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College costs keep climbing

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The College Board produced an interesting array of statistics that describe enrollment data, regional variations in costs, pricing patterns among students and net costs of college, after financial aid and tax benefits are taken into account.  

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But there's scant information as to why college costs keep going up year after year. A couple of charts show that appropriations from state and local governments have increased over time, but on a per-student level they're down over the past decade or so because of higher enrollments. And then there's this obscure index called the Higher Education Price Index which measures the costs of goods and services purchased by colleges and universities. Overall, the HEPI is up 22 percent between 2000-2001 and 2005-2006 compared with 14 percent for the Consumer Price Index.

But the cost of tuition and fees at public schools has soared 55 percent (35 percent on an inflation-adjusted basis) over the past five years. What's up with that?

The highest education authority also wants to know
In a recent address to the National Press Club, Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings asked essentially the same question.

"Higher education's escalating sticker price has many parents facing the tough choice -- whether to save for college or their own retirement. In the past five years alone, tuition at four-year colleges has skyrocketed by 40 percent," she said, citing numbers provided last year by the College Board. "I want to know why ... and I know other parents do, too!"

Spellings calls for revamping the financial aid system and increasing need-based aid. "But more money isn't going to make a difference if states and institutions don't do their part to keep costs in line," she said. "My daughter's college costs went up this year ... for what? And this is not unique to me. For most families, this is one of the most expensive investments we make. Yet there is little to no information on why costs are so high and what we're getting in return."

To this end, Spellings wants more transparency and accountability from higher education. "You'd never buy a house without an inspection, take a vacation without researching your destination, or these days, buy groceries without reading the nutritional label." To enhance transparency, she recommends matching government funds to schools that "collect and publicly report student learning outcomes."

Measuring performance a bureaucratic hurdle?
Performance-based aid may sound good in theory, but that proposal has caused some in the academic world to question the federal government's authority over the university system. Others say measuring student learning doesn't work well in practice. A common concern is that teachers focus too much on drilling content so students test well instead of exploring topics in ways that develop critical thinking skills.

"How do you put in place a whole federal program that objectively measures performance? I think it's impossible," says Deborah Fox, founder of Fox College Funding LLC, a national company that assists families in reducing their college expenses.

 
 
Next: "... schools are gaming their own system."
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