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United States Education The Almighty Buck

Obama Proposes 2 Years of Free Community College 703

An anonymous reader writes with news about a White House proposal that would provide 2 years of free community college for good students."President Barack Obama announced a proposal Thursday to provide two years of free community college tuition to American students who maintain good grades. 'Put simply, what I'd like to do is to see the first two years of community college free for everyone who's willing to work for it,' Obama said in a video filmed Wednesday aboard Air Force One and posted to Facebook. He made the announcement as part of his pre-State of the Union tour and will formally lay out the proposal Friday in a speech in Tennessee. The White House estimated it would save the average community college student $3,800 annually and said it could benefit nine million if fully realized."
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Obama Proposes 2 Years of Free Community College

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  • Free? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by NotQuiteReal ( 608241 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @09:36PM (#48770947) Journal
    As in somebody else pays for it...

    But still, it might be ok if the covered courses are useful, and not just "community organizer" type courses. That is to say, something that will train for a marketable skill.
    • Re:Free? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ClickOnThis ( 137803 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @09:37PM (#48770951) Journal

      Education is already tax-subsidized. There's no way most of us could afford it if it weren't.

      • Re:Free? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 08, 2015 @09:42PM (#48770987)

        Most of us can't afford it anyways.. takes 20 years to pay it back.

        • Re:Free? (Score:5, Interesting)

          by bobbied ( 2522392 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:07PM (#48771165)

          Then you went to the wrong school and took the wrong courses and borrowed too much money.

          My first is in college right now, and we are paying just about $600/semester (Plus books) for full time at the local community college. She can go there two years then head to the 4 year state school where the costs is something like $5k/semester plus books. She's going to graduate college with a STEM degree for something like $25K if we get no scholarships. However, I'm guessing her 4.0 thus far might get us a few thousand off that. After that, if she wants to move on to graduate school, she's going to have to look for a job and get her employer to pay for some of that.

          My youngest is looking at the same schools for about the same price, though he's 4 years away from starting that.

          Your mileage may vary, but if you graduate from college facing a 20 year struggle to pay off the debt, you did something wrong and would have been better off going into one of the skilled trades or something. It never ceases to amaze me when people get 70K into debt going to a 4 year school getting a secondary education degree or something, where the starting annual pay is half their debt load. It's a really stupid move... Not the education, but going into debt like that.

          • Re:Free? (Score:5, Informative)

            by damn_registrars ( 1103043 ) <damn.registrars@gmail.com> on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:35PM (#48771397) Homepage Journal

            My first is in college right now, and we are paying just about $600/semester (Plus books) for full time at the local community college. She can go there two years then head to the 4 year state school where the costs is something like $5k/semester plus books.

            Community colleges are great, but a lot of people fall into traps that sound like what you are describing. In >>99% of all cases, a 2-year degree from a community college does not knock off anywhere near 2 years from a 4-year bachelor's degree. Generally that 2-year degree knocks off one year and maybe a couple miscellaneous lib-ed requirements. Yeah, it saves you some money but it costs you some time. You could have gone straight into a 4-year program and - assuming you knew what you wanted to major in (which a lot of kids do not) - graduated in 4 years. Instead you started off at community and now your 4-year degree is taking you a total of 5+ years.

            Now, those 5 years might actually be a really good investment. For a lot of kids it certainly is - a lot of kids finish high school without any real ability to adapt to college. Nonetheless it does not lead to the dramatic money savings that many people (or more so, many people's parents) hope for.

            It never ceases to amaze me when people get 70K into debt going to a 4 year school getting a secondary education degree or something, where the starting annual pay is half their debt load.

            This varies a lot from one state to another but a lot of states now require a master's to teach at primary or secondary level. $70K is actually doing quite well for student loans for a bachelors and a masters. Most physicians - who have generally done only 8 years of school (2 years more than a teacher) - are well into six figures of debt by the time they start a residency.

            As for the relation between debt load and salary, I would say that your observation says more about how little we pay our teachers than anything.

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              by Anonymous Coward

              In >>99% of all cases, a 2-year degree from a community college does not knock off anywhere near 2 years from a 4-year bachelor's degree.

