Loss Of A College Education

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A college education is an essential key to be successful out in the real world. With knowledge of this, a college education should be provided for all Americans that qualify for college admissions. After all, there are more benefits that would occur from having a college education provided to those who meet college admission requirements, such like students graduating debt free, educating the next generation, and our entire economy and our workforce seeing a significant increase respectively. In most instances around the nation, it is tragically seen that promising prospect students will tend to either decide to take out loans to pay for their tuition costs, drop out of college because they can no longer pay for their tuition, weaker employment …show more content…

According to Joanna Nesbit, "The hard part, of course, is when no college is affordable. The sad truth is that college costs have increased so much, so quickly that many middle-income folks can’t keep up". Piyush Mangukia states that "People who don't attend college miss out on several important experiences that, like income potential, have lifelong implications" (154). The loss of such promising students will not only affect their future possibilities but society as whole because they are members of the next generation working class who could have studied to improve their fields of work and innovate new breakthroughs that would benefit society. These are students that had excelled in their high school academic curriculum and or on various standardized test, such as the SAT, ACT, ASVAP, etc. According to both Michal Kuraender and Eric Grodsky, "The most important criteria for selection into competitive public and private colleges and universities are measures of prior academic achievement. These include a student's high school academic grade point average (GPA), scores on college entrance exams, and the rigor of the courses completed during high school." Joseph Soares, a sociology professor …show more content…

Likewise, when a student receives only a partial amount of their total financial need in financial aid packages, they are short of the remaining tuition costs and are then left in search of paying those costs. For instance, “gapping” is when a college offers admission without enough financial aid or “front-loading”, when a financial package offers more for freshman year than later years (Nesbit). These are two instances in which students are left with struggling to cover the remaining amount of tuition because the financial aid that was needed was not fully provided for. Without the fear of debt, students will then see college as option to further themselves in their lives and careers and will more likely attend a

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