• 7 in 10 Students Have Skipped Buying a Textbook Because of Its Cost, Survey Finds (Chronicle of Higher Education)
…"Students recognize that textbooks are essential to their education but have been pushed to the breaking point by skyrocketing costs," said Rich Williams, a higher-education advocate with the group, known as U.S. PIRG….
Meanwhile, the New York Times is holding one of its “debates”:
• Do We Spend Too Much on Education?
Americans are spending more and more on education, but the resulting credentials — a high-school diploma and college degrees — seem to be losing value in the labor market…. See the debate
The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT — "[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"
This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...
-
Professor Olga Perez Stable Cox OCC Trumpsters/GOP A professor called Trump’s election an ‘act of terrorism.’ Then she became the vict...
-
The "prayer" suit: ..... AS WE REPORTED two days ago , on Tuesday, Judge R. Gary Klausner denied Westphal, et alia ’s motion f...
-
The two colleges of our district—Saddleback College and Irvine Valley College—have been dinged repeatedly by the Accreds (the ACCJC), mostly...
2 comments:
The problem I've observed is that many a college bookstore is, unlike the college it's connected to, a for-profit business. Whereas community and state colleges try (however successfully or un-) to make education affordable, the bookstore is driven by a profit motive. Strange bedfellows.
Re spending too much on education, I still think that college degrees have deep value without them having to be justified by eventual salary, class position (lower, middle, etc), job title, etc. Sure, in a bad economy, we look at the pragmatic cost-benefit analysis of everything. But this analysis often leaves out the value of a college education that cannot be expressed in terms of salary, job, earnings, status in society, etc. However, a student has to ask oneself if it's worth the debt.... The article brings up a vicious circle that's going on in education & society.
At the two colleges of the SOCCCD--and in many colleges--student government is funded in large part by a "tax" placed upon textbooks. That is, the funding mechanism for student government helps raise the cost of texts.
Post a Comment