              It only doesn't if the student decides against taking classes that count towards the four year degree. Where I work, we get nearly 90% of our credits accepted by a real college for the students that move on. Of the ones that don't transfer, the vast majority of them are things like pre-Algebra that doesn't have an equivalent at the good school or a vocational class like welding that someone took just for fun. Because the classes here are so easy, the vast majority of our students get more than a two year

            • Re:Free? (Score:5, Insightful)

              by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @11:02PM (#48771609) Homepage Journal
              The world needs ditch diggers too.

              Not everyone needs to go to college, If they can't afford it, there are very good living levels to be made by learning a trade. Hell, plumbers around here make more than some GP physicians at the lower levels.

              • Re:Free? (Score:5, Insightful)

                by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @11:30PM (#48771765)

                You don't need to worry. This proposal has ZERO chance of becoming law. There is no way that a Republican congress is going to run up the debt to fund Obama's pet project. The only reason that Obama is even proposing it is so the Republicans can reject it, and then the Dems can use it against them in 2016.

                • Re:Free? (Score:5, Interesting)

                  by Etherwalk ( 681268 ) on Friday January 09, 2015 @02:06AM (#48772423)

                  You don't need to worry. This proposal has ZERO chance of becoming law. There is no way that a Republican congress is going to run up the debt to fund Obama's pet project. The only reason that Obama is even proposing it is so the Republicans can reject it, and then the Dems can use it against them in 2016.

                  I don't know--it's community colleges, which should be relatively appealing to Republicans who like supporting hard workers. Republicans hate social welfare programs, but really like the *image* of the hardworking American. By sticking with community colleges rather than going for the elite schools, this may actually have some chance of getting Republican support.

                  • by pablo_max ( 626328 ) on Friday January 09, 2015 @04:32AM (#48772933)

                    I don't know--it's community colleges, which should be relatively appealing to Republicans who like supporting hard workers. Republicans hate social welfare programs, but really like the *image* of the hardworking American. By sticking with community colleges rather than going for the elite schools, this may actually have some chance of getting Republican support.

                    I have to say, Americans are really strange.
                    Only in America would someone claim, with a perfectly straight face that attending a 4-6 year university is "elite". Are you really that brainwashed?
                    Do you people not understand the first rule of power? Limit education and knowledge. Keep the people ignorant. It seems they have done such a good job of it that folks actually thinks that uni is only for the elite.
                    I lived in Germany for several years. At the end of the day, what I pay for taxes is about the same as what I paid in the US. What do I get for my taxes in the US? I get to drive on shitty roads, my kids can go to high school, and there was the worlds largest army by a factor of 10.
                    In Germany, there is a small army but, my kids get a master or doctorate as they like, I have health care, I drive on great roads, and hell, I can even call the fire department to come a remove some bees in my garden.

                    It is really strange that all the Jesus people in the US have no moral problem with spending trillions on an Army, but rage about money spent to educate the population and therefore make the country richer and more able to compete against other nations.

              • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

                by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday January 09, 2015 @09:40AM (#48774065)
                Comment removed based on user account deletion
              • The world needs ditch diggers too.

                Not everyone needs to go to college, If they can't afford it, there are very good living levels to be made by learning a trade. Hell, plumbers around here make more than some GP physicians at the lower levels.

                Yes, but these days in the US, a ditch digger is expected to operate a $100k machine and work without constant supervision to the spec of some detailed plan. Event the trades are going to take extensive training or an apprenticeship. You don't have to go to college, but you'd better get some sort of an education, or you'll be fighting Mexicans for dish washing jobs at a restaurant the rest of your life.

            • > a 2-year degree from a community college does not knock off anywhere near 2 years from a 4-year bachelor's degree.

              You may be thinking of jacking around taking two years of random classes, as opposed to getting an associate's degree. Or getting a two-year degree in liberal arts and trying to apply it to a four-year degree in the hard sciences. Most community colleges have matriculation agreements with nearby universities. These agreements GUARANTEE that those two years transfer.

              Of course you want to lo

            • by Taco Cowboy ( 5327 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @11:21PM (#48771721) Journal

              Community colleges are great, but a lot of people fall into traps that sound like what you are describing. In >>99% of all cases, a 2-year degree from a community college does not knock off anywhere near 2 years from a 4-year bachelor's degree

              Lemme chime in with my own experience ...
               
