Perfect example of what is wrong with "higher education"

Frogman
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Edited Date/Time 8/20/2019 12:24pm
http://finance.yahoo.com/...?mod=edu-collegeprep

Placing the Blame as Students Are Buried in Debt
by Ron Lieber
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
provided by


Like many middle-class families, Cortney Munna and her mother began the college selection process with a grim determination. They would do whatever they could to get Cortney into the best possible college, and they maintained a blind faith that the investment would be worth it.

Today, however, Ms. Munna, a 26-year-old graduate of New York University, has nearly $100,000 in student loan debt from her four years in college, and affording the full monthly payments would be a struggle. For much of the time since her 2005 graduation, she's been enrolled in night school, which allows her to defer loan payments.

This is not a long-term solution, because the interest on the loans continues to pile up. So in an eerie echo of the mortgage crisis, tens of thousands of people like Ms. Munna are facing a reckoning. They and their families made borrowing decisions based more on emotion than reason, much as subprime borrowers assumed the value of their houses would always go up.

Meanwhile, universities like N.Y.U. enrolled students without asking many questions about whether they could afford a $50,000 annual tuition bill. Then the colleges introduced the students to lenders who underwrote big loans without any idea of what the students might earn someday — just like the mortgage lenders who didn't ask borrowers to verify their incomes.

Ms. Munna does not want to walk away from her loans in the same way many mortgage holders are. It would be difficult in any event because federal bankruptcy law makes it nearly impossible to discharge student loan debts. But unless she manages to improve her income quickly, she doesn't have a lot of good options for digging out.


It is utterly depressing that there are so many people like her facing decades of payments, limited capacity to buy a home and a debt burden that can repel potential life partners. For starters, it's a shared failure of parenting and loan underwriting.

But perhaps the biggest share lies with colleges and universities because they have the most knowledge of the financial aid process. And I would argue that they had an obligation to counsel students like Ms. Munna, who got in too far over their heads.

How many people are like her? According to the College Board's Trends in Student Aid study, 10 percent of people who graduated in 2007-8 with student loans had borrowed $40,000 or more. The median debt for bachelor's degree recipients who borrowed while attending private, nonprofit colleges was $22,380.

The Project on Student Debt, a research and advocacy organization in Oakland, Calif., used federal data to estimate that 206,000 people graduated from college (including many from for-profit universities) with more than $40,000 in student loan debt in that same period. That's a ninefold increase over the number of people in 1996, using 2008 dollars.

The Family

No one forces borrowers to take out these loans, and Ms. Munna and her mother, Cathryn, have spent the years since her graduation trying to understand where they went wrong. Ms. Munna's father died when she was 13, after a series of illnesses.

She started college at age 17 and borrowed as much money as she could under the federal loan program. To make up the difference between her grants and work study money and the total cost of attending, her mother co-signed two private loans with Sallie Mae totaling about $20,000.

When they applied for a third loan, however, Sallie Mae rejected the application, citing Cathryn's credit history. She had returned to college herself to finish her bachelor's degree and was also borrowing money. N.Y.U. suggested a federal Plus loan for parents, but that would have required immediate payments, something the mother couldn't afford. So before Cortney's junior year, N.Y.U. recommended that she apply for a private student loan on her own with Citibank.

Over the course of the next two years, starting when she was still a teenager, she borrowed about $40,000 from Citibank without thinking much about how she would pay it back. How could her mother have let her run up that debt, and why didn't she try to make her daughter transfer to, say, the best school in the much cheaper state university system in New York? "All I could see was college, and a good college and how proud I was of her," Cathryn said. "All we needed to do was get this education and get the good job. This is the thing that eats away at me, the naïveté on my part."

But Cortney resists the idea that this is a tale of bad parenting. "To me, it would be an uncharitable reading," she said. "My mother has tried her best, and I don't blame her for anything in this."

The Lender

Sallie Mae gets a pass here, in my view. A responsible grownup co-signed for its loans to the Munnas, and the company eventually cut them off.

But what was Citi thinking, handing over $40,000 to an undergraduate who had already amassed debt well into the five figures? This was, in effect, a "no doc" or at least a "low doc" subprime mortgage loan.

