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Completions per 100 students
A ratio which shows the total number of undergraduate-level completions (degrees and certificate programs of at least one year in length) per total 100 full-time equivalent undergraduates, based on total credit hours taken. It's the three-year average for 2008, 2009, and 2010, and includes all undergraduate students, not only the first-time, full-time ones. 21.4
It IS a tax. It's just not called that by leftists. Clinton learned that little trick and all Democrats after him have labeled their pet taxes as something else.
The logistics of collection of this 3% for 24 years should be interesting. The State will have to keep track of everyone who attends their colleges for any amount of time, and then figure out a way to get the percentage of their paychecks rebated back to the State. Probably not all that difficult if the student stays in Oregon, but what about if they leave Oregon.
The Title is wrong ..... when you pay for something over a 24 year term ...... nothing "Free" about it.
Are you kidding me? I don't think we should e encouraging students to go into fields where they can't make a living... just saying....
I think this is such a wrong-headed philosophy. Education is its own reward. An educated population has historically been more peaceful, giving and productive in contrast to the uneducated.
Just because you can't make money being a {insert Liberal Arts major here} doesn't mean the education has little inherent value. The ability to reason, argue intelligently, parse out facts are all very important in a more evolved society. This whole idea of using money as a measure of value is archaic.
But you didn't complete college. We have the lowest rates of students completing college in the US since New College was established in the 1600's. Those dropping out of college study (as a percentage of attendees) has sharply risen since WWII. We produce an insane amount of bachelor's degree holders that don't follow up with the completion of study. Worse, many of the students go through mediocre programs.
I'm thoroughly confused. How is a BA not a completion of a four year degree?
What happens to all those people that suffered, scrimped and took responsibility for their own education? Are they going to be getting paid back? Will their be a refund program? Dumb, stupid idea.
Are you proposing no progress be made because those who came before cannot benefit? Talk about stupid ideas.
Simple fact of the matter is: MOST ARE. I know people like to tell their kids they can amount to "anything." Yeah, ok. However, lets just wake up and see the real world. MOST people in the US aren't going to amount to much and/or be much.
The VAST majority of people (including me), aren't going to invent a better lightbulb, the newest mousetrap, or even get what most would say is a decent job. Most are going to get menial paying, menial working jobs. Its just a fact of life and people just need to learn with it.
There are only so many good paying, "respectable" jobs out there.
Then you have only yourself to blame.
I don't need to invent a better light bulb or mouse trap. If you measure your success by other people's rulers then you will never be happy.
Me? I set my goals according to what I found important in life and pursued them. I've achieved some and still have more to work on. I would rate myself as a very content person.
If you set the bar low - "MOST people aren't going to amount to much" - that is exactly where you'll be.
Be content in mediocrity? No thank you. No one has to, really.
That's a pretty wild accusation, I'm sure you have solid proof that most college graduates end up being burger flippers and toilet scrubbers
I know someone who is "toilet scrubber". Well, she started out that way. Now she owns an extremely lucrative cleaning company and commands quite a salary. She never settled for mediocrity or accepted the idea that she was "just" a toilet scrubber.
You're right. That's why we have a shortage of doctors and other professionals. Many people don't want to take on that kind of debt. All the more reason to support a program like the one in the OP.
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