              When I landed on the soil of the United States of America back in the 1970's - yes, I know, it was a long long time ago, but anyway, this is what I had gone through

              I spoke no English, I was essentially penniless - unlike those big time defectors, small fly refugees like me never get any financial help from uncle sam. We were already very grateful to be granted asylum and never hope to gain any financial gain in the first place

              But anyway, as a penniless refugee who spoke no English my first jobs were in Chinatown. From washing dishes to kitchen helper to chef to waiter, I learned everything, step to step. Meanwhile I saved like crazy (working in a Chinese restaurant we got to eat free and live in very cramped worker quarter free of charge) and I tried my best to learn English any way I could

              My first 'investment' in America was the first course I took in community college. It was not actually 'hard', but due to the language difficulties, it took me a while to suit myself in the new and totally different learning environment

              First course begat more courses, and I learned of the 'pre-requisite' courses to take that I could transfer to higher learning institutions

              So I took all the 'pre-requisite' courses. Of course I already know what I was going to study if I go to real 4-year college, I took all the required math courses, all the basic logic courses, and all the other courses that I could transfer

              By the time I enrolled myself in a 4-year college most of the courses I took back in the community college were transferred. Of those courses that they (4-year college) didn't recognize, I took tests to show them that I indeed am knowledgeable enough to be exempted with such-and-such courses

              One plus side for me is that most of the math courses that I took in both the community colleges and also in the 4-year college were already 'old stuffs' for me. Back in China we had much *MUCH* tougher math training, when we were in our secondary school (equivalent to 'high school' in the States)

              I did the same thing for other degree that I took, including MBA. I took all the pre-requisite courses, such as business laws, economics, accounting, management, marketing, and then transferred them when I finally enrolled into the MBA program

          • Re:Free? (Score:5, Insightful)

            by thesandtiger ( 819476 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:38PM (#48771419)

            Actually, depending on the advanced degree she goes for, she should be able to get the school to pay her - acting as a teaching assistant or research assistant is usually nets free tuition and a stipend. Not much of one, but still.

            With regard to what people did wrong - they usually listened to their elders who insisted that they HAD to go to college ever since they set foot into 1st grade and filled their heads with visions of gloom and doom, catfood sandwiches and living in cardboard boxes if they didn't go to school. It's no surprise that many young people find it extremely difficult to make sound financial decisions and solid plans for what seems to be a very distant time when they've spent their entire lives being told horror stories about what will happen if they don't do this. I have a very hard time blaming the young people who internalized the endless advice they were given when they act on that advice.

            Part of the solution is to quit overemphasizing college where it isn't necessary. Another part of it is for parents to actually be better parents - sounds like you did fine, but a lot of parents take their kids as an opportunity to compensate for their own failings and push them to the point where the kids behave even more irrationally than the norm.

            Oh, and another part is to put a cap on what an institution that accepts ANY federal money in the form of grants, tax breaks or backed student loans and grants can actually charge for tuition. Tie the cap to the minimum wage, perhaps - something like 50% of the pre-tax earnings from a 20hr/week job at minimum wage per year. If a university can't figure out how to keep the lights on when charging ~4k/student/year JUST for tuition (let 'em charge whatever they want for housing, so long as it isn't required that students live in campus housing), something has gone off the rails.

            • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot.worf@net> on Friday January 09, 2015 @12:23PM (#48775347)

              Part of the solution is to quit overemphasizing college where it isn't necessary.

              Or more like there's a HUGE field of post-secondary educational opportunities out there besides college or university. And many of them may have more appeal than college/university.

              The thing is, well, most parents grew up at a time when "blue collar" jobs were dangerous, generally unskilled, dirty and underappreciated. So the way out was the main office - get a job working in an office (a "white collar" job) and you won't have to endure heat, dirt, grease, oil and managers barking at you all day. And the ticket to a white collar job is ... college or university.

              Except things are quite different these days - there's many jobs that are blend of both, and even traditional blue collar jobs are often higher skilled and very much appreciated. And working conditions re far better with worker compensation boards and safety and health boards, etc.

