Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Education Stats

30% of America's Student Loan Borrowers Can't Keep Up After Six Years (cnbc.com) 287

The IRS recently ruled that under some circumstances employers can link their 401(k) matching contributions to the amount of an employee's student loan repayments -- making it easier for recent graduates to take advantage of this employer benefit. But that's one spot of good news in a sea of bad, according to one anonymous Slashdot reader: Two new articles criticize America's student loan policies (under both the Obama and Trump administrations). CNBC cites reports that within six years, more than 15% of student borrowers had officially defaulted, while 10% more had stopped making payments and another 4.8% were at least 90 days late. And for-profit colleges fared even worse, where nearly 25% of graduates defaulted, and a total of 44% faced "some form of loan distress."

These trends were masked by Department of Education reports which stopped tracking repayment rates after just three years (reporting defaults rates of just 10%), according to Ben Miller, senior director for post-secondary education at the left-leaning Center for American Progress. "Official statistics present a relatively rosy picture of student debt. But looking at outcomes over more time and in greater detail shows that hundreds of thousands more borrowers from each cohort face troubles repaying."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

30% of America's Student Loan Borrowers Can't Keep Up After Six Years

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    100% can't keep up.

    But MAGA

    • Trump "university" was never accredited, and thus students were never eligible for federal loans to cover admission.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 01, 2018 @12:49PM (#57237548)
    Come on everyone - let's all chip in to cut education funding so a billionaires can get tax cuts they don't need!
    • Go Betsy Devos!

      • Betsy DeVos? How many people entered college, then left college, and fell years behind on their loan payments under Betsy DeVos? (Reminder, she's been in office less than two years.)

        Betsy doesn't set admission criteria, Betsy doesn't set tuition rates, and she definitely didn't establish student loan repayment regulations... Pseudoscience ill-equipped, borrowing tens of thousands of dollars to finance remedial math and english classes to compensate for their miserable high school educations are a bit respon

  • Help me out here; people accepted these loans, having access to the terms ahead of time, correct? They were adults, presumably, who made these commitments, right?

    Why, then, should we be looking to forgive them for making bad choices? Stupid decisions should be painful, so as to teach people not to do them anymore.

    I say this as someone who will be paying off his student loans for at least the next 20 years. I made a remarkably stupid decision and I'll own the consequences.

    • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Saturday September 01, 2018 @01:11PM (#57237674)

      Stupid decisions should be painful, so as to teach people not to do them anymore.

      This implies that attending college is a stupid decision. However, there is significant evidence to the contrary.

      Honestly, someone should hit you upside the head for submitting that post because stupid decisions should be painful.

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Saturday September 01, 2018 @01:23PM (#57237728)

        This implies that attending college is a stupid decision. However, there is significant evidence to the contrary.

        A college degree is correlated with financial success, but it is not clear if it causes that success, especially for artsy degrees. A tech degree is almost certainly worth it. A business degree is likely worth it. But not much else.

      • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Saturday September 01, 2018 @01:24PM (#57237738) Homepage

        This implies that attending college is a stupid decision. However, there is significant evidence to the contrary.
        Is there, though? What we have evidence for is the massive student debt problem across the country. Colleges may provide a boost in income, but apparently it's not enough to offset the cost; ie, they simply aren't worth it anymore.

        That's what we have evidence showing. What were you suggesting?

    • no fucking chance. I work K-12. Starting probably as early as elementary the lie that going to college will some how entirely protect you for life dropping you in to a high paying cushy job and all you have to do is plan your vacations is inculcated. This is the result of the shrill EVERYONE MUST GO TO COLLEGE!!! screaming for generations.

      Education, like healthcare, should be good, and free, for all. We don't need more aircraft carriers.

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        I agree completely with your not everyone needs to go to collage message.
        On a side note keep in mind. The cost of FREE will always collapse the system. Because those receiving services and those providing services have no skin in the game and will completely disregard those stuck with the bill (Middle Class Tax Payers).

        Just my 2 cents ;)
        • The cost of FREE will always collapse the system. Because those receiving services and those providing services have no skin in the game and will completely disregard those stuck with the bill (Middle Class Tax Payers).

          Easy counter-example: Germany. Contrary to your statement, it doesn't appear to be collapsing, even though it offers free tuition.

