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Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Is your University really Worth that Much?

By Samantha Asher

The cost of college has gone up considerably over the past couple decades. What's strange to see is how different college can cost from one school to another. Go to an Ivy League or top private school and expect to pay over $30,000 a year. Go to a community college and transfer to a four year state college, and (only considering tuition, not room and board), and you probably won't spend $30,000 for all 4 years in tuition and fees.

How can one school charge $30,000 a year when a state school is charging about $6,000 a year or less? How does that make sense? Are the more expensive schools really that much better? Are those going to a state school getting an inferior education?

State schools cost less, but this doesn't mean they have bad teachers, fewer programs, or bad living spaces. There are able to charge less because they get funding from the government as well as your tuition.

If you went to a public elementary school and public middle school and high school, your educators received money from the government. This is just how it is set up with college except it costs a little more for them to run a college, which is why they charge you tuition. Private schools get no government funding.

When you go to college, you will get what you put into it. Even beyond the price, you will learn more if you take part in your classes, study, join associations and clubs, and decide that you'll learn. Don't use price to help you decide how good an education is. Sometimes the more expensive colleges are worse but charge more because they waste money on needless 'cosmetic' things.

What careers are you interested in? Look into the programs you are interested in of the colleges of your choice. If they don't have your major, rule out that school. Ask friends and acquaintances who go to or went to the schools what they thought about them and the programs they offered.

Don't listen to the gossip you hear at school or anywhere else. You catch a lot of 'well I heard this...' Don't count on what other people 'heard'. Some people will bad-mouth a school simply because they weren't accepted. Listen to people who actually know something about the school.

Pay attention to the price or else you'll end up throwing away a lot of money. Remember, money isn't everything and money doesn't decide the true value of a school. Choose the school you feel is best for you without going above your budget.

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