A Citi spokesman declined to comment, even though Ms. Munna was willing to sign a waiver giving Citi permission to talk about her loans. Perhaps the bank worried that once it approved one loan, cutting her off would have led her to drop out or transfer and have trouble paying back the loan.

Today, someone like Ms. Munna might not qualify for the $40,000 she borrowed. But as the economy rebounds, there is little doubt that plenty of lenders will step forward to roll the dice on desperate students, especially because the students generally can't get rid of the debt in bankruptcy court.

The University

The financial aid office often has the best picture of what students like Ms. Munna are up abbgainst, because they see their families' financial situation splayed out on the federal financial aid form. So why didn't N.Y.U. tell Ms. Munna that she simply did not belong there once she'd passed, say, $60,000 in total debt?

"Had somebody called me and said, 'Do you have a clue where this is all headed?', it would have been a slap in the face, but a slap in the face that I needed," said Cathryn Munna. "When financial aid told her that they could get her $2,000 more in loans, they should have been saying 'You are in deep doo-doo, little girl.' "

That's not a role that the university wants to take on, though. "I think that would be completely inappropriate," said Randall Deike, the vice president of enrollment management for N.Y.U., who oversees admissions and financial aid. "Some families will do whatever it takes for their son or daughter to be not just at N.Y.U., but any first-choice college. I'm not sure that's always the best decision, but it's one that they really have to make themselves."

The complications here go well beyond the propriety of suggesting that a student enroll elsewhere. Colleges don't always know how much debt its students are taking on, which makes it hard to offer good counsel. (N.Y.U. does appear to have known about all of Ms. Munna's loans, though.)

Then there's a branding problem. Urging students to attend a cheaper college or leave altogether suggests a lack of confidence about the earning potential of alumni. Nobody wants to admit that. And once a university starts encouraging middle-class students to go elsewhere, it must fill its classes with more children of the wealthy and a much smaller number of low-income students to whom it can afford to offer enormous scholarships. That's hardly an ideal outcome either.

Finally, universities exist to enroll students, not turn them away. "Aid administrators want to keep their jobs," said Joan H. Crissman, interim president and chief executive of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators. "If the administration finds out that you're encouraging students to go to a cheaper school just because you don't think they can handle the debt load, I don't think that's going to mesh very well."

That doesn't change the fact, however, that the financial aid office is still in the best position to see trouble coming and do something to stop it. University officials should take on this obligation, even if they aren't willing to advise students to attend another college.

Instead, they might deputize a gang of M.B.A. candidates or alumni in the financial services industry to offer free financial planning to admitted students and their families. Mr. Deike also noted that the bigger problem here is one of financial literacy. Fine. He and N.Y.U. are in a great position to solve for that by making every financial aid recipient take a financial planning class. The students could even use their families as the case study.

The Options

The balance on Cortney Munna's loans is about $97,000, including all of her federal loans and her private debt from Sallie Mae and Citibank. What are her options for digging out?

Her mother can't help without selling her bed and breakfast, and then she'd have no home. She could take her daughter in, but there aren't good ways for her to earn a living in Alexandria Bay, in upstate New York.

Cortney could move someplace cheaper than her current home city of San Francisco, but she worries about her job prospects, even with her N.Y.U. diploma.

She recently received a raise and now makes $22 an hour working for a photographer. It's the highest salary she's earned since graduating with an interdisciplinary degree in religious and women's studies. After taxes, she takes home about $2,300 a month. Rent runs $750, and the full monthly payments on her student loans would be about $700 if they weren't being deferred, which would not leave a lot left over.

She may finally be earning enough to barely scrape by while still making the payments for the first time since she graduated, at least until interest rates rise and the payments on her loans with variable rates spiral up. And while her job requires her to work nights and weekends sometimes, she probably should find a flexible second job to try to bring in a few extra hundred dollars a month.

Ms. Munna understands this tough love, buck up, buckle-down advice. But she also badly wants to call a do-over on the last decade. "I don't want to spend the rest of my life slaving away to pay for an education I got for four years and would happily give back," she said. "It feels wrong to me."