          Also, you see the problem on a very narrow time frame - but, after leaving college, the receivers of services earn larger salaries on average, and therefore pay larger taxes, so they do pay for their tuition.

          There is also the Australian model, where tuition is free, but people who graduated pay back the tuition via a certain percent added to their tax. This payment is dependent o

      • So too many people go to college ... and the solution is to make it free so fewer people go?

        And you are a school teacher? We may have found the root problem.

        • by waspleg ( 316038 )

          No, free means people don't take out loans they can never pay back and just like the health care means single payer which means driving a harder bargain and bringing price down. You're already paying for it since the Gov't backs the loans.

          I also never said I was a school teacher I said I work K-12. Reading comprehension much, smart ass?

      • President Obama told that nation that it is everybody's patriotic duty to acquire some advanced education, but that doesn't mean everybody should go to college; for many this will mean technical training.

        People are saying better things, in addition to what you talk about, but unfortunately not many of us are listening.

        • Because he the student loan industry federalized so he could use the profits from student loans to pay for Obamacare. That's right, he wants you to go get an advanced degree so he can get money out of you to pay for the healthcare industry.
    • by shess ( 31691 ) on Saturday September 01, 2018 @01:28PM (#57237756) Homepage

      Help me out here; people accepted these loans, having access to the terms ahead of time, correct? They were adults, presumably, who made these commitments, right?

      Why, then, should we be looking to forgive them for making bad choices? Stupid decisions should be painful, so as to teach people not to do them anymore.

      I say this as someone who will be paying off his student loans for at least the next 20 years. I made a remarkably stupid decision and I'll own the consequences.

      True enough, but it's also true that incoming students are not well-qualified to figure out whether their education will result in good value for their money. An 18-year-old is taking on loans to pay for school because "everyone" says it's important. Or an older student is taking on loans to enable a career change because their existing setup isn't working out for them. Meanwhile, the school is like "Oh, yes, you absolutely need this, and here are some people to help pay for it."

      I'm not saying that students shouldn't get to make these choices, or that they shouldn't have consequences. But we should realize that a completely unregulated market is going to result in a lot of unnecessary inefficiencies and pain, and insofar as schooling benefits society, society should optimize for benefits and against inefficiencies. The trite way to put this is that we don't need a billion people with advanced degrees in Underwater Basketry, but we also don't need a million Registered Nurses or teaching assistants who spend their lives under stress because they are subject to debts they didn't realize they'd never be able to pay off.

      • by Tailhook ( 98486 )

        True enough, but it's also true that incoming students are not well-qualified to figure out whether their education will result in good value for their money.

        The educators are qualified to figure this out, but they are foregoing this responsibility to get the money.

      • by anegg ( 1390659 )

        True enough, but it's also true that incoming students are not well-qualified to figure out whether their education will result in good value for their money. An 18-year-old is taking on loans to pay for school because "everyone" says it's important. Or an older student is taking on loans to enable a career change because their existing setup isn't working out for them. Meanwhile, the school is like "Oh, yes, you absolutely need this, and here are some people to help pay for it."

        Well said. It can be hard to think through options and consequences without a lot of experience, especially when there seems to be a tide of propaganda pushing towards an expensive gamble.

      • by syzler ( 748241 )

        True enough, but it's also true that incoming students are not well-qualified to figure out whether their education will result in good value for their money. An 18-year-old is taking on loans to pay for school because "everyone" says it's important. Or an older student is taking on loans to enable a career change because their existing setup isn't working out for them. Meanwhile, the school is like "Oh, yes, you absolutely need this, and here are some people to help pay for it."

        If an 18 year old is not well qualified to figure out whether their education will result in good value, then wouldn't it be safe to argue they are not well qualified to figure out the election issues of the day? Sign contracts without consent of a legal guardian? Make medial decisions?

        18 year olds are either responsible enough to be adults or they are not responsible enough to be adults. They cannot play both sides of the fence. If they agreed to the term of the loan, they should be held accountable to

    • by gmack ( 197796 )
      Part of the stupidity is offering loans for degrees with little to know job future. In everything else the bank would want to know that it could get it's money back, but student loans are just handed out with no thought whatsoever.
      • by gmack ( 197796 )
        "No job future." I should really not type while tired.
      • The bank does know it can get its money back as their loans cannot be dismissed through bankruptcy, unlike most other kinds of debt that the bank can hand out.

