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Beating the College Bubble 616

An anonymous reader writes "The real estate bubble is long gone. Oil prices are sliding down. Are we in an education bubble? The author of Beating the College Bubble says so. He's written a short, simple guide to avoiding the crushing college debt that he thinks is about to bankrupt all of us. Just as easy loans encouraged people to dream big and buy a McMansion, big college loans are tempting students with too much Comp Lit and Frat Parties. When they graduate, the debt is so hefty that the students are stuck living in their parents' basement for 10 years until they've paid it all off. I can tell you from personal experience that there's some real truth to the hangover. The beer headache is gone after a week, but the monthly payments just keep going." Read below for the rest of cdog40's review
Beating the College Bubble
author C. Davis
pages 140
publisher Edububble Press
rating 9
reviewer cdog40
ISBN 1438235909
summary Don't go to college. Save your money.
The author spells out why he wrote the book: his kids are graduating soon and he wants to do the right thing. Should he encourage them to spend big on an impressive, Cadillac-grade education or should he be really cheap so they can be free of loans? Which will help the kids?

Chapter 2 works through a handful of examples of people who spent too much on education. Of course he brings up the fact that all of the big guys in the computer business skipped out on college after a few courses. Steve Jobs and Bill Gates started the trend and now it looks like Mark Zuckerberg is following in the famous footsteps.

The author writes out that some of the people in Chapter 2 really did benefit from their education. The lawyers and the doctors who sell their credentials did very well with fancy diplomas.

Chapter 3 is a largely obvious summary of what we all know: lots of college courses don't have any real use in the world. It's not as bad as jokes like: What do you call an English major? (Waiter!) The problem is that the Internet is very good at exporting bits and most college degrees specialize in manipulating bits. The Internet can and will ship this work to the lowest-wage countries in the world. So if you're interested in making money by manipulating bits, the Internet is going to cut you off at your knees. The real secret to making money he says is getting a career in something like sewer maintenance because that can't be exported despite what that famous Senator says about the Internet just being a bunch of pipes.

Chapter 4 is a great piece that explains where the money is going: into the pockets of the college presidents. Many of them make more than a million dollars a year in salary. Well, that's not all true. Some of it is going into the big, expensive buildings. Apparently long ago, students put on shows without fancy state-of-the-art, high-tech arts complexes. They just used an auditorium. No longer. Schools love to spend money on big-name architects. There's a good mention made of the high price tag, the bar, and the leaky roof at MIT's Stata Center.

Chapter 5 is a kind of a nice guy section added so the author couldn't be accused of being completely cynical and nasty. It points out that most schools aren't just spending the cash on the president's new yacht, but on things the students use like fancy dorms and swanky exercise rooms. I know this is true of my school. The dorms are much better. You can't even see the mortar between the cinder blocks any longer. He's still annoyed by this because all of the fancy features pump up the tuition bill.

Chapter 6 is where the book starts to get useful. He talks about how to negotiate for better terms on the debt or how to avoid picking up too much. You can pretty much skip Chapter 7 and move right on to Chapters 8 and 9 which describe how to save money by getting cut rate degrees or skipping college altogether.

I'm not sure whether I buy all of the techniques. He suggests that internet forums like Slashdot are more informative than a college classroom, something I'm not sure I believe. Yes, there's more discussion and the moderation system does a good job of shutting up that bossy know-it-all in the front row, but it would be nice to have a professor. I guess that's what they mean when we're supposed to read the article before commenting. Hah. No one did at my school either.

There are good ones. He tells of low-cost degree programs at most schools. You can save 80% of the price of going to Harvard, for instance. I think he's pretty honest about this because he does point out that you lose something when you take the cheap route. But freedom is just another word for nothing left to pay on your loans.

The book's website is trying to make the book interactive by posting new news stories and alternative solutions for college. It listed the new School of Everything as an alternative.

This is where the meat of the book lies. The only way to avoid getting hurt by a bursting bubble is to get out early. This book made me think long and hard about college. You can't go back and do a scientific experiment because you can only live life once. But I do think that's how he put it. We're really in love with the idea of college that we'll spend anything. It's like when you fall head over heels over some beautiful girl that you don't even know. Then you run up your credit card on an expensive meal to impress her only to find out that she's kind of snobby or flakey or just not interested in the right things (PS3, BitTorrent, Android, Erlang etc). When the bill comes a month later, you feel kind of dumb. This book is trying to help the next generation avoid that headache.

You can purchase Beating the College Bubble from amazon.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

*

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Beating the College Bubble

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:27PM (#25710285)

    I'll just get a loan to pay for that.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 10, 2008 @05:09PM (#25711069)

      I think it's time that as a country we have a serious conversation about the people making blood money off of our children's college dreams. This is a serious question: why don't we just forgive all outstanding US student loans, and nationalize the assets of the Sallie Mae corporation and use the money to jump-start a program to send students to college for free? Also, how much money is the CEO worth? The rest of their directors? Perhaps a dialog about seizing the asse's they've gained during their tenures at SLM, preying on our nation's youth, is necessary too. Discuss.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Because this isn't Venezuela or the USSR... yet.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by dc29A ( 636871 ) *

          Because this isn't Venezuela or the USSR... yet.

          Yeah because Venezuela or the soviets spent way more than 700 G$ on their financial sector. Oh wait ...

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Maybe it's the dreams that are in err? I graduated with no debt at all. Ooh, hard.