              So continuing education in stuff like trades and other areas may appeal more than studying and an office job. And we need to emphasize that these paths are perfectly fine - trade school works for a lot of people, and many don't want to sit in an office all day but be out and about. There's other opportunities as well - aviation for example - covers a whole range from the heavily degreed (which gets you to designing aircraft), to the trained (pilots) to the trades (mechanics). And many still end up with traditional degrees like BSc (pilots often get one, as do mechanics taking accredited programs), BA (airport management is a business) and others. ,

        • Re:Free? (Score:5, Funny)

          by silfen ( 3720385 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:08PM (#48771171)

          The vast majority of people have no problem affording a college degree in the US.

          http://www.brookings.edu/resea... [brookings.edu]

          http://www.forbes.com/sites/je... [forbes.com]

          People ending up with high student loan debts and an inability to pay it back are a small number of people who made a series of bad choices, like going to Harvard or Brown, majoring in Women's Studies or Journalism, and paying for it with student loans. If you do something that stupid, you should have to suffer the financial consequences yourself.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by silfen ( 3720385 )

        "Most of us" could afford it much easier if we didn't have to pay the taxes for it and could instead save the money, and if education was a competitive market place instead of the underperforming public-sector-union hellhole that it is.

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by Bengie ( 1121981 )
          Not many people making $30k/year could afford to pay $10k/year per kid to educate their 2 children. I guess they could always resort to crime. If we had a highly regulated or at least competitive market, people could make a livable wage and could then send their children to private school. All we need to do is fix everything wrong with our market.
      • Re:Free? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by 7-Vodka ( 195504 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:04PM (#48771135) Journal
        I think you mean "There's no way most of us can afford it because it's subsidized"

        Prices are determined by where willingness to pay meets willingness to sell. Subsidies raise the willingness to pay and therefore raise prices.

        In fact I remember from an economics class that this effect has been studied in farm subsidies, I wish I could reference that here but alas it has been a long time.

        Let's not forget that fiat currencies and deficit spending also raise prices.

        • Re:Free? (Score:4, Insightful)

          by quenda ( 644621 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @11:20PM (#48771711)

          I think you mean "There's no way most of us can afford it because it's subsidized"

          Prices are determined by where willingness to pay meets willingness to sell. Subsidies raise the willingness to pay and therefore raise prices.

          It sounds like you are implying the net cost to the student goes up, which is ridiculous.
          So long as you have elasticity of supply, there is no problem. A small increase in gross fees will lead to expansion of colleges and creation of new ones. This takes time, so new subsidies should be announced ahead, and phased in.
            In fact, free universal education can actually cost society less per student due to economies of scale, without even considering the social and economic benefits derived from it.

          In fact I remember from an economics class that this effect has been studied in farm subsidies,

          I'm not sure you grasped why farm subsidies are a bad idea.

          Let's not forget that fiat currencies

          Oh gawd, not one of those. Economics is hard, I know.

    • something that will train for a marketable skill.

      Such as President of the United States?
    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )

      As in somebody else pays for it...

      That's the only definition of "free" that exists. Even the sunlight isn't "free" by your useless definition. How many innocent Hydrogen atoms died to light your day? Something had to pay, even for sunlight.

      With a definition like that, you'd think you'd reset your hate-meter to take the definition of "free = no cost to the user" that works for every use of "Free" you've objected to.

      • Re:Free? (Score:4, Informative)

        by Obfuscant ( 592200 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:05PM (#48771137)

        How many innocent Hydrogen atoms died to light your day? Something had to pay, even for sunlight.

        You've taken pedantry to an entirely new level. Maybe it's you can't understand the difference between "somebody" and "something". Or you don't care.

        It's time more people realized that when the government uses the term "free" it truly is a lie, and the word should be reserved to actually mean something instead of being turned into useless filler to keep the politician's lips moving during sound bites.

        • Re:Free? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by AK Marc ( 707885 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:11PM (#48771193)
          And GP asserting that a "free" AOL disk isn't free because AOL paid for it isn't pedantic? That definition of free doesn't exist in any closed system. Everything has a cost.