High schools graduate useless idiots and a good number of them stay that way even after a 100k+ education. Placing the blame is easy...wonder who is paying the bill.
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J.F.S
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6/1/2010 4:09pm
Socialized higher education is great.
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Frogman
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6/1/2010 4:18pm
J.F.S wrote:
Socialized higher education is great.
Yeah, because our economy can afford to throw money at a few thousand more 200k degrees in religious and women's studies and that would be s super boost to our global competitiveness.
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WhKnuckle
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6/1/2010 4:43pm Edited Date/Time 6/1/2010 4:44pm
Don't discount the fact that high schools don't offer as many trade-oriented courses as they used to, and our country has lost so many of the industrial jobs that used to offer a good, hard working high school educated people an opportunity to make a decent living working in a trade. Basically, parents look at their kids' futures and feel like they're doomed to a minimum wage, no benefits working life unless they get a college degree; so they're willing to do whatever they can to get that education. Unless they're very highly paid, they can't possibly save enough money for their own retirement and $100K or so per kid for college too, so they're just stuck. It's another aspect of the loss of so much industrial work in America. But it's worth it to be able to go to Wal Mart and buy a drill for $50 that used to cost $70 when it was made in America.
Frogman
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6/1/2010 4:49pm Edited Date/Time 4/17/2016 11:16pm
WhKnuckle wrote:
Don't discount the fact that high schools don't offer as many trade-oriented courses as they used to, and our country has lost so many of the...
Don't discount the fact that high schools don't offer as many trade-oriented courses as they used to, and our country has lost so many of the industrial jobs that used to offer a good, hard working high school educated people an opportunity to make a decent living working in a trade. Basically, parents look at their kids' futures and feel like they're doomed to a minimum wage, no benefits working life unless they get a college degree; so they're willing to do whatever they can to get that education. Unless they're very highly paid, they can't possibly save enough money for their own retirement and $100K or so per kid for college too, so they're just stuck. It's another aspect of the loss of so much industrial work in America. But it's worth it to be able to go to Wal Mart and buy a drill for $50 that used to cost $70 when it was made in America.
I agree with all of that...I have said grade school education was a waste in many ways in previous posts.

But High Schools could offer some personal finance courses in place of the trade courses. In addition, if Mom wanted the kid to have a future, she would have helped her pick a degree that was useful and led to getting paid. Probably could have found a program that was affordable as well.

200k invested at the "best" school in a useless degree to work for a photographer...a job that requires no college...brilliant!

The Shop

WhKnuckle
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6/1/2010 5:43pm
WhKnuckle wrote:
Don't discount the fact that high schools don't offer as many trade-oriented courses as they used to, and our country has lost so many of the...
Don't discount the fact that high schools don't offer as many trade-oriented courses as they used to, and our country has lost so many of the industrial jobs that used to offer a good, hard working high school educated people an opportunity to make a decent living working in a trade. Basically, parents look at their kids' futures and feel like they're doomed to a minimum wage, no benefits working life unless they get a college degree; so they're willing to do whatever they can to get that education. Unless they're very highly paid, they can't possibly save enough money for their own retirement and $100K or so per kid for college too, so they're just stuck. It's another aspect of the loss of so much industrial work in America. But it's worth it to be able to go to Wal Mart and buy a drill for $50 that used to cost $70 when it was made in America.
Frogman wrote:
I agree with all of that...I have said grade school education was a waste in many ways in previous posts. But High Schools could offer some...
I agree with all of that...I have said grade school education was a waste in many ways in previous posts.

But High Schools could offer some personal finance courses in place of the trade courses. In addition, if Mom wanted the kid to have a future, she would have helped her pick a degree that was useful and led to getting paid. Probably could have found a program that was affordable as well.

200k invested at the "best" school in a useless degree to work for a photographer...a job that requires no college...brilliant!
I think that's all correct. I also think that we need something in between high school and a full-fledged college degree that would be more applicable to a particular job and much less expensive - more junior colleges, community colleges, trade schools, etc, that offer associates degrees in various, job-specific fields. And there's a big push to do that, which I think is a good thing. In fact, when I retire I'd love to teach something like that, I think that would be a great way to make a little walking-around money and also to try to help people who want to work in the same field I do now. I know that our I/E techs who have associate degrees really ARE better at their work than the ones who don't, taken as a whole. I think high-up business leaders are getting on board with that more these days, and there's a desire to make sure that those kinds of schools get some funding, so I think that's going the right direction. But for the time being, the default choices seem to be full-on college or go out after high school and try to get some kind of job, and that's a tough spot to be in if your parents can't afford it.
zjbell
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6/1/2010 7:07pm Edited Date/Time 4/17/2016 11:17pm
College is overrated.


