Just How Hard is University to Overcome
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@Carnival-Boy said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
My niece is in her final year at St. Andrews. She has four hours of lectures a week over two 11 week terms. For this she pays over $12k a year. I worked out that's over $130 PER HOUR! I don't know how that compares with the US, but the Uni is taking the mickey IMO.
Her non-European colleagues are paying double ($24) whilst her Scottish and French colleagues are only paying $2,400 because we have a system where every EU citizen apart from the English, Welsh and Irish pay reduced fees.
Similar in the US.... as an American I had to pay far more and had to maintain much higher standards than the Europeans in my classes.
I'm actually expected to be on campus as St. Andrews very soon, like in a month.
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@Carnival-Boy our system is non-uniform. In the NY state system, for example, NY students pay one rate and students from outside of NY pay a different rate (much higher.) Except for one college in the uni where everyone pays the same no matter where they are from. It's weird. And every state handles things differently.
And we have some that have different prices or admissions by the county that you are living in!
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@scottalanmiller said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@Carnival-Boy our system is non-uniform. In the NY state system, for example, NY students pay one rate and students from outside of NY pay a different rate (much higher.) Except for one college in the uni where everyone pays the same no matter where they are from. It's weird. And every state handles things differently.
And we have some that have different prices or admissions by the county that you are living in!
That's all community colleges in NY. You can get a discount for being in county.
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I haven't heard of the county residence having any bearing on cost, but I'm not surprised at all, Around here, if you're not a NE resident, you pay higher school tuition for sure.
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@coliver said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@scottalanmiller said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@Carnival-Boy our system is non-uniform. In the NY state system, for example, NY students pay one rate and students from outside of NY pay a different rate (much higher.) Except for one college in the uni where everyone pays the same no matter where they are from. It's weird. And every state handles things differently.
And we have some that have different prices or admissions by the county that you are living in!
That's all community colleges in NY. You can get a discount for being in county.
Some of the non-CC do that too. I hate that the CCs do that because we have no CC in my county, and no SUNY at all. And the near by counties have worthless schools like GCC. Only ECC and MCC are any good and are both far away. It's unfair that some state residents get the best schools cheaply and that others in the poorer counties get zero schools cheaply and what schools they do get are more expensive, far away and crappy.
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@Dashrender said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
I haven't heard of the county residence having any bearing on cost, but I'm not surprised at all, Around here, if you're not a NE resident, you pay higher school tuition for sure.
Probably just a NY thing. But NY has the largest university system in the country so it leads in a lot of things (structurally.)
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@scottalanmiller said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@coliver said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@scottalanmiller said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@Carnival-Boy our system is non-uniform. In the NY state system, for example, NY students pay one rate and students from outside of NY pay a different rate (much higher.) Except for one college in the uni where everyone pays the same no matter where they are from. It's weird. And every state handles things differently.
And we have some that have different prices or admissions by the county that you are living in!
That's all community colleges in NY. You can get a discount for being in county.
Some of the non-CC do that too. I hate that the CCs do that because we have no CC in my county, and no SUNY at all. And the near by counties have worthless schools like GCC. Only ECC and MCC are any good and are both far away. It's unfair that some state residents get the best schools cheaply and that others in the poorer counties get zero schools cheaply and what schools they do get are more expensive, far away and crappy.
I agree... but seeing as how I got my undergrad for almost nothing because of this, and a few other things, I'm not complaining.
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@coliver said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@scottalanmiller said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@coliver said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@scottalanmiller said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@Carnival-Boy our system is non-uniform. In the NY state system, for example, NY students pay one rate and students from outside of NY pay a different rate (much higher.) Except for one college in the uni where everyone pays the same no matter where they are from. It's weird. And every state handles things differently.
And we have some that have different prices or admissions by the county that you are living in!
That's all community colleges in NY. You can get a discount for being in county.
