I don't mind the meme. As your best friend on bf2s, I suggest you not buy another Paradox DLC vehicle. It is not worth it.
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No you didn't. You didn't have to buy a full meal plan or pay for a dorm room. STEM students get charged an extra fee every time they take a lab class, so you weren't subsidizing them either.SuperJail Warden wrote:
I would be opposed to any sort of increase in funding for colleges without reforming how colleges can spend their money. Colleges do not need sports teams and stadiums. They don't need lazy rivers, arcades, and recreational rock walls.
I am a little bitter that as a commuter student I didn't get to take advantage of all the frivolous extras but still had to pay the same tuition as the south Jersey upper class dormers. I essentially subsidized their lifestyle. I know the liberal arts also subsidize the STEM students but at least their is a social utility to that.
Same here. Even when I went, there were people who didn't need to go to college and were only there because a college degree is pretty much as necessary now as a high school degree was in the '70s. We do need more non-college post-secondary education options like vocational schools to train people to do jobs. Still, it would be nice to see taxes going toward helping my and future generations, seeing as we're already carrying the social security bill for all the old folks.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
The one thing I regard warily is "free" tuition for public colleges. Increased price/demand and an increased number of students who kinda-sorta-but-not-really want to be there but not really doesn't seem like a better way to improve the atmosphere for people who genuinely want to study or learn a new trade. There's not one Republican presidential candidate who I'm voting for this campaign, though.
All the European countries with free tuition put a ton of pressure on the students not to fuck off, and they weed out the people who aren't college material starting in like 8th grade. The same people that are pushing for free tuition here are also the "I'm gonna take five years to discover who I am and change majors seven times" types, the types that would be thrown out on their ear in Europe. Germany and Scandinavia view it as an investment in people who will hopefully improve their country, and expect results. People seeking the "college experience" full of booze and partying and living away from home in a dorm while fucking off in class should not receive a penny of support from the rest of us. I give zero shits about their student loan debt.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
The one thing I regard warily is "free" tuition for public colleges. Increased price/demand and an increased number of students who kinda-sorta-but-not-really want to be there but not really doesn't seem like a better way to improve the atmosphere for people who genuinely want to study or learn a new trade. There's not one Republican presidential candidate who I'm voting for this campaign, though.
90%+ college sports programs lose money and it has to come out of the general fund to pay for them. That is in your tuition. My school had $3000 worth of activities fees. If the dorm fees and meal plans paid for any of that stuff, it would have been restricted to those student.Jay wrote:
No you didn't. You didn't have to buy a full meal plan or pay for a dorm room. STEM students get charged an extra fee every time they take a lab class, so you weren't subsidizing them either.SuperJail Warden wrote:
I would be opposed to any sort of increase in funding for colleges without reforming how colleges can spend their money. Colleges do not need sports teams and stadiums. They don't need lazy rivers, arcades, and recreational rock walls.
I am a little bitter that as a commuter student I didn't get to take advantage of all the frivolous extras but still had to pay the same tuition as the south Jersey upper class dormers. I essentially subsidized their lifestyle. I know the liberal arts also subsidize the STEM students but at least their is a social utility to that.
Not living in a dorm was your own choice. Don't be bitter.
Sure it did, at a profit. Think of all the hundreds of students that use that lab equipment every semester. Undergrad science equipment is paid off quickly. Grad level science equipment is usually paid for by the government.SuperJail Warden wrote:
90%+ college sports programs lose money and it has to come out of the general fund to pay for them. That is in your tuition. My school had $3000 worth of activities fees. If the dorm fees and meal plans paid for any of that stuff, it would have been restricted to those student.Jay wrote:
No you didn't. You didn't have to buy a full meal plan or pay for a dorm room. STEM students get charged an extra fee every time they take a lab class, so you weren't subsidizing them either.SuperJail Warden wrote:
I would be opposed to any sort of increase in funding for colleges without reforming how colleges can spend their money. Colleges do not need sports teams and stadiums. They don't need lazy rivers, arcades, and recreational rock walls.