        Why don't we forgive? Because no one held a gun to their heads. WTF is some people's idea about forgiving stupid decisions, thus penalizing others who didn't make bad ones? How about this instead? Let the stupid pay for their mistakes and the smarter ones get ahead. Those are the ones we want succeeding you know.
        • by Korin43 ( 881732 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @06:14PM (#25712237) Homepage
          The problem is that we're pushing them into this as a society. It's not that these kids are stupid, we're just telling them "the only way to succeed in life is to go to college x" where college x costs far more money than they have. Then we tell them "Well everyone gets a student loan", so they assume it's a good idea. Instead of just screwing people over like this, we need to start teaching people that not everyone needs to go to college, very few people need to go to Harvard, and they will do just fine at a community college.
          • by crmarvin42 ( 652893 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @07:09PM (#25712975)
            I'm still in school, and while I knew that some schools were rated better than others, I also knew that your education is what you make of it. That's why I went

            2 years at community college (HCC)
            2 years at a State university (UMass Amherst)
            3 years on a MS at a prestegious University within my field (Purdue).
            3 years and counting on a PhD at the same university.

            No student loans at Community college. 33% off of my tuition at UMass b/c I had a 3.8 at HCC. I had offers at 2 other Universities at the end of MS that were also offering tuition remission and a monthly stipend I could live on. As a result I've got 10 years worth of college education and only 2 years of student loans, neither year of which did I take the full amount, and I've been getting paid to go to school for the last 6 years.

            I had friends that teased me for going the community college/state school route, but they owe 2-3 times what I do in student loans. Some of them even went to grad school but had to pay tuition and their own living expenses b/c they pursued degrees like Music Therapy and History.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Vancorps ( 746090 )

          How on earth did you make 30+k per year to afford college? That's the average tuition right now. I sense that you either went to college a while ago or had some serious help.

          Those of us who worked through college and still ended up with lots of debt take exception that is was a stupid mistake considering we now make enough to pay our debts and live a good lifestyle.

          The problem is that college is sold as a way to a better life so a lot of people are in college that shouldn't be and they are the ones that e

      • by unassimilatible ( 225662 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @05:45PM (#25711737) Journal
        Far from being the solution, the government is the problem, yet again. While government-guaranteed student loans have expanded college access, any economist worth his salt will tell you that by flooding the college market with loans that anyone can get and that are guaranteed by the government has led to tuition well outpacing inflation. What else could have caused this?

        If this sounds really familiar, it should. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had a similar effect on the housing bubble. So you'll have to excuse me if I get frightened when I hear "government to the rescue" for a problem it helped create.
        • by copponex ( 13876 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @09:04PM (#25714371) Homepage

          That would explain why college education is less expensive per capita, and of comparable quality, and free across much of Europe. Oh, wait...

          Any economist worth his salt will also tell you that giving out government loans to private institutions that exist purely to make a profit will always lead to price increases, while service industries like education, health care, local utilities, etc, are almost always better served by a single entity, regionally operated, that has no profit motive.

          The only problem is when the false idea - that free markets solve all problems efficiently - is run up the flag pole, again and again, despite evidence to the contrary.

          It's much easier to have an open government institution providing common necessities than it is to try and regulate private institutions that have no public interest, yet receive massive public funds. If you're serious about finding a solution, all you have to do is look around, and see what other countries have been doing successfully for years.

          Everyone here laughed and laughed that the European governments charged a 100% tax on fuel, until about a year ago. Since those countries foresaw the inevitable, that tax reduced consumption, funded mass transit construction, and made them less dependent on countries like Saudi Arabia for their daily transportation needs. Here it would be called socialism; elsewhere, it's just common sense.

    • Student loans are the modern day equivalent of indentured servitute: Just a step away from slavery.
      • by starX ( 306011 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @07:39PM (#25713355) Homepage

        Right, because my 30k+ of student loans gives my liege lord the right to beat me, sell me, and prima nocte entitlement to enjoy my new bride.

        You are as uninformed as you are un-insightful. Maybe if you spent a little more time learning some history (in a college classroom, for example), you might not go on spouting such rubbish.

        I would argue that a good education can be had at any school, as long as you start with a good student. Whether you go to a top tier college, a local community college, or a trade school, you're going to get out what you put in. Kids who spend most of their time at parties and worrying about who they're hooking up with are throwing money away on a four year vacation from reality. Students who apply themselves to their studies (whether Comp. Lit. or Comp. Sci.) and seek out opportunities to apply their studies to themselves are making a great investment in their futures.

  • by LingNoi ( 1066278 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:27PM (#25710287)

    When they graduate, the debt is so hefty that the students are stuck living in their parents' basement for 10 years until they've paid it all off. I can tell you from personal experience that there's some real truth to the hangover.

    Just because you live in your Mom's basement surfing Slashdot all day doesn't mean you can blame it on college debt.

    • by PachmanP ( 881352 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @06:13PM (#25712225)
      I disagree completely! I would be spending my days surfing slashdot in my own apartment, if I didn't have any college debt!
  • by eldavojohn ( 898314 ) * <eldavojohn@noSpAM.gmail.com> on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:27PM (#25710291) Journal

    big college loans are tempting students with too much Comp Lit and Frat Parties. When they graduate, the debt is so hefty that the students are stuck living in their parents' basement for 10 years until they've paid it all off. I can tell you from personal experience that there's some real truth to the hangover.

    Well, here's my anecdote. I didn't rack up $100k worth of loans like my friends. I worked nearly full time through my undergrad and didn't receive a penny from my parents. I came out $20k in debt and had to prove that I actually put a lot of effort into my public college undergrad degree. I graduated in 2004, made my employer pay for my Masters from a private college (which I got in 2007) while, again, working full time. I will be making the final payment next month and be debt free for the first time since I was 17.