          The much more popular "no cost to the end user" definition of free is obviously the right one.

          It's time more people realized that when the government uses the term "free" it truly is a lie,

          The meaning of "free" from the government is obvious to everyone. Only the mentally ill have a problem with using the common word accurately. "no cost to the user" is always the meaning, and I've never seen "free" used inappropriately with that common definition.

          • Oh bull. If it's open to everyone and everyone used it, it would cost everyone the cost of the "gift" plus bureaucratic handling, which is the actual point of the thing. Free (as you try to use it) is fine though high school. If someone can't get their ass in gear by eighteen, screw them.
          • Re:Free? (Score:5, Interesting)

            by Obfuscant ( 592200 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:41PM (#48771443)

            The meaning of "free" from the government is obvious to everyone.

            No, sadly, it is not. That's the problem. De Toqueville covered this a long time ago. Even if you assume (an unjustified assumption, I fear) that people do know the true meaning, the fact that they simply don't care that others are paying for it makes the problem just as bad.

            This has nothing to do with AOL disks, and yes, ignoring the difference between "somebody" and "something" is significantly more pedantic than any statement that a "free" two years at a CC really isn't free. The main reason "AOL disks" are irrelevant to this is because "AOL disks" are not taxpayer funded, they are voluntarily paid for by AOL out of the profits they make from people who use AOL by their own choice.

            When the government extorts money from some people to pay for other people's "free" stuff, the word "free" is being misused in a significant and important way. Trying to handwave the problem away by claiming that even sunlight isn't free because some poor hydrogen atoms had to die is just ridiculous.

            Here's some new content: we're already facing the issue of requiring remedial basic math and English classes for incoming university freshmen. Imagine how much worse it will be when those who are passed out of the high schools just to get rid of them start appearing on the doorsteps of the local CC demanding their "free" education. Remedial remedial math, anyone?

      • by jopsen ( 885607 ) <jopsen@gmail.com> on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:09PM (#48771183) Homepage

        That's the only definition of "free" that exists. Even the sunlight isn't "free" by your useless definition. How many innocent Hydrogen atoms died to light your day?

        If you look down in the corner of the horizon you'll sometimes see a little note with the text: "Your daylight is brought to you by God Inc." :)

        • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
          So it's free like the postman delivered AOL disks. Or are those not free to me because AOL paid to press them and send them?
      • I think you've been watching Plan 9 from Outer Space too much...using solarbonite IS NOT killing hydrogen...IT IS NOT!
    • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Friday January 09, 2015 @01:18AM (#48772251) Journal
      In fact, do you have a degree from ANY university in America? If so, then you were on the public dole. It is simply a matter of how much support you had. I 'put myself' through school back in 79-83. Of course, rent, tuition, fees, etc were well within the minimum wage amount. And after the first year of living in Colorado, I was given in-state tuition where 95% of the costs was paid by the state. IOW, that I 'put myself' through school was still subsidized.

      So, get over yourself.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    then no one will. Or rather, the 2 year degree will be worth nothing.

    This is just covering the complete failure of the highschool system, and an attempt to buy votes.

    We need fewer people in college not more. In many places by 16 you have the 'trade school' kids and the 'college kids'. Hint: craftsmen aren't just guys with a Home Depot credit card, it's hard work and takes time.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 08, 2015 @09:48PM (#48771015)
      I understand worth means different things to different people, but a 2 year degree will be worth nothing only if you place absolutely no value in knowledge.
      • by msauve ( 701917 )
        You're confusing possession of a piece of paper (fake sheepskin) with knowledge. One can get knowledge free by going to the public library.
        • [quote]You're confusing possession of a piece of paper (fake sheepskin) with knowledge.[/quote]

          Sounds like a certain someone didn't go to college and learn the value of sheepskin...

          • by gatkinso ( 15975 ) on Friday January 09, 2015 @08:58AM (#48773867)

            The poster is correct. However what the poster would be missing is the value of a mentor to guide his self research, and the collaboration of his fellow students.

            Walk into a library and get a degree in (pick a subject). How do you know WHAT to read? Are you going to miss something fundamental in your studies? How would you know if you did?

