Texas Could Offer a Stripped-Down Degree for Just $10,000, Commissioner Says (Chronicle of Higher Education)
Gov. Rick Perry's call for Texas universities to develop a four-year baccalaureate degree that costs no more than $10,000 isn't as far-fetched as it seems, the state's commissioner of higher education said on Wednesday after a staff member of the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board presented preliminary strategies for developing a stripped-down degree.
Those strategies, which the commissioner said the coordinating board plans to pursue aggressively, could involve statewide online courses, more opportunities for students to spend their first two years in community colleges, and accelerated and self-paced course formats.
Key to any plan would be faculty support and rigorous standards.
In his State of the State address, in February, the Republican governor urged public college and university leaders to come up with "a bold, Texas-style solution" to the challenge of rising higher-education costs by developing bachelor's degrees that cost no more than $10,000 for four years of tuition, fees, and textbooks.
Big heads, big hats
The low-cost programs should eventually account for at least 10 percent of degrees conferred, Mr. Perry said.
Skeptics have questioned whether that is possible, or even desirable….(continue)
2 comments:
$2,500.00 a year for all the costs of a degree, including books? That's going to be a really fine educational experience.
Sort of like the happy meal is a fine nutritional option.
Yep - and ketchup is a vegetable :)
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