    I know a lot about some of my close friends and if I may impart some wisdom (I have no idea if this is covered in the book), do not consolidate your loans. Just don't do it. So many people consolidated their loans after reading a letter from a third party that used words like "at the current federal reserve rate ... " or "if trends continue" followed by "you will save a shit ton of money." I know because I received these offers ... hundreds of them. They all turned out to be variable rate bullshit. I did my homework and only needed minor math skills to figure out the scams. Maybe 5% of the people I know have had loan consolidation work for them (all one of them who graduated years before me). At a Halloween party, one of my friends lamented about trading up 3.5% & 4.5% fixed rate loans worth $80k for a consolidated loan at 3% in 2004. The company now sends her biannual updates informing her that her rates will be going up and she's looking at 7% now. Imagine that. She signed up with a company that doesn't even bother justifying it, she says some of the letters are just one sentence. The sad thing is that she can still afford the monthly payment so apathy wins for the next 10 years.

    I know I am lucky, I was able to sleep 3-5 hours a night with little repurcussions. Most people can't live off of a cup of noodles or day old wheat bread (animal consumption only FTW) for 30 cents from Erberts & Gerberts. Make smart choices, if you aren't good with finances, ask a friend who is ... I've doled out more than my fair share and often call my friend who is now a CPA.

    If you want to pay for a brand name college, I'm not going to stop you. Their are plenty of schools like the University of Minnesota that have great engineering programs and although I can't walk into an interview and drop a name like MIT, I don't mind proving I'm worth what you want to pay.

    • by krlynch ( 158571 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:43PM (#25710545) Homepage

      The blanket directive "Don't consolidate" is just as specious as the blanket "You should consolidate". Be a smart shopper! We, too, got lots of those "consolidate with us!" letters ... we threw most of them out. We eventually did consolidate my wife's loans, cutting the interest rate on most of her debt by more than half. The rate is fixed for the life of the loan, and we get a further rate discount for automatic payments. The effective rate is so low that they are almost paying US to hold the loan once inflation is counted in.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Can't agree with you more. I came from India, with enough money to pay for first semester tuition. I got a part time job (paid $7/hr) to pay for the living costs. I managed to live off of about @ $300/month. For two and half years I lived like a monk. Even then I owed $8000 to different credit card companies and some $12000 to a bank. I paid that off in four months after getting my first job.

      Take it from someone like me (call it exotic if you wish), but you don't have to live in your mom's basement for 10 y

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by couchslug ( 175151 )

        "I managed to live off of about @ $300/month. For two and half years I lived like a monk. Even then I owed $8000 to different credit card companies and some $12000 to a bank. I paid that off in four months after getting my first job."

        EEEK! A thrifty, competitive foreigner with a work ethic! Cleanse it with fire and legislation!

    • I used to work for one of those student loan companies. The federal program was pretty solid. The loans had to comply with certain guidelines set forth by the Department of Education. The consolidated loans were required to be a fixed interest rate, and that rate was usually set on June 1st. A while back it did used to be variable, but a law had passed (I think around 2000) to make it fixed. Stafford and PLUS loans, however, were not a fixed rate until recently (AFAIK anyway, I could be wrong on that).
    • Well, what you mean is "don't be stupid" and "be a fiscally responsible person."

      Never consolidate? Well, I consolidated my student loans to 3.125%, fixed. Next year, it will go down to 2.125% if I pay on time. That's looking like a brilliant move at this point!

      Sometimes a name school is worth its weight in gold. In law, at least, you are more likely to get a high-paying job (starting at $160K + bonus right out of school) if you are in a top school. I'm pretty sure that law is the only profession like this b

    • I had a similar approach... went to a cheap community college for my first year while working full time, then transfered 100% of my credits into a private school.

      Continued working all through school, got my employer to pickup my tuition bill. Got my Bachelors in 2004 with only 10k of debt!

      Now I'm up to my eyeballs with two mortgages :)

    • by vux984 ( 928602 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:58PM (#25710833)

      If you want to pay for a brand name college, I'm not going to stop you. Their are plenty of schools like the University of Minnesota that have great engineering programs and although I can't walk into an interview and drop a name like MIT, I don't mind proving I'm worth what you want to pay.

      The advantages of a brand name school have almost -nothing- to do with the quality of the education itself.

      The advantages are simply:

      1) It may get you interviews over someone else, due to brand name recognition, for example he might shortlist the one from MIT over a similar candidate from from U. of Minnesota. If he finds a satisfactory canditate from that short-list, you might never get the interview.

      2) The more prestigious the school, the more prestigious the -other- students tend to be. And who you met there that you might not otherwise have met is usually far more valuable than what you learned there that you might not otherwise have learned.

      IT isn't quite as 'who you know not what you know' as politics or law, but IT has its celebrities and movers and shakers too, and knowing someone high in the ranks at Google or Sun or Apple or IBM or wherever still opens a lot of doors. Your choice of school impacts your odds of knowing the next generation of these people, or meeting these people's kids (although again, unlike politics etc IT isn't nearly as dynastic...)

      But then not everyone on slashdot is in IT either, not by a longshot.

      • by kklein ( 900361 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @07:51PM (#25713537)

        Yes.

        I am a university lecturer. I have been in or working for (it's the same as in, but you're paid) universities since 1993. None of my universities have been famous, and I'll back up what you say.

        When I was in college, I thought college was about learning. It isn't. Well, I should say, it is but that's only part of it. The main part, as I see it now, is about building your resume. You can, you see, learn anywhere.

