College tuition too high? Tune in, drop out, and learn!
Loading...
Wonder why university fees are so outrageously high? The question comes to us at least once a year. We鈥檝e had at least one child in college for the last 14 years 鈥 often two. Year after year, tuition costs rise. A study reported in The Economist shows tuition rising at two to three times faster than household income over the last 40 years. For Ivy League schools the excess was 14 times income.
We haven鈥檛 noticed any increase in the quality of education. So why have costs gone up so?
Outside of government itself, America鈥檚 universities probably shelter more zombies than any other industry. Of course, there are the millions of students who spend some of the best years of their lives doing little or nothing useful 鈥 study loads have dropped from an average of 24 hours a week in the 鈥60s to just 14 hours now. The professors, administrators and hangers-on are even more zombified. The students eventually have to leave this sanctuary and go out into the real world 鈥 or the government. The employees stay zombified for life.
Harvard increased its administrative staff by 300% since 1993. And the typical professor at an Ivy League university now takes a sabbatical every three years, rather than every 7 as the word implies. And according to The Economist, 20 of Harvard鈥檚 48 history professors are on leave this year.
Come to think of it, we don鈥檛 know why they bother to teach history at a university. Anyone can read it on his own. And if you want to know what the professor thinks, just buy his book. You can get it for鈥hat, $29?
Which just goes to show what a zombie business higher education is. You could get a fine education in history, law, politics 鈥 or dozens of other specialties 鈥 just for the price of a library card. But the public library doesn鈥檛 give you a degree.
Take this Daily Reckoning challenge: drop out of college. Set up a reading and discussion group鈥 Spend four hours a day, two hours reading鈥ne hour writing a critique/opinion on what you have read鈥nd one hour challenging each others鈥 thoughts. Do that for 4 years at negligible cost鈥r spend $160,000 and 4 years fulltime at Harvard.
Let us know how it works out.
.
------------------------------
海角大神 has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on the link above.