If the schools are not raising tuition because of their funding cuts then why are they? Why does every article I see discuss the massive funding cuts as the man driver? What’s the main driver to you? Do you think it’s adjunct salaries?
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Replying to @kstreethipster @servetus and
You can look at the numbers yourself. If funding fell by, let’s say 10%, and tuition rose by, lets say 30%, then we should be able to agree that there are other potentially larger factors driving up the sticker price. My guess is admin costs and larger federal subsidies
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Replying to @J_RtheWriter @kstreethipster and
As to why the media only seems to focus on the state funding story... well, I find myself asking the same question
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Replying to @J_RtheWriter @servetus and
Maybe it’s because the cuts have been so drastic
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Replying to @kstreethipster @servetus and
But again, the cuts are not so drastic when compared to the much more drastic rise in tuition. Eyeballing the graph, tuition about doubled and state funding fell by ~25%pic.twitter.com/0qmevbFk63
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Replying to @J_RtheWriter @servetus and
A 25% cut is different than staying the same or increasing. If the funding had increased over time students wouldn’t be paying as high of tuition. Because it would be paid by the state. For every dollar you cut in funding they have to at least add a dollar in tuition.
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Replying to @kstreethipster @J_RtheWriter and
If the net effect is that tuition hikes have outpaced the equivalent state cuts then we can acknowledge that the enterprise costs more now than It did 20 years ago. We have computers now. Information tech infrastructure now.
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Replying to @kstreethipster @J_RtheWriter and
We have actual services to students they didn’t back then, like counseling and title IX protections.
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Replying to @kstreethipster @J_RtheWriter and
Presumably things like Increased emphasis on disability accommodation, gender equality, and especially the computers has increased costs. Are we to supposed to want all that rolled back? Or do we just want college to be more affordable!
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Replying to @kstreethipster @J_RtheWriter and
At the end of the day we just want college to be as affordable as it was 20 years ago. AND to have the civil rights protections and technology too. That’s reasonable.
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That’s not what our behavior says. Our behavior says that we want an increasingly expensive college experience, much of which has minimal relation to academics. And to be honest, that’s perfectly reasonable. Just not reasonable to ask taxpayers to fund that experience
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