    • by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Saturday September 01, 2018 @01:47PM (#57237852) Journal

      No one is talking about loan forgiveness. What the article is about the mess they and society are in.

      Here are the facts:
      1. If you have a HS diploma you will live with your parents until 40 and have a life of poverty. HR won't give you the chance to build your resume outside of your grocery store or McDonalds. It kind of forces you to go to a trade school or a university of you want a non horrible sucky life. Don't bother talking about your friend Jon or yourself if you developed computer skills in the late 1990s. That was abnormal and still a very minority statistic.

      2. Cost of living is VERY VERY HIGH. You can't attack the kids for not planning when your first jobs pay $35,000 a year with no experience. How the fuck can you pay rent of $1500 a month with that kind of salary? Let alone pay off the loan and a car payment?

      3. Asshole College Admins jerked up the prices. Free money Wahoo! What do you do? You jack up prices to the max. Now you Mr. Smarty Pants who doesn't want to pay $30,000 a semester has to compete with Mike Ditwiit who didn't do the math. If you don't pay he will!

      4. Federal Government guaranteeing the loans. Hey if you can't loose either way why not keep screwing people over and raising prices?

      5. State Governments no longer funding Universities. This is a HUGE one. During the recession of the early 2000s states no longer subsidize the universities due to the free money from the federal student loan program.

      So you can blame the kids for being stupid but if you are older which I assume you are, then you have no right to speak as you never had to pay these outrageous prices the youngers folks pay today. In the 1970s you could work at McDonalds and pay your Harvard Degree no problem. This is not true today.

      It is a mess in America and it needs fixing FAST. Solution would be caps on the Federal Student Loan Program and maybe an ability to pay calculation put in. If the degree doesn't have the odds statistically of being able to be paid then the government funds less. This will force states to pay back into the University program and lower costs for students. Also the Federal Government could finance trade schools and community colleges differently. Not everyone is meant for University and less than 1/3 people have degrees. Plumbing for example is much cheaper to learn and pays good if you have plenty of experience. Maybe tax breaks for apprentice programs with plumbers, air craft techs, electricians, etc?

      Also Maybe a discount tax for those who completed these programs for 5 years so they can keep more of what they earn as well as $40,000 is shit pay and even programmers starting out make $50,000 only if you don't have years of experience to back you up.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        No one is talking about loan forgiveness. What the article is about the mess they and society are in.

        That is the best summary of the problem so far.

      • what happened is that federal subsidies were cut in the 90s and the cost of college was passed directly onto students. I was in college when it started and the folks at the economics dept predicted these prices and that there'd be loans (guaranteed by the government) to cover them. You can thank Clinton and Bush for this mess (and Obama for not fixing it, but to be fair he had his hands full with the market crash Bush left him and the batch of right wing "establishment Democrats" the voters gave him).
      • 5. State Governments no longer funding Universities. This is a HUGE one. During the recession of the early 2000s states no longer subsidize the universities due to the free money from the federal student loan program.

        At every state school I've been able to find detailed budgets, the per capita cost of education has more-or-less matched inflation back to at least 1980. The major difference is that in the 70s and 80s, 70-ish% of the cost was paid by state allocations, while in 2000s-10s, 60-ish% of the cost is paid by tuition. States spending on education has not increased as fast as enrollment, and the difference has to come from somewhere.

        Problem is exacerbated by colleges competing for students by offering better cam

        • I like the ones that are building lazy rivers and golf courses. Dorms are coming with rooms with private washer/dryer, private courtyards, etc.
      • No one is talking about loan forgiveness. What the article is about the mess they and society are in.

        Here are the facts: 1. If you have a HS diploma you will live with your parents until 40 and have a life of poverty. HR won't give you the chance to build your resume outside of your grocery store or McDonalds. It kind of forces you to go to a trade school or a university of you want a non horrible sucky life. Don't bother talking about your friend Jon or yourself if you developed computer skills in the late 1990s. That was abnormal and still a very minority statistic.

        2. Cost of living is VERY VERY HIGH. You can't attack the kids for not planning when your first jobs pay $35,000 a year with no experience. How the fuck can you pay rent of $1500 a month with that kind of salary? Let alone pay off the loan and a car payment?

        So you can blame the kids for being stupid but if you are older which I assume you are, then you have no right to speak as you never had to pay these outrageous prices the youngers folks pay today. In the 1970s you could work at McDonalds and pay your Harvard Degree no problem. This is not true today.

