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education prices

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 1:50 pm
by Dr_Watson
i just got an email today saying my tuition will go up 5.9% for next fall. :icon33:
they just fucking raised it 7% last year... jesus christ on a bike, tuition is going to be near $30K next year.
At this rate I'll be priced out of my education in no time.
bastards!
(and according to their financial figures they took in ~$180 million in tuition last year, so i have no idea where they're spending all of this cash... unless maybe the higher-ups thought it was time for a "compensation increase")

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 2:20 pm
by Fjoggs
Free education.. ah, lovely.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 2:23 pm
by plained
eh when you think about it, 7% doen seem that bad.

less flunkies with higher costs i bet.

and maybe a greater respect for the degree as well.

dunno

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 2:30 pm
by DiscoDave
Over here in the UK our tuition fees have gone up to £3000 a year (5,211.86 USD). If its a good thing or not im not sure....

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 4:22 pm
by Guest
Yeah they've been going up around here too... Frankly, I'm not that surprised. Most professors out there actualy have a lot of knowledge and have to get good pay to teach, otherwise why bother?

What get's me is those people who go into philosophy/politics and have like 2 masters with 4 degrees and 2 phd's or somethign rediculous. No wonder these guys become professors, it's either that or get assasinated with all the information they know.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 6:00 pm
by Qr7
I don’t know about you UK fags, but people here (GWU - Washington dc) are paying 52K (USD) a year. College sucks. Lets here it for scholarships.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 6:10 pm
by PhoeniX
Qr7 wrote:I don’t know about you UK fags, but people here (GWU - Washington dc) are paying 52K (USD) a year. College sucks. Lets here it for scholarships.
As Dave posted we pay around $5,000 a year :o

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 6:18 pm
by Guest
Here its $132 CAD ($113 USD) per semester in college and $2795.30 CAD ($2395.57 USD) per fall and winter terms (2 semesters or one school year) in university.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 6:33 pm
by Foo
Didn't you guys get the memo? Education is big business now.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 7:15 pm
by Methyd™
Was only paying $3,500 a year when I was in college. Luckily I dropped out.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 7:39 pm
by Wizard .3
ToxicBug wrote:Here its $132 CAD ($113 USD) per semester in college and $2795.30 CAD ($2395.57 USD) per fall and winter terms (2 semesters or one school year) in university.
Yet so many students still complain about the tuition fees. It's unbelievable.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 7:43 pm
by Dave
I'm sure the tax rate in the US is lower than in the UK. I might pay 10 grand a year to go to a public university, but I bet you guys pay more in taxes to offset that difference.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 7:44 pm
by werldhed
Getting paid to go to school, ftw. Word up.
:icon25:

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 9:03 pm
by ScooterG
I hear ya, dude. It took me until I was 30 years old to actually "own" my two degrees!

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 10:03 pm
by tnf
werldhed wrote:Getting paid to go to school, ftw. Word up.
:icon25:
Yea, but graduate research programs are a tad different.

At one point, I had stipend money from both a grant I wrote and my NIH Biotechnology Fellowship at the same time. Factor into that the tuition waiver and that was a nice package.

Then I decided to teach high school. 31,000 in debt to become a high school teacher. Make less, go into more debt. Jesus Christ what a decision. *keeps reminding himself about June, July, and August.*

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 10:09 pm
by werldhed
tnf wrote:
werldhed wrote:Getting paid to go to school, ftw. Word up.
:icon25:
Yea, but graduate research programs are a tad different.

At one point, I had stipend money from both a grant I wrote and my NIH Biotechnology Fellowship at the same time. Factor into that the tuition waiver and that was a nice package.

Then I decided to teach high school. 31,000 in debt to become a high school teacher. Make less, go into more debt. Jesus Christ what a decision. *keeps reminding himself about June, July, and August.*
Shh... don't give it away. I want to sound cool!
It's not much of a stipend -- just barely enough to get by (I'm not on any fellowships yet) -- but at least it's not stuff I owe.
Did you go into debt because you quit the program, and were require to repay the tuition waiver? Or was that leftover debt from undergrad?

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 10:14 pm
by tnf
werldhed wrote:
tnf wrote:
werldhed wrote:Getting paid to go to school, ftw. Word up.
:icon25:
Yea, but graduate research programs are a tad different.

At one point, I had stipend money from both a grant I wrote and my NIH Biotechnology Fellowship at the same time. Factor into that the tuition waiver and that was a nice package.

Then I decided to teach high school. 31,000 in debt to become a high school teacher. Make less, go into more debt. Jesus Christ what a decision. *keeps reminding himself about June, July, and August.*
Shh... don't give it away. I want to sound cool!
It's not much of a stipend -- just barely enough to get by (I'm not on any fellowships yet) -- but at least it's not stuff I owe.
Did you go into debt because you quit the program, and were require to repay the tuition waiver? Or was that leftover debt from undergrad?
That was the cost of my Master's in Teaching program. I wasn't required to repay anything.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 10:16 pm
by Dave
I work for the university (not as a student employee) and I'm a student, so I get full health coverage, vacation time, sick leave and a TIAA-CREF retirement plan. Beat that fuckers

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 10:16 pm
by werldhed
(@ tnf) Gotcha. In my program I believe you are required to repay the amount of tuition you've milked from the school if you quit partway through.
That may be if you fail out, though... I'm not sure.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 10:20 pm
by menkent
werldhed wrote:Or was that leftover debt from undergrad?
i'm *almost* breaking even now as a grad student with a teaching position, but i certainly have around $30k of various student loans looming just over the horizon. fuckers.

of course about any of us could have gone to State U and had full tuition + room&board + books and/or a new computer. when i decided on a private university i just accepted the fact that i wouldn't be able to afford falling back on a position as a public school teacher (thank fuck i never wanted to in the first place). i think i'm going to shop my resume around a bit this summer and see what ($) that ", M.A." will land me. my dick tells me it'll be enough to make it worth the trouble, but my brain keeps telling me i'm gonna be real poor for a while.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 10:25 pm
by tnf
werldhed wrote:(@ tnf) Gotcha. In my program I believe you are required to repay the amount of tuition you've milked from the school if you quit partway through.
That may be if you fail out, though... I'm not sure.
I didn't milk it per se, because it was all through the NIH. I landed a pretty nice fellowship from them that covered tuition, gave me a stipend bigger than an RA would be, gave me 1 trip to DC a year for some big biotech thingy, gauranteed me an internship in the participating biotech company of my choice, etc. I let it all go. It was above and beyond the regular graduate responsibilities, and it was highly competetive to get the fellowship. To be perfectly honest, I wasn't mature enough to handle it all - being only 22 and right out of college while most everyone else had been out living a little before. The professor who oversaw the 7 of us who had these NIH fellowships expected us to consistently be at the top of everything we did - I remember getting an 89% on a graduate biochem test, way above the curve, and being told "we'll have to work on getting those scores a bit higher." In the end, the hoop jumping, politics, and ass-kissing that were required by the program were just too much for me at that age...so I bailed.

Had I gone into the program at 26 or 27 instead of 22, the ending would have been much different. But that's life.

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 11:13 pm
by Dr_Watson
holy crap your schools are cheap.
this year my tuition was ~$24,000
(and that doesn't include housing, if you live on campus its over 30k)

Posted: Mon Apr 03, 2006 1:24 am
by LawL
I'll have $43,000 student debt by the time I graduate.

Posted: Mon Apr 03, 2006 3:19 am
by Mogul
I'll probably be more in debt than some of you put together. :)