Wednesday, April 11, 2012

College Affordability and Why Your Vote Matters

College Affordability and Why Your Vote Matters:

College Affordability and Why Your Vote Matters


A new report on the troubling amount of money most college students must borrow was released at the end of February, 2012. Compounding the hurdles for many young people seeking a college education is the double burden of dropping out and being in debt. What career prospects do you have when you only have half a degree, but an enormous amount of money you owe and no way to repay it? A high-paying job seems ever more out of reach.
The difficulties stem from many causes. Tuition is too high. Pell grants, which need not be repaid like a loan must, are limited in number and capped at levels that barely make a dent even in state tuitions. State budgets to fund community college and four-year colleges in California’s state system have been slashed by the legislature, resulting in higher tuition and reductions in the classes offered, slowing a student’s ability to graduate on time.
And if you can’t repay your loans, personal bankruptcy is the spectre that hangs over your head. But here’s the