    • Education is not a zero-sum game.

  • by acoustix ( 123925 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @09:53PM (#48771027)

    In my state they made preschool "free". Within the year the tuition costs tripled from previous levels that were flat the previous 5 years. Every time the government offers something for free it's cost becomes unbearable.

    • by quenda ( 644621 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @11:27PM (#48771747)

      Just about every developed country provides free pre-school. But its not a blank cheque to private businesses.
      Why doesn't your state run its own preschools? Here they are attached to primary (elementary) schools. Maybe not the same location, but sharing staff, admin etc.

      • by jma05 ( 897351 ) on Friday January 09, 2015 @12:20AM (#48771991)

        You pretty much hit the nail on its head. When most governments take socialist action, it is because of socialist motives (people demanded it). When US takes socialist action, it is because of capitalist motives (businesses lobbied for it). So cost controls, either through regulation or via competition with the public options (in US, public option often ends up being publicly-funded option, rather than publicly-run option) are quickly ruled out as infeasible or unfair for privates. Then everybody nods their heads on how government is not the solution.

        This is not to say that a bit of this does not happen in other countries, but seems to be especially problematic in US.

  • by asasdlfgnjl ( 1678718 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @09:59PM (#48771079)
    Now it will be four years for associates, and six for bachelors.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    If this programs saves its average participant potentially $3,800 annually it seems to do so by having someone else pick up the tab. And Community Colleges like most Colleges in this country are a joke. Just like most High Schools are.

    The average College Freshmen in this country reads at a Seventh Grade Level. And now we are going to lower standards even more at Community Colleges so that EVERYONE can at least get a C+ and these schools get more taxpayer money shoveled into them. Let's lower standards even

    • by sootman ( 158191 )

      The big difference is college isn't legally required. The only students who will go are those who want to go, and colleges won't be inclined to let kids slip through with a D-minus-minus just to get them through the system. The reason people graduate HS practically illiterate is because you can't force someone to learn. Make it optional, and require passing grades to stay in, and the problem is solved. If you don't pass, you don't get to go. If you fail, you're disqualified from the free program. (I would i

  • Nope (Score:5, Interesting)

    by russotto ( 537200 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:02PM (#48771111) Journal

    We don't need a 13th and 14th grade to fail to teach students what K-12 failed to teach them. Because that's what this would end up being; not a start on post-secondary education, but an extension of high school.

    • Re:Nope (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Trepidity ( 597 ) <[gro.hsikcah] [ta] [todhsals-muiriled]> on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:20PM (#48771293)

      That isn't the case in other countries with free college education (i.e. most of Europe).

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      WRONG!

      as I posted just a few minutes before, many of us use (used) community colleges as a way to save a LOT of money on the 'useless first 2 years' that is mostly BS anyway. english is english; chem 101 is chem 101. calc 101 is calc 101, no matter where you go (for all intents and purposes).

      I LOVE the idea of us finally giving our own people a direct benefit to the huge riches that are locked away in this country. there's zero reason why we can't fund 100% of our people to go to school! other MUCH LESS

  • I actually tried to RTFA, but the page wont scroll down. Some horrible web design right there.
  • Obvious... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by aaronb1138 ( 2035478 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:14PM (#48771217)
    The federal school loan program is turning out to be wildly profitable new tax program for the federal government. The loans are exempt from bankruptcy and are typically $40+k per student.

    It's incredibly affordable with the amount of federal, state, and county money already subsidizing community colleges to pick up the last 5-10%. This is more likely a program to entice mediocrity into buying into federal school loans for universities after 2 years at the community college level. The GPA requirement is clearly a troll move unless we're going to get honest as a country and start making the 2.5-3 range GPA kids take trades classes at the community college.

    Even worse, by making the 2 years free, many students will be skating by on a lot of electives and "fun" classes which will keep them in the perpetual life student mindset. This is the same error that came with making parents responsible for their children's health insurance until they are 25.

    Lastly, this is finally saying that the K-12 system is broken and we're not going to fix it. What better way to say that a HS diploma is worthless than making an Associate's degree a freebie.

