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Old 03-06-2013, 12:51 PM   #21
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It's the third-party payer issue (and especially the subsidized loans). Lots more money dumped into the system=higher prices. The bloated faculty sizes and deluxe student services are just symptoms--the money is there, so let's attract students with it.

And is it at least possible that grade inflation and watered-down curricula is also related? ('keep that customer happy and those checks coming in")

If the schools had to hold the loans they'd at least have a vested interest in assuring their grads were wanted in the working world. And, it's about time somebody published accurate numbers on earnings for graduates of various schools/majors.
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Old 03-06-2013, 03:32 PM   #22
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Originally Posted by Animorph

Both require a lot of labor hours and haven't managed to change that. Online courses will be changing college costs soon. A general problem if everyone starts making the same as everyone else. Health care has the added problem of new procedures being added faster than old procedures are getting cheaper, in addition to all the oddball pricing problems.
I recently talked to a student who was taking some online courses in addition to his bricks and mortar classes. I asked him if the online were cheaper. He said they were $25 more an hour. I would have never guessed that. Our governor a couple years ago threatened to cut university budgets if their tuition increases were above inflation rate. Well somehow magically the schools figured out how to make their budgets work with only CPI increases in tuition. I wouldn't be surprised if they worked around that problem by doubling the parking fees and implementing a campus air oxygen use fee.
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Old 03-06-2013, 06:36 PM   #23
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Granddaughter is at a dorm in Sam Houston State University this year as a freshman. When I went there to hook up her computer to the internet, I was shocked to see how small her SHARED room was for $1000/month. I think a prison cell would be roomier.
DS will be transferring there from community college in the fall. We live less than an hour away so he will be commuting. SHSU has classes in the Woodlands at the community college campus, but they actually charge more for those classes. That would be a little closer for us (about a 20 minute drive) but it irks me that they charge more for the classes there.
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Old 03-07-2013, 07:10 AM   #24
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We looked at SHSU for our DD and I really liked it, also has a good football team. Unfortunately DD selected a much more expensive private school that ate into my nest egg, but at least she graduates this May and hopefully will be off the dole, unless grad school is next.
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Old 03-07-2013, 07:12 AM   #25
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Did you know SHSU was originally named the Sam Houston Institute of Technology?
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Old 03-07-2013, 07:26 AM   #26
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DS will be transferring there from community college in the fall. We live less than an hour away so he will be commuting. SHSU has classes in the Woodlands at the community college campus, but they actually charge more for those classes. That would be a little closer for us (about a 20 minute drive) but it irks me that they charge more for the classes there.
Both our daughters finished at SHSU after taking 2 years at the old Montgomery College (highway 242 just north of the Woodlands) which is now Lone Star College. They commuted from home (The Woodlands) to SHSU in Hunstville.

That was before the University Center was built on 242. Granddaughter wanted to go to A & M, but didn't get in so SAM was the alternative. She actually entered as a 2nd year student (credits from taking courses during high school). SHSU is growing but the tuition is going crazy along with the fees.
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Old 03-07-2013, 07:27 AM   #27
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Did you know SHSU was originally named the Sam Houston Institute of Technology?
No, that must have been a long while ago!
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Old 03-07-2013, 07:27 AM   #28
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Cool chart, thanks!

I lived on $200-300/month in college including rent, food & entertainment, along with 2 other roommates. The good old days...
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Old 03-07-2013, 07:32 AM   #29
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Did you know SHSU was originally named the Sam Houston Institute of Technology?
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Old 03-07-2013, 07:54 AM   #30
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Cool chart, thanks!

I lived on $200-300/month in college including rent, food & entertainment, along with 2 other roommates. The good old days...
Yes, the good old days!