        As a teacher, let me tell you what most of the education research and my experience finds again and again: Great students are born, not made. Teaching is easy, because it's actually impossible. You can't teach anyone anything. All you can do is help the people who want to learn get where they are going. I work for a pretty unknown school, but I have some stellar students (and a lot of not-so-hot students) who are doing truly amazing thing, and I feel honored and privileged to give them a helping hand whenever I can, and help them fill in the gaps between what they already know. That's all I can do, but I'm happy to do it.

        However, these students are not likely to fare as well as students who come from some of the more famous schools, regardless of their inherent intelligence or drive (honestly, I've come to believe the former is pretty common, but it's the latter that makes the difference). They won't have the resume that opens the doors.

        In my own experience, I basically couldn't get a job after uni. I am now 34, and I am finally starting to make a livable middle-class wage. Part of that was my ridiculous degree; part of that was my unknown school. I had to go back to school (on my dime) to get a master's before I could get a real job. However, my master's isn't that famous either (I hadn't figured the name-value bit out yet). In my current situation, I have a colleague from Columbia, whose program in our field is not really as good as the one I graduated from (based on conversations and observations), who doesn't have the theoretical grounding I have, who has done almost no research in our field (and what he has done is not quantitative because he never learned research methodology, stats, or even how to write a journal article in his program), and who (according to inside sources) didn't interview well--but the job that we both applied for recently actually had a week-long debate on who to hire--the guy with the publication list (me) or the guy who went to Columbia--and they finally just found the funding to hire both of us (thank god).

        But see what happened there? I work every night and every weekend on building a publication list; he catches up on satellite TV. I spend my breaks in my office studying and plowing through stats; he literally, by his own account, sits on the couch and watches DVDs with his wife for 2 months (he shows up at the end of breaks and he hasn't had a haircut or shaved since school got out). And yet we end up getting the same job (at a prestigious university).

        Folks, if you're in college now, or if you have kids who are heading that way, take a close look at what you're getting for your money. My friends and colleagues who spent a little more and went to famous places are all doing better than I am, even in the same goofy field. Name-value doesn't mean a better education; it means better options for the future. You can learn anywhere. Hell, if you're highly motivated, you can teach yourself. That's not what college is about. College is about getting a job.

        And take it from me: The people who say what you major in doesn't matter, as long as you get the degree are wrong. If you are in the college of liberal arts now, change majors. If your kids are talking about going that way, but don't want to be teachers, refuse to pay. There is a lot of great stuff in those majors--important stuff!--but majoring in them is sacrificing your life for them, unless you really want to teach them. Don't point at people like me, who are doing fine, and say "See? He majored in En

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by nizo ( 81281 ) *

      ...I can't walk into an interview and drop a name like MIT...

      If only you had gone to the Michigan Institute of Technology instead...granted it is geared towards people seeking careers as automotive mechanics, but just think, being able to say, "I went to MIT" would be totally worth it.

      • by HungWeiLo ( 250320 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @05:07PM (#25711017)

        At a previous conglomerate that I worked at, our Bangalore subsidiary had a guy get promoted to the head honcho. I found a copy of his resume in the printer, and it said he graduated from "IIT" (India's premiere educational institute on par with MIT).

        A quick Googling found him struggling with homework questions on a web forum attached to an evening class at the Illinois Institute of Technology.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by ServerIrv ( 840609 )
          Although you may be correct in your sleuth work, there are a lot of people with the same name in India. Be careful before you throw him under the bus.
    • by Dripdry ( 1062282 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @05:08PM (#25711049) Journal

      You say you were lucky, being able to funciton on very little sleep, for instance. You're saying your situation is the exception to the rule. I'm just trying to point out that many people simply cannot perform these sorts of things. I literally go nuts after about a month of 5-6 hours sleep and stop being able to physically function, for instance.

      In defense of college: For most of us, we've spent our entire lives in school, so the next step is college. It's simply expected of all the people that went to my high school.

      To piss off the non-collegiates: I know a fair number of people who never went to college. Many of them are snobby about how they didn't get "taken in by it" or that they're "just not college material". Incidentally, many of them could contribute A LOT to an academic setting.
      I also hear many parents and grandparents say their kids aren't college material. This trend bothers me. How else can people get a solid grounding in a wide range of the basics that underpin our ability to both learn and critically reason? High school helps a little, but falls short imo.

      Although I am saddled with a fair amount of debt,about 20K, my college experience was useful. No, I didn't learn a bunch of real world skills (was in Comp Sci, and looking back it would ahve helped a lot to learn real world skills, though I took a lot of different other types of classes). I did, however, learn a lot about interacting with people(this email certainly shows!), understanding HOW to learn LOTS of different types of information, and most importantly I learned many different points of view.

      What I find with non college-goers sometimes is a certain ignorance or narrow-mindedness. Their way, much of the time, seems to be the only way and all others be damned. Some of these people have had success with their jobs, though many I know are still working at Kinko's or Jimmy John's ten years later. Would the non-college achievers be better off if they had gone to college? I don't know.

      I know I've written something that in itself is a bit narrow and probably sounds ignorant (I'm really fishing for other viewpoints, in a hamfisted, non-college kind of way), so I have a creeping feeling that I've shot this part of the discussion in the foot.

      I may have wasted a LOT of time in college, yes. Was it a worthwhile transition between school and life instead of just being thrown to the wolves in the real world? Did it teach me MANY ideas that I've used to further my career and relations with others that I NEVER would have learned without college? Did it teach me an appreciation for all the different types of people who make the world function? Yes, yes, and yes.