        Being one of those "older" persons, lucky enough to have parents who could balance between paying for a state college and taking out manageable loans, this is spot on. Back when I was doing this (mid-80's) I rubbed elbows with plenty of less-fortunate students who hustled at grocery-store jobs to make it happen.

        But today, if your demographic is such that your parents are in a position where their feasible contribution to your education is $0, you are more or less screwed.

        I witnessed this close-up-and-perso

      • I never understood why basic financial management wasn't a required high school course. I suspect a lot of these kids taking on $20k per semester loans (assume they manage to pay $10k themselves via part-time work) are figuring ($20k)*(2 semesters)*(4 years) = $160k. And they figure if the college degree means they'll earn $10k more per year, then it will have paid for itself in ($160k) / ($10k per year) = 16 years. They figure they can scrimp and save for 16 years and pay off the loan.

        Which is comple
      • by syzler ( 748241 )

        No one is talking about loan forgiveness. What the article is about the mess they and society are in.

        Here are the facts: 1. If you have a HS diploma you will live with your parents until 40 and have a life of poverty. HR won't give you the chance to build your resume outside of your grocery store or McDonalds. It kind of forces you to go to a trade school or a university of you want a non horrible sucky life. Don't bother talking about your friend Jon or yourself if you developed computer skills in the late 1990s. That was abnormal and still a very minority statistic.

        I'm calling BS. Sure I work as a Unix systems administration and I came into the field in 2000, however 4 out of 5 people in my department with ages ranging from 22 - retirement do not have college degrees. The people in other departments (wireline installers, telephony switch engineers, sales team, etc) I work with routinely make $75K - $130K and most (if not all) do not have college degrees. My uncles who work in various blue collar jobs (1 is a machinist, 1 is a carpenter, and 1 is a factory worker) o

    • When I borrowed a quarter million dollars to buy my house as a rather young man, it made me really nervous, but everyone older than me told me it would be great! Housing values always go up! They did go up. Then they crashed in 2008. Shit. Fortunately I had a job and could keep making the payments, or may have had to be underwater, and bankrupt.

      Almost all older adults will tell younger adults they have to get a college degree, even if they have to borrow money, and government programs help them do it

      • Almost all older adults will tell younger adults they have to get a college degree, even if they have to borrow money, and government programs help them do it. It must be OK right? It must be good advice, right?
        If some "financial advisor" gave the elderly such good investment advice as we give younger adults regarding housing and college, that "financial advisor" would be in jail.

        I tell young people to get the best education they can get for the lowest price possible.
        Also consider the job prospects and income potential the education will provide.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      These were pre-college people that thought they were getting a good quality continued education. They got ripped off at a time where they did not yet have toe education needed to see that. The problem is that the scam is not that obvious and that in addition there is no good alternative. Any good college or university education pays for itself, we see that in Europe. But in the US, except for some few elite institutions, they seem to be primarily interested in separating the students from their money. The p

    • by mspohr ( 589790 )

      So, it's a stupid decision to go to college?
      All colleges are expensive (some more than others). Not everyone has a rich uncle to pay for their college.
      Maybe the problem is greedy colleges.

    • My understanding is that it's less about being forgiven and more about being able to get out from under these loans the same way you can get out from other kinds of loads trough bankruptcy.

      However you are right in that these are bad loans and should have gone trough way more screening as to if the recipient can pay off the loans. My personal gut feeling is that the clear majority of these bad loans are for people getting degrees in fields with pretty terrible job prospects and they were just auto approvi
    • they're kids. Since when is 18 an "adult". Hell, even science says you're brain's not done developing until 25, but ignoring that can we really expect someone in their late teens to fully understand all of the ramifications of a choice that big? And even if they do can they really predict how much a given degree is worth?

      But let's ignore all that. Are you a Doctor? How about a mechanical engineer? Or a financial analyst? Are you all of those things? Are you John Galt? If not then at some point you're go
    • I sort of agree with - In the '80's - when I got my degree- State subsidies covered 80% the cost of education. Since then, through efficiencies, it's actually cheaper to educate someone, however republicans screaming about taxes have slashed state education budgets. Where-as before 80% of the cost came from States directly to colleges, now it's 20%. The difference is made up by increased tuition to the student. Which is why a 4 year degree from a state school can cost $80K. Go to a private school or a
    • I'm in agreement with you. These people knew the terms of their loan, accepted them and are not honoring their commitment.

