Practical Dad
PracticalDad and College: Shooting at the Sacred Cow
Colleges and universities are non-profit entities and paint themselves as caring for the best interest of your child. But let's be honest, they are a huge business and it's good to remember that.
My local school district found itself in a controversy last year when they sponsored a seminar by a for-profit specialist in college financial planning. This person made the comment that colleges were a big business and you had to bear that in mind when speaking with them and reviewing their material. The word leaked out and the next thing anybody knew, the local colleges - state and private - were sending angry letters to the editor decrying this viewpoint and steadfastly maintaining their care for the welfare and best interest of the student. From what I understand, that session won't be happening again.
But this financial planner was correct. The cost of tuition has gone up significantly faster than the rate of general inflation and no one can provide an adequate rationale for justifying this. Indeed, is this a big business? It might be not-for-profit, but it acts like any major corporation. Consider the state of Pennsylvania. The state financing agency is the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Authority, hereafter referred to lovingly as PHEAA. This group has gained recent notoriety for a lack of accounting controls on spending with executives making paid trips to the California wine country and the corollary perks of cigars and wine excursions. Even when the information was divulged by a local newspaper using the Freedom of Information Act, PHEAA turned around and spent almost $100,000 to take their employees and families for a day at the local amusement park. Indeed, the head of PHEAA makes an annual salary of $285,000, which is more than the governor of Pennsylvania.
And the Chancellor of the state university system, comprising fourteen universities, is pulling down $325,000 annually.
There is an institutional bias toward keeping the gravy train rolling, at least for the powers that be.
Likewise, many colleges and universities are competing not only for faculty, but also in terms of the plushness of the facilities. One local private college even offers a Mongolian Grill for the students. And this is generally matched by the upgraded student commons facilities. These institutions have a vested interest in assuring that the steady flow of students and funding come through their ivied portals.
So when you read the materials and meet with the Admissions and Financial Aid people, be prepared to negotiate as hard as you can and be prepared to walk if you must. There are other institutions available and they need your child and money more than you need them.
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- PracticalDad: When Can I Stop Taking My Daughter Into the Men’s Room?
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Family / Personal Economics
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- Shopping Smart - Summer Menus
Family Management
- PracticalDad and Vacation
- Do You Write the Site or Does the Site Write You?
- PracticalDad Solution: The Details Sheet
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- Fatherhood Lesson #5: Stuff Flows Downhill
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- Lesson #3: Your Child is a Blank Slate
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- PracticalDad Solutions: Uniform Hooks
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School
- A Father’s Thoughts on Bullies
- PracticalDad:: Just Blame the Teachers?
- Checking the Returned Schoolwork
Comments
Your stuff is well thought. Found you via CR.
Been almost exactly where you are minus 1.5 decades. Our is in university, a Junior. She is very happy, solidly motivated, secure in who she is and where she is going. It takes a lot of attention to detail to get a child to that point.
Your blog should be standard reading for anyone thinking about having a child.
Keep up the good work.
I have a section in my blog about how we managed child rearing. A lot of it had to do with being involved and happy about being involved. It was never a chore to be with her and she knew it.
By Bob Mount on December 04th, 2008
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