      Encouraging people not to go to college because it has nothing to offer seems like telling people not to get their driver's license because they're 16 and where do they need to go at this age anyway? It's very shortsighted in most instances, I feel. There's your car analogy!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:29PM (#25710317)

    And the great thing is that bankruptcy does not wipe out student debt.

    As much as I understand the need for that not to happen, this has become a dangerous trap and something may need to be done about it.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by mcgrew ( 92797 ) *

      bankruptcy does not wipe out student debt.

      Correction: it doesn't wipe out educational loans. A student who racks up credit card debt who makes less than a prescribed amount of money (they changed it after my bankrupcy; I'm not sure how little you have to make now) can get that debt discharged.

      It doesn't wipe out taxation debts, fines, child support, or some other types of debt either.

  • Depends... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by cabjf ( 710106 )
    I think a lot of it depends on whether you know what you want to do, whether you need a degree to do it or not, and whether you can find a reasonable priced school that teaches it (like a state school or start at a community college).

    There are way too many people going to college just for the experience. In addition, many people don't think about how they will pay for it later. Not all degrees will raise your earnings enough to make it worthwhile.

    On the other side of the issue is that there are many
    • Re:Depends... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by CheshireCatCO ( 185193 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:37PM (#25710471) Homepage

      There are way too many people going to college just for the experience.

      Granted, I went to a liberal arts college so my perspective may be somewhat different from most here, but I don't think that there's anything necessarily wrong with this. Going to college to get an education, even one that you won't use in your career (assuming you even decide to have a career) isn't wrong as long as you know that that's why you're going and you're OK with it. I know quite a few folks who got degrees that they've never used to make a dime, but are glad that they go the degrees for the way that that education has enriched their lives.

      • Re:Depends... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by qbzzt ( 11136 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @05:03PM (#25710927)

        I know quite a few folks who got degrees that they've never used to make a dime, but are glad that they go the degrees for the way that that education has enriched their lives.

        Education as a luxury good is wonderful - I've taken a large number of courses for that. But luxury goods are something you should buy when you can afford it, not a good reason to get into debt.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by mikael ( 484 )

        Here in the UK, there is the "Open University", which before the advent of the VCR, CD-ROM and DVD, would broadcast all their programming on TV. Now, they have the internet which allows them to put the course syllabuses online. [open.ac.uk]

  • how to win (Score:5, Funny)

    by nak8880 ( 1176213 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:31PM (#25710359) Homepage
    How to beat the "College Bubble:" 1. Go to College. 2. Become deep in debt. 3. Sell a book about being in debt. 4. ??? 5. Profit!!
  • by Kingrames ( 858416 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:32PM (#25710391)
    What a wonderful message to send to all our recent high school grads.

    This is not going to help any of us.
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:34PM (#25710427)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Competition (Score:4, Informative)

    by CheshireCatCO ( 185193 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:33PM (#25710401) Homepage

    He's still annoyed by this because all of the fancy features pump up the tuition bill.

    Sure, except the colleges are a business like any other (at least to some extent) and they have to attract customers (i.e., students). The prospective students have been enticed into expecting fancy rec centers and cushy dorms. Once a few schools start offering those features, pretty much everyone else has to do so to stay competitive.

    It's also worth noting here that the nominal price of tuition typically doesn't pay for the actual cost of sending student to college. At my alma mater (graduated ten years ago, for reference), our tuition -- huge those it was -- paid for about 1/3 of the actual expense.

    Also note that most people don't pay full tuition. The high tuitions seem to exist so that those who can (apparently) afford it can be charged for it, while being "nice" and knowing the price down for others.

    • Re:Competition (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Philip K Dickhead ( 906971 ) <folderol@fancypants.org> on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:40PM (#25710497) Journal

      Education is a resource who's value is inflated through a systematized, artificial scarcity - especially at the graduate and post-grad levels.

      Those with advanced degrees from 'elite' institutions have a vested interest in keeping their numbers limited and their relative status higher than their peers. This is graduated in degrees down through the system - which is designed and maintained by an economic and political elite to server their ends, maintained against the objectives of 'higher' learning by those most privileged.

      What good did Harvard Business School education do for creating a better, more predictable and stable market environment? Nothing. This is one of a million examples. PhD. == Tool.

  • The book part is not the same as out side of us books costs are a lower.

    The book market is not like oil.

  • by bigredradio ( 631970 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:34PM (#25710417) Homepage Journal
    Humm.. the article quotes "stuck living in their parents' basement for 10 years" like that is a bad thing.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by jfinke ( 68409 )
      Well, at least they won't be going and getting loans that they can't afford to purchase a house they don't need. ;)
  • My alma mater (an unnamed private technical school in upstate NY) has consistently raised its tuition by inflation plus 3%. This means (based on the Rule of 72 [wikipedia.org]) that in the 25 years or so since I graduated, the tuition has more than doubled, even adjusting for inflation!

    If I were looking today, I'd be looking at public schools.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by EricWright ( 16803 )

      The in-state tuition and fees (ie, bare minimum) at NCSU (public university) was in the neighborhood of $650/semester when I started in fall of 1990. Today, that same base tuition and fees will run you $2643.

      Using the CPI, $650 in 1990 dollars is approximately $1031 in 2008 dollars. In "neutral dollars", my university now costs 256% what it did 18 years ago (406% in real dollars).

      When I was in graduate school (and not paying my own tuition), I routinely saw in-state tuition increases of 15-20%/year and th

  • by tripdizzle ( 1386273 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:35PM (#25710435)
    Boo paying back my debt!!!! I want a bailout for me damnit.
  • MIT FTW! (Score:4, Funny)

    by east coast ( 590680 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:40PM (#25710495)
    I hear that open course ware thing is pretty nifty for the price.