I knew someone who pulled a loan for her last two years at a state college and was getting $800/month extra in 'living expenses' even though she lived at home and her parents paid everything. Amazing how someone can drive around in a 3 series, have no job and party every night.
wilcom121
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6/1/2010 7:29pm
Should of changed their strategy to the best possible college they could afford. She would at least look smarter than she does right now.

I just graduated a couple weeks ago with a bachelors in accounting, I'm happy with the education I received and the money i spent (which is about the same as the tuition for one semester at NYU)



drmarkr
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6/1/2010 9:03pm
wilcom121 wrote:
Should of changed their strategy to the best possible college they could afford. She would at least look smarter than she does right now. I just...
Should of changed their strategy to the best possible college they could afford. She would at least look smarter than she does right now.

I just graduated a couple weeks ago with a bachelors in accounting, I'm happy with the education I received and the money i spent (which is about the same as the tuition for one semester at NYU)



Good job. Seriously....congratulations on your accomplishments.
plowboy
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6/1/2010 10:49pm
Most of the kids I know that are going/gone to college(not all but most) have neither the capacity nor the desire to learn anything. Even if they do manage to squeak by and graduate...who wants an accountant/doctor/dentist/engineer/etc...that graduated with straight D's. Just like at the amusement park..."You must be this tall to ride"....people should be tested for apptitude in order to go to college. Vocational Education is better suited for a large portion of the population.
6/2/2010 3:42am
plowboy wrote:
Most of the kids I know that are going/gone to college(not all but most) have neither the capacity nor the desire to learn anything. Even if...
Most of the kids I know that are going/gone to college(not all but most) have neither the capacity nor the desire to learn anything. Even if they do manage to squeak by and graduate...who wants an accountant/doctor/dentist/engineer/etc...that graduated with straight D's. Just like at the amusement park..."You must be this tall to ride"....people should be tested for apptitude in order to go to college. Vocational Education is better suited for a large portion of the population.
Vocational education goes against NAFTA. We are moving away from working with our hands and will provide the world with service sector jobs. At least that's what democratic and republican politicians, Wall Street and our Unions who supported NAFTA told me. You can't beat a college education but starting out young with a heavy debt load and a liberal arts degree isn't a good place to be standing in. On the other hand, having a great work ethic and common sense can make anyone a millionaire.
jmar
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6/2/2010 4:37am
College is way to expensive now and the cost continues to increase every year. It's getting next to impossible for a kid who comes from a low income family to be able to work their way through school.

J.F.S
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6/2/2010 4:54am
wilcom121 wrote:
Should of changed their strategy to the best possible college they could afford. She would at least look smarter than she does right now. I just...
Should of changed their strategy to the best possible college they could afford. She would at least look smarter than she does right now.

I just graduated a couple weeks ago with a bachelors in accounting, I'm happy with the education I received and the money i spent (which is about the same as the tuition for one semester at NYU)



Congrats! You should have taken some spelling and grammar there too accountant. Wink
Racer92
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6/2/2010 5:59am
Of course, there's always jobs in the food service industry..... Grinning

plowboy
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Pretty much agree with you wired. I think the word "poitician" was created as a word to use in polite company when one really means..."low-down, dirty, thieving, lying, backstabbing, corrupt, two-faced, piece of human excrement." It always amazed me when some good ole boy with not much more than a family name can get elected to a job that pays a couple hundred thousand a year can come home a few terms later with millions in the bank. They are just like ticks...wait...I don't think ticks feed on other ticks.
Sherwood
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6/2/2010 8:36am
The way you throw out how much you two make all the time leads me to believe you don't make half as much as you portray.
Cygnus
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6/2/2010 8:43am
I would like to thank all of the tax payers who are footing the whole bill for my daughters college education. She is a single mom and is getting her Full ride at metro at no cost to me. She is going to be an accountant also.
Tiki
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6/2/2010 9:59am
College shows you can finish something, even if it means taking the company to the bank and in trouble with SEC. Honestly this article echos only a few. She has chosen to live in a high rent district an competitive marketplace for jobs. Given she moved across the states, I am guessing she did not do any pre-employment work while she was in college.

