Khross wrote:
Xequecal:
We need fewer people in our colleges and universities. We need fewer colleges and universities. We need fewer graduates. All this mandatory baccalaureate degree nonsense does is turn all degrees into nonsense. Moreover, if your parents cannot afford tuition, you cannot afford the loans, and you cannot secure scholarships to defray the cost of attendance, that used to be a pretty good benchmark you should not receive a post-secondary education. Primary education in the United States ends with 8th Grade. High school is your secondary education.
But, you know, you still don't get along with Supply and Demand very well, do you?
In fact, you have no idea how much it costs to run a university; otherwise, you wouldn't be defending all of this "expanded access" nonsense; you'd be asking for gibbets and pillories for all the idiot legislators and executive politicians who keep pushing the "need for more college degrees."
Also, liberal arts majors who cannot find when they graduate should probably have not gone to college. If you don't know how to market the 4 years of practical skill development any college degree provides you in the workplace, you shouldn't go to college. You have no idea why you went other than someone told you it would lead to a better job.
While this is all a nice ideal, it doesn't address my point at all. The fact is, right now student loans have very little counterparty risk. As long as they don't, colleges have no incentive to raise admission standards or control tuition, because any student they admit will be able to pay any tuition amount they ask for. I don't know how much it costs to run a university, but that's very irrelevant because they'll want to maximize revenue regardless of whether they're raking in the dough or barely scraping by.
Yes, less people should go to college. That's not going to happen without some kind of government fiat, so you're going to have to pick the one that's most palatable.