    As for a degree? You got a printer, a scanner and a copy of Gimp? Good boy.
  • College Debt? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by rjshirts ( 567179 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:40PM (#25710507)
    Honestly, the easiest way to avoid debt is to avoid it in the first place. Why do students take out $30k in loans for a school that only costs $6k per semester? It might not be the easiest route, but I worked all through school, and tried to pay off all the debt I could during the deferment periods once I graduated. I can honestly say that I am almost done with a Masters degree and have a total of $3k in debt that will be paid off before I graduate.

    Maybe I should sell a book... Then I could pay off that last little bit and move on to pure profit!
    • Re:College Debt? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Arterion ( 941661 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @05:20PM (#25711281)

      You realize that $30k loans for a $6k/semester school leaves $18k the student had to come up with some other way -- probably out of pocket. That's assuming he was actually able to complete his program in 8 semesters.

      That's over $4k a year the student is paying for his own expenses. If we assumed full time work at $10 an hour -- not too bad for college work -- that's not even $20k a year before taxes. You're talking about over 25% of the student's free income from a full time job. JUST TO PAY for what the student loans wouldn't.

      And you're questioning why would someone borrow $30k total for a $6k/year school?

      I'm seriously wondering how could they not? And in fact, how did the manage to pay for it all ONLY borrowing $30k?

      • Re:College Debt? (Score:5, Informative)

        by Dragoon412 ( 648209 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @07:58PM (#25713609)

        It gets far, far worse. Think about rent and cost of living.

        I attend a law school that costs ~$1,000/credit hour. That works out to $36,000 year, full-time, in tuition alone. Furthermore, students enrolled full-time are not allowed to work more than 18 hours/week. And although you may think a JD candidate could make a fair amount of money, they don't. You're looking at the same $8-10/hour pay you could get as an undergraduate, except now you're clerking or doing paralegal work.

        As you'd expect, law school is far more academically intensive than your average undergraduate program. The rule of thumb is that you'll spend a minimum of three hours studying for every one hour of class time. On a standard full-time track, that's 12 credits per term; 12 hours per week in every class, another 36 hours studying. So, 48 hours/week devoted to academics. Let's assume that you get a job at $10/hour, and work the full 18 hours/week. That's $180/week, or $720/month.

        The short of it is that any job you get as a full-time law student isn't even going to put a dent in tuition costs.

        But now, add, say, $700/month for rent. Then you have bills. And food. And transportation. Let's say the student's frugal, and he gets by on about $1200/month (obviously this varies based on where you're living, but I'm trying to pick a number that would be typical of a suburban law school). And upwards of $5000 worth of books every year.

        So... add it all up.

        Tuition: $36k/year
        Books: $5k/year
        Rent, food, bills, etc.: $14.4k/year

        Working income: $8604

        YEARLY TOTAL: $46,796
        TOTAL TO GRADUATION: $140,388

        Now, consider the time constraints.

        1 week is 168 hours.
        You're spending 48 hours/week in class or studying.
        You sleep 8 hours/night (or 56 hours/week).
        You're working 18 hours/week.
        That's 122/168 hours per week spoken for. That leaves 46 hours/week on average for leisure, additional studying, eating, and transportation time. That's almost 7 hours per day. In my personal experience, it's about 2-3 hours/day for relaxing and/or working out. It's not an impossible task, but it's stressful, and not fun. But going tens of thousands of dollars into debt for the "privilege" of being too damned busy all the time isn't much fun. Clinic and volunteer work - both of which the school pushes pretty hard - all come out of this time, too.

        Thankfully, I'm at the school I'm at (as opposed to a more prestigious one) because they offered me an enormous scholarship. But I have friends that are borrowing their whole way through. One of them half-heartedly jokes that the only way to get through it is to pretend that loans aren't real money, because the debt is otherwise just stifling.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by anomaly ( 15035 )

      I think that there's huge value in liberal arts education - and in some ways I got a better technical education than friends who went to school someplace well known with "Tech" in the name....

      More than that, I simply cannot understand the logic in borrowing huge money for a degree that qualifies for a job that pays too little to service the debt!

      People should look at college/university in terms of an investment. There's no reason to spend a bajillion dollars on undergraduate education, unless you plan to m

  • by Bragador ( 1036480 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:41PM (#25710513)

    Everybody, including me, believed at some point that a college or university degree would bring fame and fortune... which is false.

    Unless you study engineering or get a degree in a medical profession, you might get screwed. Oh, and you WILL get screwed with a liberal arts degree (sad for me and my psy major).

    Meanwhile, some friends bring home tons of cash by being welders, linemen, plumbers and electricians...

    Who is the smartest guy around? The guy that goes to university and studies something like philosophy or psychology, or the one who gets a professional welding formation and earns 75k+ per year?

    Think about it...

    • by mcgrew ( 92797 ) * on Monday November 10, 2008 @05:02PM (#25710905) Homepage Journal

      My dad was a lineman, and I have friends who are welders and construction workers.

      You can't work as an electrician (actually they're called "indoor wiremen") or a lineman without an apprenticeship, and you can't get an apprenticeship without knowing someone in the business already.

      Welders get burn scars all over them, and most of them are blind by the time they retire.

      Plumbers work in shit. Literally.

      Factory workers and construction workesr die on the job, often horribly (as do linemen and indoor wiremen).

      Plus all these jobs are hard physical labor. If you want to sit on your ass, better go to college.

  • Great idea! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Seakip18 ( 1106315 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:41PM (#25710523) Journal

    The US can get ahead in the world economy by getting LESS education for it's populace. That way, we'll slowly start getting our manufacturing jobs back because India and China won't be able to compete. I mean, people over there can translate business logic into those magical bits faster and cheaper than here, right?