If you court colleges for your education, wouldn't it make sense that you would court employers when you receive your degree?

I chalk this article up to ignorance. So I guess like Frogman originally stated, this is what is wrong with Higher Education. All the degrees in the world will not save you from your own stupid self.

That said, I would like to be a fly on the wall in her interviews. I bet there is some humor there.
Frogman
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6/2/2010 10:20am
I assume she has a law degree? She isn't earning anything from the hobby degrees.

If you want to educate yourself for enjoyment...then you should be able to pay for it.
J.F.S
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6/2/2010 10:22am
Why are righties so afraid of education? Jealousy probably!
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Frogman
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6/2/2010 10:24am
That's definitely an exception and not the rule.

You aren't going to come out of a top school with a drama degree and get a job in business comparable to someone with a Business/Accounting/IT related degree.
Frogman
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6/2/2010 10:25am
J.F.S wrote:
Why are righties so afraid of education? Jealousy probably!
How about your share your experiences at the special needs school with us?
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J.F.S
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6/2/2010 10:37am
J.F.S wrote:
Why are righties so afraid of education? Jealousy probably!
Frogman wrote:
How about your share your experiences at the special needs school with us?
If I had such experiences and told you about them, how will that make you less afraid of educating yourself?
Frogman
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6/2/2010 10:42am
Frogman wrote:
http://finance.yahoo.com/...?mod=edu-collegeprep Placing the Blame as Students Are Buried in Debt by Ron Lieber Tuesday, June 1, 2010 provided by Like many middle-class families, Cortney Munna and...
http://finance.yahoo.com/...?mod=edu-collegeprep

Placing the Blame as Students Are Buried in Debt
by Ron Lieber
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
provided by


Like many middle-class families, Cortney Munna and her mother began the college selection process with a grim determination. They would do whatever they could to get Cortney into the best possible college, and they maintained a blind faith that the investment would be worth it.

Today, however, Ms. Munna, a 26-year-old graduate of New York University, has nearly $100,000 in student loan debt from her four years in college, and affording the full monthly payments would be a struggle. For much of the time since her 2005 graduation, she's been enrolled in night school, which allows her to defer loan payments.

This is not a long-term solution, because the interest on the loans continues to pile up. So in an eerie echo of the mortgage crisis, tens of thousands of people like Ms. Munna are facing a reckoning. They and their families made borrowing decisions based more on emotion than reason, much as subprime borrowers assumed the value of their houses would always go up.

Meanwhile, universities like N.Y.U. enrolled students without asking many questions about whether they could afford a $50,000 annual tuition bill. Then the colleges introduced the students to lenders who underwrote big loans without any idea of what the students might earn someday — just like the mortgage lenders who didn't ask borrowers to verify their incomes.

Ms. Munna does not want to walk away from her loans in the same way many mortgage holders are. It would be difficult in any event because federal bankruptcy law makes it nearly impossible to discharge student loan debts. But unless she manages to improve her income quickly, she doesn't have a lot of good options for digging out.


It is utterly depressing that there are so many people like her facing decades of payments, limited capacity to buy a home and a debt burden that can repel potential life partners. For starters, it's a shared failure of parenting and loan underwriting.

But perhaps the biggest share lies with colleges and universities because they have the most knowledge of the financial aid process. And I would argue that they had an obligation to counsel students like Ms. Munna, who got in too far over their heads.

How many people are like her? According to the College Board's Trends in Student Aid study, 10 percent of people who graduated in 2007-8 with student loans had borrowed $40,000 or more. The median debt for bachelor's degree recipients who borrowed while attending private, nonprofit colleges was $22,380.

The Project on Student Debt, a research and advocacy organization in Oakland, Calif., used federal data to estimate that 206,000 people graduated from college (including many from for-profit universities) with more than $40,000 in student loan debt in that same period. That's a ninefold increase over the number of people in 1996, using 2008 dollars.

The Family

No one forces borrowers to take out these loans, and Ms. Munna and her mother, Cathryn, have spent the years since her graduation trying to understand where they went wrong. Ms. Munna's father died when she was 13, after a series of illnesses.

