sam and them Stafford loans. :)

amietron
10-08-2002, 08:43 AM
Originally posted by Craig@Oct 3 2002, 11:20 AM
Originally posted by AliBabaIncorporated@Oct 3 2002, 07:13 PM
my uncle always said the government should just put all the kids in jail and send convicts back to school.

I think a lot of the convicts may get more out of it and appreciate the opportunity more. It would also save a lot of many for many of the student's "mommies and daddies".
i think you might be right about that one. growing up, i've never doubted that my parents wouldn't pay for my college education. after talking to my friends, neither have any of them. it's just expected of them. call us spoiled brats. call us whatever you want. it's learned since early childhood. how can we help it?

controversy
10-14-2002, 02:46 AM
oh yea now they decide to do this. great.
why does everything seem to get a little better after im gone...