    Personally, I didn't find out how much I liked Computer Science till Sophomore year of College. The theory and beauty behind how different sort algorithms was the turning point I think. Without College, I'd have settled on some part-time tech work and full-time retail employee. College has it's purposes and the masses still need higher education, whether they want it or not.

    You want to not get a fuck-ton of college debt? Don't go to a school for prestige or a wife. Go to your local CC for a year then go to a local Uni to get your degree. Otherwise, study your ass in high school and get there on scholarship.

    You want it to be easier for your kids? Get a 529 plan [wikipedia.org] started TODAY. Contributions to it are be state and federal-tax free. You can get the money back out at regular tax rates if they don't go to school or get scholarships. I'm surprised that wasn't in the review. Just because you are getting the shaft doesn't mean your kids have to as well.

  • I'm in the same boat... and I haven't had the time to 'learn' because I already made the mistakes.

    First off -- Harvard, MIT, etc.. great schools, but unless you're going on a full ride they simply are NOT worth it (at least as an undergraduate). The simple fact is that you're going to waste a lot of time in your undergrad partying, having fun, and not taking it seriously, regardless of whether it's MIT or Harvard or a state school. I wound up going to a private school and graduated $60k in debt, AFTER a hal

  • by Hangtime ( 19526 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:45PM (#25710589) Homepage

    Information can be gleaned very easily from the Internet, but knowledge and the mechanics of synthesizing knowledge are best learned in a university setting. I do agree that in many ways college costs have gotten out of control. It used to be you would goto college to be a school teacher. However, why would you spend $50,000 on job that is at best going to net you $35,000 out of the gate (other than someplace you would rather not teach and danger pay come to mind).

    The university setting is best for individuals who need to do high-end problem-solving or research as part of their work not for vocations. Vocations are best learned in a setting where you can skip a lot and go straight to what needs to be known and add a few extras as well. My own family is a perfect example of what can be done through vocational training. My uncle who is dsylexic and color-blind was never great in high school. Instead of moving on to college like he may have been pushed today he went to a technical college where he floushied in electrical power and control and today has been designing power systems for commericial and industrial buildings for over 25 years.

    For better or worse, college has become part of the American dream and many who do not belong there are now going. People are going not because they want to but they feel they need to in order to achieve the American dream. The more we due to de-emphasize the idea that college is the only answer and supplement it with apprenticeships, vocational training, etc. , the better will do for all our children.

  • by mpapet ( 761907 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:46PM (#25710603) Homepage

    For many generations a college education generally fulfilled the promise of class mobility. E.G. Dad's a gardener, daughter a lawyer. The key to this dream was two-fold.

    1. Cost of tuition/loans were capable of repaying in +/- 10 years.

    2. Job you leveraged yourself into PAID the loan + decent standard of living over the 10 year payback.

    Neither 1 or 2 hold true any more.

    Discussions about class in the U.S. are generally forbidden, but I'll throw it out anyway. I find it almost impossible to see how decades of "winner take all" economics ISN'T creating a massive, permanent, underclass. Economic conditions suggest this is so already.

    • by An dochasac ( 591582 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @06:00PM (#25712007)
      The reasons 1 and 2 are no longer true are:
      1. Reaganites sold the idea of higher education as a short term fiscal investment rather than a long term societal investment.
      2. So more students were forced to take out loans instead of pay their way through college.
      3. Loans meant universities were able to raise tuition without students noticing (student loans are even better than subprime and car loans because "the minimum payment" during the 4 years of parties and cheap bear is $0, the "balloon payments" start after graduation.
      4. Universities turned themselves into country clubs in order to attract even more endowment money. Which piled even more debt onto student loans.
      5. Sallie Mae helped facilitate the transfer of wealth from students to financial institutions backed (like FME, FMC) by our tax dollars.
      6. More students were forced to focus on degrees with short term payback (Compsci, BA, Accounting, Law)
      7. These "short payback" fields do very little to improve U.S. competitiveness and happen to be the most easily outsourced.
      8. Fewer students major in "Long payback" fields such as basic science.
      9. Our universities begin to decay into glorified trade schools.
      10. ???
      11. PROFIT!!!
  • He's written a short, simple guide to avoiding the crushing college debt that he thinks is about to bankrupt all of us.

    It won't bankrupt me; I've been out of college nearly thirty years. My student loans were paid off long ago.

    Just as easy loans encouraged people to dream big and buy a McMansion

    Buy into the bankers' hype. My home cost $50k, about a year's income, but the mortgage company just tripled my payments. The government is set to bail out the very people who are causing and have caused our economic

  • Cheap, quick, and easy. If you take half of a full 4 year degree there, well, your bills are significantly cheaper later. Work while doing it? Even better. Who cares, your degree will be from the University who gives you the Bachelors or (eventually) your Masters?

    Nice way to start and stay debt free.

  • Do you expect your degree (BA, BS, BFA, etc) to be your terminal degree? If so, go for the best you can get. If not, it doesn't matter what school you go to. Enroll in your least expensive regional state school, but work your hardest to build a portfolio you can take with you to your Master's/PhD program at the best school you can get. Yale/Harvard/Columbia will still take you coming from East Nowhere State University if you have something to show.

    Don't go to college at all if you are looking for Vo-tec

  • by cashman73 ( 855518 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:54PM (#25710751) Journal
    Is it just me, or did this book stop before it could get to Chapter 11 on purpose?
  • It's called postsecondary education. Two years of college on the government's dime *AND* you get out of high school two years sooner.