Some of the non-CC do that too. I hate that the CCs do that because we have no CC in my county, and no SUNY at all. And the near by counties have worthless schools like GCC. Only ECC and MCC are any good and are both far away. It's unfair that some state residents get the best schools cheaply and that others in the poorer counties get zero schools cheaply and what schools they do get are more expensive, far away and crappy.
I agree... but seeing as how I got my undergrad for almost nothing because of this, and a few other things, I'm not complaining.
CCs are definitely the best way to get maximum potential value from a degree. You often get the best quality of education AND the lowest price.
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I know that Monroe Community College (MCC) had a better freshmen level programming lineup than Cornell had for their Master's program. If you had an MS in CS from Cornell you were just prepared to enter MCC as a Freshman. The difference in expectations of their students was staggering.
OCC in Syracuse is where I sat on the program board for a very long time because I feel that the community colleges do the best for their students and are where we should be focused the most on improving the system.
I would definitely work with SUNY Empire if they wanted me to. Their programs are good enough that they are worth improving and supporting. They take what they are doing very seriously and work hard to offer real value to their students (hence why they are the top ranked school in New York as ranked by those that actually attended.)
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I found this article on the subject to in my LinkedIn feed yesterday. I hope it comes through. Your onto something SAM, Thank you for this talk in Syracuse Spicecorps! https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/make-mistake-student-debt-problem-national-crisis-marta-l-tellado
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Good timing that this just popped up...
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@scottalanmiller and I were discussing this thread today, which is why I resurrected it.
I asked the question ... if college was free, would you still feel this way?
My contention is that the "HS Benefit After Investments" is only applicable if you can bank the $146K in tuition.
Without that, you would only have the additional 4 years of salary to bank over the kid in college not making money. However, most 17 year olds are probably closer to $20K yearly than $38K. And the college goer can offset that by working. They work 20 hours a week? Then the non college goer only gets them by $10K.
And if they are not in college, there are probably a lot of other costs associated which will eat into the $20K, thus making any "HS Benefit After Investment" amount less and less.
I figure they would need to save 20K over the 4 years at the mentioned 8% to break even. But then they are just even, and the college educated person makes much more and can invest much more.
You can also skew this by having the college educated person invest their increased earning amount.
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@brrabill said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@scottalanmiller and I were discussing this thread today, which is why I resurrected it.
I asked the question ... if college was free, would you still feel this way?
My contention is that the "HS Benefit After Investments" is only applicable if you can bank the $146K in tuition.
Without that, you would only have the additional 4 years of salary to bank over the kid in college not making money. However, most 17 year olds are probably closer to $20K yearly than $38K. And the college goer can offset that by working. They work 20 hours a week? Then the non college goer only gets them by $10K.
And if they are not in college, there are probably a lot of other costs associated which will eat into the $20K, thus making any "HS Benefit After Investment" amount less and less.
I figure they would need to save 20K over the 4 years at the mentioned 8% to break even. But then they are just even, and the college educated person makes much more and can invest much more.
You can also skew this by having the college educated person invest their increased earning amount.
Those other costs exist regardless. Was the original calculation just tuition or did it also include room and board?
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Or you can pursue a bachelors or masters degree while working full time as well as investing in something like SP500 or 401k.
That's what I plan on doing in the kind-of-near future when my personal life opens up more free time to put in like 22+ hours for studying. I can't find a decent online only offering with good reputation, so may be forced to do it super slowly at a brick and mortar in evenings.
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@tim_g said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
Or you can pursue a bachelors or masters degree while working full time as well as investing in something like SP500 or 401k.
That's what I plan on doing in the kind-of-near future when my personal life opens up more free time to put in like 22+ hours for studying. I can't find a decent online only offering with good reputation, so may be forced to do it super slowly at a brick and mortar in evenings.
What are you going for?
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@coliver said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@tim_g said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
Or you can pursue a bachelors or masters degree while working full time as well as investing in something like SP500 or 401k.
That's what I plan on doing in the kind-of-near future when my personal life opens up more free time to put in like 22+ hours for studying. I can't find a decent online only offering with good reputation, so may be forced to do it super slowly at a brick and mortar in evenings.