I am a little bitter that as a commuter student I didn't get to take advantage of all the frivolous extras but still had to pay the same tuition as the south Jersey upper class dormers. I essentially subsidized their lifestyle. I know the liberal arts also subsidize the STEM students but at least their is a social utility to that.
Not living in a dorm was your own choice. Don't be bitter.
STEM classes are totally subsidized. Liberal arts classes only need a professor and projector. Lib arts students didn't need labs and equipment. Your lab fee didn't cover all that.
The vice-chancellor of the University of Exeter flat out said liberal arts students get shafted when it comes to costJay wrote:
Sure it did, at a profit. Think of all the hundreds of students that use that lab equipment every semester. Undergrad science equipment is paid off quickly. Grad level science equipment is usually paid for by the government.SuperJail Warden wrote:
90%+ college sports programs lose money and it has to come out of the general fund to pay for them. That is in your tuition. My school had $3000 worth of activities fees. If the dorm fees and meal plans paid for any of that stuff, it would have been restricted to those student.Jay wrote:
No you didn't. You didn't have to buy a full meal plan or pay for a dorm room. STEM students get charged an extra fee every time they take a lab class, so you weren't subsidizing them either.
Not living in a dorm was your own choice. Don't be bitter.
STEM classes are totally subsidized. Liberal arts classes only need a professor and projector. Lib arts students didn't need labs and equipment. Your lab fee didn't cover all that.
http://www.theguardian.com/higher-educa … unviersity"The imposition of £9,000 tuition fees did affect the number of applicants last year," he says, "though that was in line with what we expected as many students who might have deferred their places during the previous year sensibly chose not to, UCAS applications have been back up again this year. Not to their peak, but to where they were in 2009. But we can't ignore the fact that the demographics are changing – the potential student pool has fallen by 60,000 this year or that student expectations have risen."
The new fee structure may have put more cash directly into the coffers – universities are about £1,000-£1,500 better off on every arts and social studies student (though down a bit for those doing heavy science courses) – but the gain has come with its own price tag. "Students are now asking themselves if what they are being presented with is a value for money £9,000 offer," says Smith. "And it's one they are fully entitled to make."
http://www.aaup.org/article/avoiding-co … xLEMDArKc1Budgetary secrecy has been straining internal campus relationships for quite some time. Yudof’s remarks about the humanities and social sciences needing subsidies provoked firestorms on faculty e-mail lists. These fields are tied to all others in a maze of commingled cash flows that would give migraines to armies of accountants. Universities are held together by “cross-subsidies,” and the general rule, as explained to UC officials last fall by Jane Wellman, executive director of the Delta Project on Postsecondary Education Costs, Productivity, and Accountability, is that cheap programs subsidize expensive ones. Cheap programs include English and sociology. Expensive ones include medicine. This means that in the real world of higher education funding, English and sociology make money on their enrollments, spend almost nothing on their largely self-funded research, and then, in the cases I have reviewed, actually have some of their “profits” from instruction transferred to help fund more expensive fields. Without these cross-subsidies, plus the everincreasing clinical labors of its own overworked faculty, medical research would be losing money, as the research enterprise always does.
You're talking about post-grad in both cases. My point stands. Undergrad science labs may break a few beakers but expensive stuff like spectrometers or tensile testing machines last for decades. I paid $150 per lab and I guarantee they made a profit.SuperJail Warden wrote:
http://www.aaup.org/article/avoiding-co … xLEMDArKc1Budgetary secrecy has been straining internal campus relationships for quite some time. Yudof’s remarks about the humanities and social sciences needing subsidies provoked firestorms on faculty e-mail lists. These fields are tied to all others in a maze of commingled cash flows that would give migraines to armies of accountants. Universities are held together by “cross-subsidies,” and the general rule, as explained to UC officials last fall by Jane Wellman, executive director of the Delta Project on Postsecondary Education Costs, Productivity, and Accountability, is that cheap programs subsidize expensive ones. Cheap programs include English and sociology. Expensive ones include medicine. This means that in the real world of higher education funding, English and sociology make money on their enrollments, spend almost nothing on their largely self-funded research, and then, in the cases I have reviewed, actually have some of their “profits” from instruction transferred to help fund more expensive fields. Without these cross-subsidies, plus the everincreasing clinical labors of its own overworked faculty, medical research would be losing money, as the research enterprise always does.