    I still spent 7 years paying off my student loans, but it could have been a lot longer.

    Best education decision I ever made.

  • No college debt for me, thanks.

  • Community college (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Shotgun ( 30919 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @04:57PM (#25710827)

    First, skip the 4 year program. The first year of college is just a sieve for partiers and a way for the college to collect a lot of tuition without doing any work. Anytime you sit in a class with 600 of your closest friends, you know you're being taken. Most community colleges offer a two year prep program, which will transfer to a 4 year college. Gets most of the bullshit courses out of the way for MUCH lower prices.

    Second, there are two ways to make money in this world. Do something other people CAN'T do, or do something other people WON'T do. There's a reason that brain surgeons and attractive prostitutes get paid so much. A 4 year degree may or may not put you into one of these categories, but so can a 2 year degree.

    Finally, the statistics that say a college degree will allow you to make twice as much money over your lifetime. Bullshit! Motivation will allow you to make more money, and it just so happens that motivated people are more likely to finish college. But that statistic may soon be a historical anomaly as degrees will become less directly tied to income when everyone has one.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      The best is to do a community college in a town with a 'real' college. Move into the same apartment complexes as the other students. Go to the same bars. You'll still get the same college "experience" but won't have the debt to show for it.

  • Help is on the way. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by tyrantking31 ( 1115607 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @05:03PM (#25710943) Homepage
    My experience with federal consolidation was fantastic. I was able to consolidate 80K+ at less than 3% fixed. But as it turns out there is help on the way beyond consolidation. It's called Income-Based Repayment and it begins this year. http://www.ibrinfo.org/ [ibrinfo.org] This program has the potential to solve both the consolidation problem and the bankruptcy problem.
  • Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @05:22PM (#25711315)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Only to a point. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Tokerat ( 150341 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @05:49PM (#25711831) Journal
    If there is an education bubble, it just burst and no one noticed. Not to be cliché, but as someone who was recently laid off from an education lender who exited the market for private loans, I'm getting a kick out of these replies.

    I have to tell you that the problem coming up for new students isn't going to be paying off their huge debt after college, but instead finding a way to get the money to attend.

    Lenders are going under quickly. We were backed up by a large bank with a promise of funding for private loans, even in these financial tough times; then a week later they backed out on us (myself and all my friends are all still without employment). At this point (IIRC) there are around 30 private loan lenders in the education marketplace, this is down from approx 100+ only two years ago.

    The Feds are going to pull the plug on guaranteed FFEL buy-backs pretty soon (the whole country is out of money, not much choice); this is bad because schools are going to go with Direct Lending (which does have better interest rates, so that's good for students and families) and lenders will have no in-road to sell private loans (once they have a Stafford and they need more, you can recommend a private loan).

    Lenders will drop FFEL as there is no incentive to participate any longer (high default rate with no 100% buy-back guarantee, BARELY profitable..I'm talking pennies on the dollar above operating costs), and since that will dissipate volume so heavily, probably drop out of the market altogether.

    Thus, state schools, community colleges, and cheap private schools are going to see a huge spike in demand, and larger, more expensive private institutions are going to see a drop in enrollment. As no one can afford the big school and no one can get into the cheap ones (they're full, even after expansions), we're poised to start becoming a lot dumber than we are now unless something tips the scale back. Keep an eye on education costs, this is the "sleeper" of the worries that face the USA.
  • by timholman ( 71886 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @06:29PM (#25712489)

    From my experience in academia, I think one of the best ways to reduce college debt would be to bring back co-op educational programs, particularly for IT and engineering majors. In recent years, American universities have transitioned almost completely from quarters to semesters, which has consequently destroyed co-op programs across the country. Thirty years ago, a student could work and go to school on alternating quarters, in many cases making enough money to cover most or all of his/her educational costs, and graduate in just 5 to 6 years. (The summer quarter was a regular teaching quarter just like fall, winter, and spring quarters.) Furthermore, the co-op student got absolutely invaluable experience while learning what industry was really like before graduation.

    Now every school has transitioned to semesters, mainly to cut administrative costs. Consequently there are only two teaching semesters a year as opposed to four teaching quarters, resulting in a drastic reduction in course variety, and making co-op programs impossible to manage as many essential electives are now taught only once a year. And even if a school did offer a co-op program, a student would need 8 years to graduate!

    So if you want to make college cheaper for more students and increase the number of graduating students in engineering, lobby for the return of the quarter system and the restoration of co-op programs. Too bad if the registrar's office now has to process course registration and grades four times a year instead of two. College programs should be structured for the benefit of the students, not the convenience of the administration.

  • by eimsand ( 903055 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @06:35PM (#25712567)
    As a person who works in the higher ed industry (faculty & scientific research), let me tell you, there are way too many institutions out there.

    The fact of the matter is that there are many, many institutions out there that are passing unqualified graduates in the name of keeping the doors open. As much as some participants might disagree, higher education is a business, and students are the customers. If you fail too many students, enrollment (i.e. revenue) drops.

    As much as it pains me to say, I believe that we as a society would be better served if 15-25% of this country's marginal universities were to close. The existence of these institutions is not resulting in an enlightened, educated populace, but is instead simply driving down the value of a college degree.
  • by istartedi ( 132515 ) on Monday November 10, 2008 @07:33PM (#25713293) Journal

    Yep. The Lunch Lady shouldn't have bought a house, and the guy with the 900 SAT score shouldn't have gone to college. Film at 11. Vo-tech at 12. The return of a decent highschool education at 1? Oh now... we're all too drunk from credit, and have fallen asleep by then.

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