What are you going for?
Not sure anymore. All universities call the same programs something different, or add their own spin. So I have no idea anymore. Especially after reading all of Scott's info on college education. I was thinking something science-y and IT-ish. Something to set me up the best in the future in the IT field at a high level, to make more money.
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@tim_g said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@coliver said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@tim_g said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
Or you can pursue a bachelors or masters degree while working full time as well as investing in something like SP500 or 401k.
That's what I plan on doing in the kind-of-near future when my personal life opens up more free time to put in like 22+ hours for studying. I can't find a decent online only offering with good reputation, so may be forced to do it super slowly at a brick and mortar in evenings.
What are you going for?
Not sure anymore. All universities call the same programs something different, or add their own spin. So I have no idea anymore. Especially after reading all of Scott's info on college education. I was thinking something science-y and IT-ish. Something to set me up the best in the future in the IT field at a high level, to make more money.
Recent research, aside from Scott talking about it, has shown that in specific technical industries grad degrees are a net negative. You generally don't earn more money by having a degree.
That being said. I wouldn't go for something IT related. Go for an MBA or something related. It will give you more background on how a business works as well as classes on things like accounting, risk management, and project management.
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If you think about the Rule of 72, if you take 6 years to go to college, you would have half as much money at retirement as someone that started 6 years earlier assuming a 12% return. 12% might be a generous rate of return, but so is doubling your entire 401 as you near retirement.
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@coliver said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@tim_g said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@coliver said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@tim_g said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
Or you can pursue a bachelors or masters degree while working full time as well as investing in something like SP500 or 401k.
That's what I plan on doing in the kind-of-near future when my personal life opens up more free time to put in like 22+ hours for studying. I can't find a decent online only offering with good reputation, so may be forced to do it super slowly at a brick and mortar in evenings.
What are you going for?
Not sure anymore. All universities call the same programs something different, or add their own spin. So I have no idea anymore. Especially after reading all of Scott's info on college education. I was thinking something science-y and IT-ish. Something to set me up the best in the future in the IT field at a high level, to make more money.
Recent research, aside from Scott talking about it, has shown that in specific technical industries grad degrees are a net negative. You generally don't earn more money by having a degree.
That being said. I wouldn't go for something IT related. Go for an MBA or something related. It will give you more background on how a business works as well as classes on things like accounting, risk management, and project management.
So given where I am at currently in my career, getting a BIT and/or MSIT would most likely not get me a raise or open up an opportunity later down the road that pays more with that?
I'm also keeping my IT education up to date... constantly educating in all IT aspects. I'm using certifications as a way to learn and do my job better.
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@tim_g said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@coliver said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@tim_g said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@coliver said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
@tim_g said in Just How Hard is University to Overcome:
Or you can pursue a bachelors or masters degree while working full time as well as investing in something like SP500 or 401k.
That's what I plan on doing in the kind-of-near future when my personal life opens up more free time to put in like 22+ hours for studying. I can't find a decent online only offering with good reputation, so may be forced to do it super slowly at a brick and mortar in evenings.
What are you going for?
Not sure anymore. All universities call the same programs something different, or add their own spin. So I have no idea anymore. Especially after reading all of Scott's info on college education. I was thinking something science-y and IT-ish. Something to set me up the best in the future in the IT field at a high level, to make more money.
Recent research, aside from Scott talking about it, has shown that in specific technical industries grad degrees are a net negative. You generally don't earn more money by having a degree.
That being said. I wouldn't go for something IT related. Go for an MBA or something related. It will give you more background on how a business works as well as classes on things like accounting, risk management, and project management.
So given where I am at currently in my career, getting a BIT and/or MSIT would most likely not get me a raise or open up an opportunity later down the road that pays more with that?
I'm also keeping my IT education up to date... constantly educating in all IT aspects. I'm using certifications as a way to learn and do my job better.
Pretty much you've got it. Certifications and experience are a better investment.