    If you want to incentivize hard work, pay for the last year at a university for students who finish "on time" in 4-4.5 years.
    • Re:Obvious... (Score:4, Informative)

      by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @11:18PM (#48771693) Journal

      The federal school loan program is turning out to be wildly profitable new tax program for the federal government. The loans are exempt from bankruptcy and are typically $40+k per student.

      I don't know where you're getting your data, but you should never trust that place again. The average is less than $30k [usnews.com], you can discharge it [usnews.com] in bankruptcy [usnews.com], and it's not profitable for the government [wsj.com]. It would be, if everyone always paid their loans, but then the banking crisis never would have happened, either.

  • on my student loans from a community college, can I get some $$$ to help me pay it off?
  • Let's do the math (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ichabod801 ( 3423899 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:17PM (#48771245)
    $3,800 x 9 million students x 2 years = $68.4 billion dollars. Perhaps not a lot when you consider the full federal budget, but it's more than we spent on the entire Department of Education last year. The real numbers that matter are 54% and 57%, the Republican portion of the Senate and the House of Representatives.
    • The Dept of Education budget was 67.3B last year, your 68.4B number is for 2 years. The projected cost is 34.2B/year so it's roughly half the Department of Education budget. Whether that's a good or bad thing is a different debate.

  • "2 years of free community college for to good students." -- Derek Zoolander

    As an aside, with so many states trying to deal with failing high schools (and the horribly ill-prepared young adults they are producing), now we want to pump these kids through "college". Yeah. Right. Between 'Idiocracy' and the "first wave" spaceship of over-credentialed "professionals" written about in H2G2, you'd think we, as a culture, would see what is going on here. But nope. So I'm sure this will happen and be billed as a re

  • Just what I needed back when I was a kid. 2 more years of high school with the potential that afterwards I'll have a sizeable debt coming out of it if I screw off those years like I did when I was a junior and senior.

  • Whats the point? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:35PM (#48771393) Journal
    What is the point in training people if there are no jobs for them? So your burger flipper now has an associate degree. How does that help the burger flipper?

    It would be far more effective to train people in basic programming skills and back office operations and bring the jobs back from India, Ireland, Israel and Indonesia. Costs there have gone above the US minimum wages, when you factor in all the costs of offshoring.

    • I'm assuming the community colleges would also include the local tech colleges. If that burger flipper goes on to become a plumber or an electrician, they'll probably make more than I do with less than half the schooling.
  • by TheGavster ( 774657 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:37PM (#48771411) Homepage

    We already have droves of graduates who can't find jobs because they paid for a degree with little useful application; now we'll have droves of graduates who can't find jobs because the taxpayer bought them a degree with little useful application. Why not, instead, train a generation to build things and to fix things by expanding the trade schools?

  • by GoodNewsJimDotCom ( 2244874 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @10:50PM (#48771521)
    Scrap a bloated super jet program that isn't going to win us any war we're fighting today, and you can pay for all people's tuitions and student loans over a couple years.

    And instead of bailing out banks, we could have paid off 70-90% of the mortgages directly.
  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @11:39PM (#48771799)

    Perhaps our education-overlords are worried too many Americans will learn to speak German and head over to Deutschland so they can get a quality education without going into life crushing debt :|

    Nachrichten für Nerds Deutsch [thinkprogress.org]

  • by Beeftopia ( 1846720 ) on Thursday January 08, 2015 @11:53PM (#48771871)

    Government subsidies just jack up the price for everyone. It benefits the poor, harms the middle class, has minimal impact on the wealthy.

  • by Livius ( 318358 ) on Friday January 09, 2015 @12:07AM (#48771939)

    Education is an investment in the economy, not a 4-year paid vacation.

    Of course, investment is not a guarantee of benefit or cost-effectiveness.

  • by nitehawk214 ( 222219 ) on Friday January 09, 2015 @12:55AM (#48772137)

    Around here community collage is already nearly free. As long as you are a resident of the county and have at least a part time job the grants you get cover a lot of stuff.

    Of course if republicans that get mommy and daddy to pay for expensive but useless private schools realized it is a way for poor adults that want to work into a better career, they would probably have the community colleges shut down.

"And remember: Evil will always prevail, because Good is dumb." -- Spaceballs

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