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Confronting the High Prices of Higher Education

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Okay, let’s get the bad news out of the way. Yes, college is expensive. Consider the supposedly “best” private colleges which on most lists includes colleges and universities like Brown University, Carnegie Mellon University, Colgate University, Columbia University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Duke University, Georgetown University, Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University, Lehigh University, MIT, Northwestern University, Princeton University, Rice University, Stanford University, Tufts University, University of Chicago, University of Notre Dame, University of Pennsylvania, University of Southern California, Vanderbilt University, Washington & Lee University, Washington University, and Yale University.

Tuition, room, board, books, and other fees will run you $250K to $300K or more over four years! Stop and think about that high cost for a moment.

If that’s not daunting enough, getting into these schools is ridiculously difficult and competitive to do. High school students are packing their schedules with Advanced Placement and honors courses, burning the midnight oil to get that elevated grade point average, playing sports, running for student government, playing in the band, volunteering regularly and jumping through other hoops.

In the hopes of making their future college applications tempt admissions officers, students must also often seek other ways to stand out and be different. Being from a small state, rural or non-wealthy area certainly helps. Living in a non-wealthy area and attending a not so great public school may help your case also.

While quite a bit less expensive if you qualify for in state tuition rates, public colleges are getting more and more expensive and can easily set you back for well over $100K for a four-year education. If you attend a top public college as an out of state resident, expect to pay upwards of $200K for the four years — about the same freight as those going to a typical private college.

Looking back over the past 50 years, after adjusting for increases in the general cost of living, tuition and fees at four-year colleges have jumped in real terms (that is, above and beyond the general rise in the cost of living) by more than 240 percent at private colleges and 340 percent at public colleges according to data from the National Center for Education Statistics. This trend obviously can’t continue because few families can afford to pay the already big dollar amounts today.

Paying For College For Dummies

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