Posted on 05/22/2015 12:03:53 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
A brilliant young man has single-handedly solved the problem of college loan debt. It was a daringly simple maneuver!
Tennessee high school senior Ronald Nelson, Jr., who is a National Merit Scholar, star athlete, sax player, SAT high scorer, and student body president, turned down acceptances from eight Ivy League colleges and will instead attend the University of Alabama this fall.
Young Ronald seems to have absorbed at an early age a lesson that eludes many youths (and those who have long since left youth behind): avoid going head over heels in debt.
This is not to denigrate an Ivy League education or the great universities that have flourished in the United States since colonial times. If there is one thing I believe worth sacrificing for, it is an education. But tuition has reached such astronomical heights today that families can mortgage the house and live on bread and water, and still the sacrifice is not sufficient.
The Nelson family did not take lightly the matter of Ronalds college choice. The Nelsons gave serious consideration to what college debt would do to the familys financesand to Ronalds future.
"With people being in debt for years and years, it wasn't a burden that Ronald wanted to take on and it wasn't a burden that we wanted to deal with for a number of years after undergraduate," Ronald Nelson, Sr., an engineer at the Federal Aviation Administration, told Business Insider. We can put that money away and spend it on his medical school, or any other graduate school." Ronalds mother, Sandra, is in management at FedEx, which is headquartered in Memphis.
"I've had a lot of people questioning me 'Why are you doing this?' but after I explain my circumstances, they definitely understand where I'm coming from," Ronald Jr. told Business Insider.
Not quite everybody understands, however. An online outfit called Mic.com didnt get it, posting a story headlined The Student Who Got in All Eight Ivies and Didnt Go for the Most Depressing Reason. Mary Katharine Ham rightly noted that Mic.com seemed to regard Nelsons choosing Bama after sensible balancing of the family checkbook as a Shakespearean tragedy.
She perspicaciously noted further that it is just this attitude that has allowed the Ivy League schools to become prohibitively expensive: many people are willing to hock everything to go to a name brand school. And one gets the clear sense that it is the name itselfnot a superior educationwhich people find most valuable. Surely the gifted Ronald Nelson Jr. will be able to find professors eager to impart knowledge and help him advance in his studies. People are shocked that he is giving up on having the illustrious ivy-league credential.
The President and Mrs. Obama exemplify this attitude of worshiping credentials. Indeed, it often seems that the Obamas ascribe their success not to character and hard work but to having gone to the right schools. They are at the other end of the spectrum from Ronald Nelson and his family.
This was memorably driven home to me when I covered Mrs. Obama at an event in Richmond, Va., when her husband was first a candidate for the presidency. She said something I have never forgotten: after lamenting at length her and her husbands college loan burden, she said, "Barack and I had world-class educations" and that "otherwise we wouldn't be here." In the piece I wrote, I asked: Could the fragile Obama promise not have survived, say, a large state university?
The Obamas, unlike Ronald Nelson, certainly believe that to be the case. And, in truth, the Ivy League patina was probably essential in attracting a certain kind of supporter and ultimately voter when President Obama emerged on the national scene. But they paid dearly for the Ivy cachet: The Obamas reportedly lived with the burden of college loan debt of $120,000 until 2004, when he was elected to the U.S. Senate and paid off his debt after securing a $1.9 million book deal to write The Audacity of Hope.
This devotion to the existing tiered university system may be one reason why President Obamas solutions to the college loan debt problem revolve around propping up the dysfunctional system, rather than encourage actual innovation and a more efficient educational system.
The Obama administration has sought to make it easier for some to repay their college loans by tinkering with the rules to cap student payments and forgive debt after twenty years. This is a terrible policy in transferring the costs of that expensive education to hardworking taxpayersmany of whom dont have college degreesand in undermining an important message to young people: You must make good on your obligations. Repaying your debts is character building. Not repaying your debts is just the opposite.
More fundamentally, President Obama encourages name brand schools to continue to be profligate. They dont bother to cut tuition costs because they dont have to. Students take on debt increasingly assume they will never actually have to pay up, not understanding how burdensome carrying the loan could become.
If there were more Ronald Nelsons around, the Ivies would have to find ways to cut their costs. Schools would be competing on price and developing innovative ways to efficiently deliver real valueeducation, usable skills, networking support and experience. Wed be seeing the kind of innovation we witness in other, competitive sectors of the economy, rather than the same horse-and-buggy whip approach to university.
Nelsons levelheaded decision-making inspires confidence that he will be a very good physicianeven if, like many other Americans, he gets his undergrad degree from a state university.
You thought very wrong.
When the government taxes and take money from people who earned it then give that money to someone who didn’t earn it, it is socialism.
To say that he “earned” the scholarship is stretching the definition of earned. He met the government’s requirements to be given other people’s money.
Your concepts of socialism and economics appear fairly typical of what is taught in colleges today. That doesn’t make them correct.
Not all scholarships are government money, many are endowments from alumnae or industry.
What’s semi-surprising to me, as this story has been around for a few days, is that there are two questions that nobody’s asking.
1. I believe the application fee for each school is now about $200..unless it’s waived for minority applicants. That’s a lot of $$
2. The guidance counselors in his school should be fired for allowing him to apply to all of the Ivies. There job is to help him focus of which schools meet his goals, not to run an admissions lottery. Furthermore, it hurts the next student from that HS who applies to any of the Ivies...if it’s a close decision, they’ll likely reject him. It’s a well-known fact
An accurate count of the number of states in the US continues to baffle Obama.
I don’t believe the obamas had any debt to pay other then from a bribe.
I used to work with a guy that had a degree from Rensselaer. He was no smarter or more effective than the rest of us - he just had parents that could afford to send him to an elite school.
Turns out that most of what you need to know to be effective in the world is not taught in college. This guy will get just as good an education at Bama as he would at an ivy school - what he does with it depends on him. I’d much rather pay for his education than pay to provide minor league experience for some thug that knows how to run with a dead pig in his hands.
Someone somewhere impressed on me that beside an Ivy reputation, you really only need look at the size of the library for determining the quality of the university. I’d add that a conglomeration of colleges in an area also add to the size of the library.
The education you gain is not then so much from a prof as it is from your own work and research, using the resources at hand.
I took those lessons to heart. Professors tend toward fascism and socialism. They’re all tied up in the paper of their own work and egos, so, you’re basically on your own, paying through the nose-and you only have your own efforts to get your money’s worth.
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