      I see a lot of folks running up loans at expensive institutions in majors that will make it near impossible to repay the loans.

      Go to a community college for general education and transfer to a less expensive, local university. Especially for a generic liberal arts degree that will pay mid 30K range upon graduation.

      I went this route for Electronics Engineering and have zero regrets. On

    • by nbauman ( 624611 )

      Help me out here; people accepted these loans, having access to the terms ahead of time, correct? They were adults, presumably, who made these commitments, right?

      Why, then, should we be looking to forgive them for making bad choices? Stupid decisions should be painful, so as to teach people not to do them anymore.

      I say this as someone who will be paying off his student loans for at least the next 20 years. I made a remarkably stupid decision and I'll own the consequences.

      OK, I'll try to help you.

      Adults who made these decisions should pay the painful consequences of their stupid decisions. That will teach people not to do it any more, and it will eliminate the stupid people from the economy.

      You're only looking at one stupid guy, the student. I'm looking at the other stupid guy, the banker who issued the loan.

      During the S&L crisis, one banker said, "Anybody can loan money. What makes you a banker is that you can get your money back again."

      In other words, a banker is suppo

  • Am old school but (Score:4, Insightful)

    by oldgraybeard ( 2939809 ) on Saturday September 01, 2018 @01:07PM (#57237648)
    maybe those going to collage are not doing a proper ROI (Return on Investment) analysis before making their collage and funding choices.
    A collage degree does not guarantee financial success. The entire process needs to be approached and executed with diligence and awareness.
    Since it seems to me even public collages have no problem helping students run up huge debts they know won't provide the student with a marketable
    skill set to lay a firm foundation for paying back the borrowed money. The collages (public and private) are corrupt and deeply involved in this problem.

    Just my 2 cents ;)
    • maybe those going to collage are not doing a proper ROI (Return on Investment) analysis

      Maybe high schools should teach more about calculating ROI, and less about integrating the reciprocal of the cube root of the co-secant.

      • not sure about the cube root co-secant stuff. Been a few years since I had trig.
        But it could be more like, teaching less gender is optional and a choice, how to have sex, becoming and activist and protester, socialism is good, etc
        Does not seem like the 3 R's get taught much in school these days. But then again how would I know for sure what is being taught today in our schools.

        Just my 2 cents ;)
        • Sex-ed is taught in 5th and 6th grade, not high school. Schools that don't teach it have higher rates of pregnancy and STDs, although that may be correlation rather than causation, with the underlying cause being stupid parents.

          My kids were taught nothing about gender options and choices, nor that "socialism is good". That happens in college, not high school. Public high school teachers can be disciplined for pushing their personal political or religious views.

          • OK, granted I got a bit snarky and off base, That is on me ;) My point is, I don't think some are graduating High School with excessive exposure to the 3 R's under their belt.
            When I finished high school, I was an adult, had a draft number, moved out and was on my own making my own choices. And being responsible for the choices and decisions I made.

            Just my 2 cents ;)
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      The collages (public and private) are corrupt and deeply involved in this problem.

      I think that is the core problem right there. The ROI analysis is a problem, because people before college cannot usually do them yet. They are dependent on the offering actually being quality and offered in good faith. If colleges turn into scams, a lot of people are vulnerable to being ripped off.

      • Really "The ROI analysis is a problem, because people before college cannot usually do them yet."
        When you graduate from High School and turn 18 in our world you are an adult. I see things getting mushy now but what are the schools turning out? And if there is a problem there we need to fix it.

        Charter Schools anyone ;)

        just my 2 cents ;)
    • Close but not quite - it's not the students that need to do the ROI, it's the people offering the loans. College loans really should be issued on the basis of ability to pay it off -and they are not.

      This will mean that medical, engineering, and other "high-value trade" students will get loans and other students will not - because as a society we are not willing to pay for those "other" degrees.

      If we want to have some portion of the population having the intangibly-beneficial professions (which is not a bad

    • To be fair, most artwork ("collage") has a poor or negative ROI.