She started college at age 17 and borrowed as much money as she could under the federal loan program. To make up the difference between her grants and work study money and the total cost of attending, her mother co-signed two private loans with Sallie Mae totaling about $20,000.

When they applied for a third loan, however, Sallie Mae rejected the application, citing Cathryn's credit history. She had returned to college herself to finish her bachelor's degree and was also borrowing money. N.Y.U. suggested a federal Plus loan for parents, but that would have required immediate payments, something the mother couldn't afford. So before Cortney's junior year, N.Y.U. recommended that she apply for a private student loan on her own with Citibank.

Over the course of the next two years, starting when she was still a teenager, she borrowed about $40,000 from Citibank without thinking much about how she would pay it back. How could her mother have let her run up that debt, and why didn't she try to make her daughter transfer to, say, the best school in the much cheaper state university system in New York? "All I could see was college, and a good college and how proud I was of her," Cathryn said. "All we needed to do was get this education and get the good job. This is the thing that eats away at me, the naïveté on my part."

But Cortney resists the idea that this is a tale of bad parenting. "To me, it would be an uncharitable reading," she said. "My mother has tried her best, and I don't blame her for anything in this."

The Lender

Sallie Mae gets a pass here, in my view. A responsible grownup co-signed for its loans to the Munnas, and the company eventually cut them off.

But what was Citi thinking, handing over $40,000 to an undergraduate who had already amassed debt well into the five figures? This was, in effect, a "no doc" or at least a "low doc" subprime mortgage loan.

A Citi spokesman declined to comment, even though Ms. Munna was willing to sign a waiver giving Citi permission to talk about her loans. Perhaps the bank worried that once it approved one loan, cutting her off would have led her to drop out or transfer and have trouble paying back the loan.

Today, someone like Ms. Munna might not qualify for the $40,000 she borrowed. But as the economy rebounds, there is little doubt that plenty of lenders will step forward to roll the dice on desperate students, especially because the students generally can't get rid of the debt in bankruptcy court.

The University

The financial aid office often has the best picture of what students like Ms. Munna are up abbgainst, because they see their families' financial situation splayed out on the federal financial aid form. So why didn't N.Y.U. tell Ms. Munna that she simply did not belong there once she'd passed, say, $60,000 in total debt?

"Had somebody called me and said, 'Do you have a clue where this is all headed?', it would have been a slap in the face, but a slap in the face that I needed," said Cathryn Munna. "When financial aid told her that they could get her $2,000 more in loans, they should have been saying 'You are in deep doo-doo, little girl.' "

That's not a role that the university wants to take on, though. "I think that would be completely inappropriate," said Randall Deike, the vice president of enrollment management for N.Y.U., who oversees admissions and financial aid. "Some families will do whatever it takes for their son or daughter to be not just at N.Y.U., but any first-choice college. I'm not sure that's always the best decision, but it's one that they really have to make themselves."

The complications here go well beyond the propriety of suggesting that a student enroll elsewhere. Colleges don't always know how much debt its students are taking on, which makes it hard to offer good counsel. (N.Y.U. does appear to have known about all of Ms. Munna's loans, though.)

Then there's a branding problem. Urging students to attend a cheaper college or leave altogether suggests a lack of confidence about the earning potential of alumni. Nobody wants to admit that. And once a university starts encouraging middle-class students to go elsewhere, it must fill its classes with more children of the wealthy and a much smaller number of low-income students to whom it can afford to offer enormous scholarships. That's hardly an ideal outcome either.

Finally, universities exist to enroll students, not turn them away. "Aid administrators want to keep their jobs," said Joan H. Crissman, interim president and chief executive of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators. "If the administration finds out that you're encouraging students to go to a cheaper school just because you don't think they can handle the debt load, I don't think that's going to mesh very well."

That doesn't change the fact, however, that the financial aid office is still in the best position to see trouble coming and do something to stop it. University officials should take on this obligation, even if they aren't willing to advise students to attend another college.

Instead, they might deputize a gang of M.B.A. candidates or alumni in the financial services industry to offer free financial planning to admitted students and their families. Mr. Deike also noted that the bigger problem here is one of financial literacy. Fine. He and N.Y.U. are in a great position to solve for that by making every financial aid recipient take a financial planning class. The students could even use their families as the case study.

