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On May 25, 11:03*am, ScottW wrote:
On May 24, 11:47*pm, Jenn wrote: In article , *"ScottW" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message .... In article , "ScottW" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , ScottW wrote: On May 24, 9:02 am, Jenn wrote: In article , ScottW wrote: On May 23, 7:20 pm, Jenn wrote: In article outaudio..com, "BretLudwig" wrote: Higher education as a pyramid scheme. "From The Atlantic, an anonymous article by a Professor X, who teaches English 101 at a couple of unselective colleges to people who can't learn to form coherent paragraphs: In the Basement of the Ivory Tower I agree with some of this. Not everyone needs higher education. But everyone deserves a shot at it if they have strong desire. Keep the standards high, I don't know why the standards of admission are so high that very qualified US students can't find a seat in our universities while we bring in 1000s of foreign students every year. Huh? Where's the evidence of that? Commissions paid for foreign students. http://www-tech.mit.edu/V128/N26/college.html *Do you know that USC is 20% foreign students? http://www.iie.org/Content/Navigatio...eleases/New_En rol lme nt_of_Foreign_Students_in_the_U_S__Climbs_in_2005_ 06.htm http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14034413 Yes, I'm aware of this, but it doesn't address your statement that qualified U.S. students can't find a seat in our universities. *Look at the huge gap between guaranteed admission and qualified UC admission standards. Why aren't all the qualified guaranteed admission? For example UC Santa Cruz denied over 7,000 qualified freshman applicants. http://admissions.ucsc.edu/apply/froshNotAdmitted.cfm "Were UC-eligible students denied admission? Since we are a selective campus, the majority of our denied freshmen were UC-eligible. " ScottW Eligible, but are they the most qualified? I really don't give a **** about that when it comes to foreign students. *Admit all the US qualified and give whats left over to the foreigners. Also, the foreign students pay a tuition rate that fully pays for their education; IIRC about $25,000 for out of state, vs. about $7000 for in state. *That is highly debatable. *They pay for the current cost of the current seat. *They don't pay a rate that pays for the capacity increase to provide a seat for the US student they displaced. Foreign students don't take enough seats that they impact facilities, if that's what you mean. *That's ridiculous. *When schools are operating at full capacity, every seat taken displaces a qualified US student. False assumption. Additional capacity doesn't require a desk, it requires whole buildings. So because some poor US student cannot get in at a specific college, that college should build more buildings. But because there are non-US students there, they cannot afford to. Is that about it? *The $25000 or so pays for their whole ticket, as opposed to the $7000 for in-state students. *We can't afford more students paying $7000 for education that costs $25000 with the current budget. * Education, like most government bureauocracies are full of waste. I've even seen college professors with cell phones. |
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