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Saturday September 01, 2018 @01:39PM (#57237806) Journal

    If we had just let the market work, the only people that would have been going to college would have been the wealthy, those that actually earned scholarships or those WHOSE STUDY HABITS & MAJOR SELECTION would have shown to a commercial lender that they were a worthwhile risk.
    The end result would have been college costs not rising at 3x inflation, no public money wasted on students whose prospects were poor anyway, likely many more engineers and a lot fewer Russian Medieval Literature majors serving coffee at Starbucks.

    But no. The social engineers felt it was necessary that everyone go to colleges, with Pell Grants and government backed loans, the result being now a college degree is pretty much a requirement for any job (whether it requires it or not), and students with no serious prospect of decent income are saddled with ridiculous debt.

    Nice job, social engineers.

    • If we had just let the market work

      In Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith included an appendix explaining why higher education does not result in a capitalism market. Not everything turns into a market. People don't choose a school based on cost; if one of the schools a student is accepted to offers a sale, or coupon, it does nothing. People choose the school with the highest reputation that they can afford, and that reputation is based on non-economic factors. So you can't make it capitalism, if you try you fail because demand is disconnected fro

    • This is where you are wrong. A kid out of highschool has 0 assets and a 100% liability. Who the hell would loan to someone like that?

      The problem is you don't get the assets and ability for repayment until later in life. Sometimes much later in life when you start to accumulate. This creates a catch 22 as you can't have the ability to pay without having the ability to pay first and it feeds itself as HR weeds these people out of jobs.

      Yes, HR is a problem too. At my employer they are still looking for folks w

    • by rossz ( 67331 )

      During high school, the narrative pushed by the teachers was, "you are a failure if you don't go to college". That is an insult to all those people making excellent money as electricians, plumbers, carpenters, etc. This lie pushed many people into college who had no business being there.

    • the result being now a college degree is pretty much a requirement for any job (whether it requires it or not), and students with no serious prospect of decent income are saddled with ridiculous debt.

      The reason a degree is a requirement for any job is because the economy has been tilted so much in favor of the ultra-wealthy in recent decades.

      Any rational person making hiring decisions is going to hire the best people who will accept the pay on offer. Because job prospects are still poor (unemployment is hi

    • he was already worried about the ruling elite living too far from the squalor they created to care about it. His entire economic system was predicated on the assumption that the rich would live near the poor and that they wouldn't shit in their own backyard. If he were alive today he'd be a Democratic Socialist.

      You're putting the cart before the horse. The loans came after a decade+ of federal funding cuts. College was _always_ expensive. We were subsidizing it. We stopped in the late 90s (thanks, Clint
  • It means that a large part of students do not have access to academic education worth its money. They have basically been ripped off. Now, whenever somebody posts here that college or university is not worth it, I typically strongly disagreed. But if academic education in the US is actually this bad (at least in Europe it is not), then I see their point. A good academic education is still worth all the time and money you invest, but if you cannot get a good one, then the situation is really bad.

  • Unfortunately, your typical high school graduate has rather limited math skills, so aren't able to figure out that a $50,000 loan to get a job that pays $30,000/year is probably a bad financial decision. The lenders have zero incentive to turn down these loans since they are guaranteed. A future fix is to limit loan amounts based on the degree being pursued. A STEM major can get a bigger loan. A genders studies major is sent back to community college.

  • It's all well and good to tout personal financial responsibility. However, the information you need to make a wise decision is often not available - because it is being deliberately withheld but the institutions. There are also a lot of predatory institutions out there which intentionally mislead the students.

    The only solution I have been able to come up with is this: Require colleges and universities to purchase all non-performing loans at face value. (Note - this does not forgive the students' debt) If th

  • I know for a fact that my daughter's school has a huge influx of Asian students all paying full tuition no questions asked.
  • I know a lot of defaults are from distance learning and for-profit schools (University of Phoenix, DeVry, etc.) as well as college drop-outs, so what happens when we control for those?

    What is the loan risk/default rate is for students who actually graduate from 4-year brick-and-mortar school.

  • Some ideas:

    1) Have more certificate programs (classes only in the major, and no general education classes required). If I don't have to take an art class, and if an art major student doesn't have to take a programming class, then the other student and I save time and tuition money. If I want to take an art class, fine. But I don't want to have to take it.

    2) If a school takes taxpayer money, then it should have to publicly state where it spends its money. Donors (including the government) might say they'll d

We are Microsoft. Unix is irrelevant. Openness is futile. Prepare to be assimilated.

Working...