I had the G.I. Bill that paid me $220/month for college (1973 - 1977). That covered my tuition (state college) and some expenses. I worked nights and weekends in a drug store as a cashier to cover the rest. Rent on the downstairs of an old house was $85/month. I had one roommate who split the house expenses.
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Old 03-07-2013, 08:05 AM   #31
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The odd thing is, most of the jobs that historically required college are easier to ship overseas than many blue collar jobs, particularly in the trades. Almost any job that is primarily information-based is a prime candidate to be sent off to India and elsewhere.
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Old 03-07-2013, 08:12 AM   #32
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Did you know SHSU was originally named the Sam Houston Institute of Technology?
Before that it was the Texas Institute of Technology, but they thought the abbreviation was unbecoming.
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Old 03-07-2013, 09:02 AM   #33
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I recently talked to a student who was taking some online courses in addition to his bricks and mortar classes. I asked him if the online were cheaper. He said they were $25 more an hour. I would have never guessed that. Our governor a couple years ago threatened to cut university budgets if their tuition increases were above inflation rate. Well somehow magically the schools figured out how to make their budgets work with only CPI increases in tuition. I wouldn't be surprised if they worked around that problem by doubling the parking fees and implementing a campus air oxygen use fee.
My DW is getting her masters and the online courses are more than $25 per hour more expensive... and I think she also has to pay an online course fee of a few hundred dollars... I was very surprised also...
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Old 03-07-2013, 09:06 AM   #34
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Did you know SHSU was originally named the Sam Houston Institute of Technology?

OK>>> lucky I saw MichaeB's response.... funny....


But, it was Sam Houston State Teachers College.... and I think it is the oldest or second oldest college in the state...
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Old 03-07-2013, 11:33 AM   #35
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OK>>> lucky I saw MichaeB's response.... funny....


But, it was Sam Houston State Teachers College.... and I think it is the oldest or second oldest college in the state...
Here you go:

Oldest Colleges In Texas

Oldest Colleges in Texas (year founded)

1. Baylor: 1845
1. University of Mary Hardin-Baylor: 1845
3. Austin College: 1849
4. St. Mary's University: 1852
5. Lon Morris College: 1854
6. Trinity University: 1869
6. Weatherford College: 1869
8. Paul Quinn College: 1872
9. Southwestern University: 1873
9. TCU: 1873
9. Wiley College: 1873
12. Huston-Tillotson College: 1875
13. Texas A&M-College Station: 1876
14. Prairie View A&M: 1878
15. Sam Houston State: 1879
16. University of Incarnate Word: 1881
17. Blinn College: 1883
17. UT-Austin: 1883
19. St. Edward's University: 1885
20. Howard Payne University: 1889
20. Texas A&M-Commerce: 1889
22. Texas Wesleyan University: 1890
22. U. of North Texas: 1890
24. Hardin-Simmons: 1891
24. Texas Lutheran University: 1891
26. Southwestern Adventist University: 1894
26. Texas College: 1894
28. Our Lady of the Lake University: 1895
28. UT-Arlington: 1895
30. Clarendon College: 1898
30. St. Philip's College: 1898
32. Jacksonville College: 1899
32. SW Texas State: 1899
32. Tarleton State: 1899
35. Texas Woman's University: 1901
36. Abilene Christian: 1906
37. Wayland Baptist: 1908
38. Lamar State-Port Arthur: 1909
38. West Texas A&M: 1909
40. SMU: 1911
41. East Texas Baptist: 1912
41. Jarvis Christian College: 1912
41. Rice: 1912
44. UT-El Paso: 1913
45. Sul Ross State: 1920
46. Midwestern State: 1922
47. Hill College: 1923
47. Lamar: 1923
47. McMurry University: 1923
47. Schreiner University: 1923
47. Stephen F. Austin State: 1923
47. Texas Tech: 1923
53. North Central Texas College: 1924
53. Paris JC: 1924
55. San Antonio College: 1925
55. Texas A&M-Kingsville: 1925
55. Victoria College: 1925
58. Concordia University: 1926
58. Ranger College: 1926
58. Tyler JC: 1926
61. Southwestern Assemblies of God U.: 1927
61. Texarkana College: 1927
61. U. of Houston: 1927
61. UT-Pan American: 1927
65. Angelo State: 1928
66. Amarillo College: 1929
67. Del Mar College: 1935
67. Kilgore College: 1935
69. Arlington Baptist College: 1939
70. Cisco JC: 1940
71. Howard College: 1945
72. Laredo CC: 1946
72. LeTourneau University: 1946
72. Navarro College: 1946
72. Odessa College: 1946
72. SW Texas JC: 1946
72. Trinity Valley CC: 1946
72. Wharton County JC: 1946
79. Panola College: 1947
79. U. of St. Thomas: 1947
79. Texas A&M-Corpus Christi: 1947
79. Texas Southern: 1947
83. Alvin CC: 1949
83. Southwestern Christian College: 1949
85. University of Dallas: 1956
86. Lubbock Christian: 1957
87. South Plains College: 1958
88. San Jacinto-Central: 1961
89. Texas A&M-Galveston: 1962
90. Grayson CC: 1964
91. Dallas Baptist: 1965
91. Coastal Bend College: 1965
91. McLennan CC: 1965
91. TSTC-Waco: 1965
95. El Centro College: 1966
95. Northwood University: 1966
97. Central Texas College: 1967
97. College of the Mainland: 1967
97. Galveston College: 1967
97. Tarrant CC: 1967
97. TSTC-Harlingen: 1967
102.Angelina College: 1968
102.Brazosport College: 1968
104.Lamar State-Orange: 1969
104.Midland College: 1969
104.UT-Permian Basin: 1969
104.UT-San Antonio: 1969
104.Western Texas College: 1969
109.Eastfield College: 1970
109.Mountain View College: 1970
109.TSTC-West Texas: 1970
109.Vernon College: 1970
113.Amberton: 1971
113.Houston-Clear Lake: 1971
113.Houston CC: 1971
113.Texas A&M-Texarkana: 1971
113.UT-Tyler: 1971
118.Austin CC: 1972
118.North Harris College: 1972
118.Richland College: 1972
121.Houston-Victoria: 1973
121.UT-Brownsville: 1973
123.Houston-Downtown: 1974
123.San Jacinto-North: 1974
125.Cedar Valley College: 1977
126.San Jacinto-South: 1979
127.Kingwood College: 1984
128.Collin County CC: 1985
128.Northeast Texas CC: 1985
130.Palo Alto College: 1987
131.Tomball College: 1988
132.South Texas CC: 1993
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Old 03-07-2013, 01:56 PM   #36
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Here you go:

Oldest Colleges In Texas
Oldest Colleges in Texas (year founded)
/snip/
15. Sam Houston State: 1879



Guess I was told incorrectly... why do these colleges try and brainwash you into false info


OK... looked up in Wiki...

Sam Houston State University (known as SHSU or Sam) was founded in 1879 and is the third oldest public institution of higher learning in the State of Texas.

I just read this and did not know it...

Austin Hall was constructed in 1851 and is the oldest university building west of the Mississippi still in operation. Notably, Sam Houston himself attended and participated in the original dedication of the building


OK... edit to add....

April 21, 1879, founded as Sam Houston Normal Institute
1923: Sam Houston State Teachers College
1965: Sam Houston State College
1969: Sam Houston State University
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Old 03-07-2013, 02:27 PM   #37
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What I'm interested in is - why did college costs go up at this rate? What can we do about it? What can we learn from it? Why is it different from so many other things?

Any thoughts on that?

A friend of mine wrote a book on the subject:

Why Does College Cost So Much?: Robert B. Archibald, David H. Feldman: 9780199744503: Amazon.com: Books

Warning: its data driven so it doesn't necessarily support most people's pet theories. The biggest factor is Baumol's cost disease, and it has affected other service industries as well.

FWIW, Clay Christensen, author of The Innovator's Dilemma believes that education is the next major industry that will be subject to disruptive innovation. If that's true, I will have grossly overfunded my son's 529.
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Old 03-07-2013, 02:38 PM   #38
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My alma mater is older than all of these, in fact its the oldest continuously operating technological university in both the English-speaking world and the Americas. Can anyone guess what school it is?
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Old 03-07-2013, 02:44 PM   #39
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HKU? (Hard Knock University)
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Old 03-08-2013, 08:11 AM   #40
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HKU? (Hard Knock University)
Good guess, but thats not a registered college.
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