I am sure you have some research material he doesn't
http://studyassist.gov.au/sites/studyas … on-amountsSuperJail Warden wrote:
The vice-chancellor of the University of Exeter flat out said liberal arts students get shafted when it comes to costJay wrote:
Sure it did, at a profit. Think of all the hundreds of students that use that lab equipment every semester. Undergrad science equipment is paid off quickly. Grad level science equipment is usually paid for by the government.SuperJail Warden wrote:
90%+ college sports programs lose money and it has to come out of the general fund to pay for them. That is in your tuition. My school had $3000 worth of activities fees. If the dorm fees and meal plans paid for any of that stuff, it would have been restricted to those student.
STEM classes are totally subsidized. Liberal arts classes only need a professor and projector. Lib arts students didn't need labs and equipment. Your lab fee didn't cover all that.http://www.theguardian.com/higher-educa … unviersity"The imposition of £9,000 tuition fees did affect the number of applicants last year," he says, "though that was in line with what we expected as many students who might have deferred their places during the previous year sensibly chose not to, UCAS applications have been back up again this year. Not to their peak, but to where they were in 2009. But we can't ignore the fact that the demographics are changing – the potential student pool has fallen by 60,000 this year or that student expectations have risen."
The new fee structure may have put more cash directly into the coffers – universities are about £1,000-£1,500 better off on every arts and social studies student (though down a bit for those doing heavy science courses) – but the gain has come with its own price tag. "Students are now asking themselves if what they are being presented with is a value for money £9,000 offer," says Smith. "And it's one they are fully entitled to make."
But I am sure you know more about how college budgets work than he does.
There is a separate fee paid for labs. I think I paid $150 extra for every lab class.uziq wrote:
I can't believe what jay is arguing here. undergraduate science provision costs a lot more than liberal arts: a flat fee for all courses definitely benefits the STEM undergraduates more.
i know of zero universities that charge their STEM undergraduates lab fees.Jay wrote:
There is a separate fee paid for labs. I think I paid $150 extra for every lab class.uziq wrote:
I can't believe what jay is arguing here. undergraduate science provision costs a lot more than liberal arts: a flat fee for all courses definitely benefits the STEM undergraduates more.
Must be an American thinguziq wrote:
i know of zero universities that charge their STEM undergraduates lab fees.Jay wrote:
There is a separate fee paid for labs. I think I paid $150 extra for every lab class.uziq wrote:
I can't believe what jay is arguing here. undergraduate science provision costs a lot more than liberal arts: a flat fee for all courses definitely benefits the STEM undergraduates more.
But STEM course are in general more expensive.Cybargs wrote:
That's pretty shitty. over here we just have a flat course fee.Jay wrote:
Must be an American thinguziq wrote:
i know of zero universities that charge their STEM undergraduates lab fees.
Cost shown is the annual student contribution amount for 1 Equivalent Full-Time Student Load3: Law, Accounting, Administration, Economics, Commerce, Medicine $10,440
2: Mathematics, Statistics, Science, Computing, Built Environment, Other Health, Allied Health, Engineering Surveying $8,917
1: Humanities, Behavioural Science, Social Studies, Clinical Psychology, Foreign Languages, Visual and Performing Arts, Education $6,256
Last edited by DrunkFace (2016-04-17 20:12:14)
Medicine is expensive, most STEM degrees are mostly theory, the cost for theory courses is the same.uziq wrote:
I can't believe what jay is arguing here. undergraduate science provision costs a lot more than liberal arts: a flat fee for all courses definitely benefits the STEM undergraduates more.