The Options

The balance on Cortney Munna's loans is about $97,000, including all of her federal loans and her private debt from Sallie Mae and Citibank. What are her options for digging out?

Her mother can't help without selling her bed and breakfast, and then she'd have no home. She could take her daughter in, but there aren't good ways for her to earn a living in Alexandria Bay, in upstate New York.

Cortney could move someplace cheaper than her current home city of San Francisco, but she worries about her job prospects, even with her N.Y.U. diploma.

She recently received a raise and now makes $22 an hour working for a photographer. It's the highest salary she's earned since graduating with an interdisciplinary degree in religious and women's studies. After taxes, she takes home about $2,300 a month. Rent runs $750, and the full monthly payments on her student loans would be about $700 if they weren't being deferred, which would not leave a lot left over.

She may finally be earning enough to barely scrape by while still making the payments for the first time since she graduated, at least until interest rates rise and the payments on her loans with variable rates spiral up. And while her job requires her to work nights and weekends sometimes, she probably should find a flexible second job to try to bring in a few extra hundred dollars a month.

Ms. Munna understands this tough love, buck up, buckle-down advice. But she also badly wants to call a do-over on the last decade. "I don't want to spend the rest of my life slaving away to pay for an education I got for four years and would happily give back," she said. "It feels wrong to me."



High schools graduate useless idiots and a good number of them stay that way even after a 100k+ education. Placing the blame is easy...wonder who is paying the bill.
How exactly am I afraid of educating myself? Are you educated?
Tiki
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6/2/2010 11:35am
Yall sound souper scmart! And have swown even bestest.
Racer92
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6/2/2010 12:38pm
WTF does going to college have to do with being educated?

You can learn all you want with zero assistance from anyone.
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SteveS
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6/2/2010 1:00pm
Sounds like you're advocating homeschooling.
Tiki
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6/2/2010 1:02pm
SteveS wrote:
Sounds like you're advocating homeschooling.
heey I waz houm scooled
Racer92
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6/2/2010 2:03pm
SteveS wrote:
Sounds like you're advocating homeschooling.
Not at all, but what I am saying if you want knowledge you dont hafta have it spoon fed to you.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

One day a young man approached Socrates and said, "O great Socrates, I come to you for knowledge. You are wisest man in our land and I desire to know all you know.'

The philosopher asked the young man, "Do you really want to learn?"

"Yes, very much." The man said.

Socrates then told him, "Meet me tomorrow at dawn at the lake for your first lesson."

The next day at sun-up, the young man walked to the shore of the lake where Socrates stood waiting.

"Are you ready now? asked the wise old man. "Yes" answered the anxious pupil.

Socrates waded into the water, motioning the young man to follow. Confused, the student walked in behind him til they were waist deep in water.

Suddenly, Socrates grabbed the man by the hair and dunked him under the water, and held him down as he thrashed about.

When he let the young man up for air, Socrates asked him again what he wanted. "Knowledge, O great one" he sputtered.

Socrates forced him under the water again, only this time for longer. He held him so long the young man's efforts eventually weakened. Just as it seemed the student was about to drown Socrates pulled him up as he gasped and coughed.

"You old fool, what are you trying to do, kill me? I came to you for wisdom and you try to drown me?" asked the bewildered man.

"You wanted to learn, didn't you?" asked Socrates.

"Yes, of course" he replied.

"Well tell me then, that last second before I finally let you up from the water, what was the most important thing in the world to you?"

The young man answered, "What do you think? A breath of air !"

Socrates then said, "when you want knowledge as bad as you wanted that breath of air, you won't need me to teach it to you."

P
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6/2/2010 3:41pm
You can blame it on the school, but I don't think that is the problem. Everyone is so wrapped up in going to a school with a big name and a big rep when the truth is the student will get out of the University what they put in, especially in undergrad. If you bust your ass and know your shit, you will still be able to compete with the kid that went Stanford or Yale or whatever school you want to insert. How do I know??? I've seen it happen time and time again.

Either way, she got caught up in the hype. I'm sure that she could have gone to a less expensive school and gotten pretty much the same, or better, education. Also, if you go to a less prestigious school that is near one of the more prestigious schools there just might be programs that allow you to take some classes at the other school.

At the grad level where you went seems to carry more weight.



P

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