The Hidden Cost Of Higher Education
The Article: Dismantling The Middle Class: The Hidden Cost Of Higher Education by Amanda Richards in The Speckled Axe.
The Text: For decades, education was viewed as the most important step on the path out of poverty and the golden ticket to class mobility in American society. While this may still ring true for those managing on a hand-to-mouth existence, the role of education in securing the continued upward economic trajectory of the middle class is much less certain. Indeed, with rising costs of tuition and cuts in student aid, the debt burden of a college education may be enough to break the middle class.
The American middle class, historically admired for its size and diversity, owes much of its existence to the public universities that made access to higher education available to everyone regardless of socio-economic background. According to Christopher Newfield in his book Unmaking the Public University: The Forty-Year Assault on the Middle Class: āThere has never been a middle class in history that was not created by public infrastructureāby facilities offering rough equity regardless of personal means. As the middle class cuts public education, it cuts the conditions of its own existence.ā
Since 1980, college tuition has more than doubled. Potential students often must seek outside funding in addition to scholarships, financial aid and parental support. Students used to put themselves through college on part-time jobs, but with tuition averaging roughly $21,000 a year and rising faster than inflation, the prospect of doing it alone is not an option for most ā and the alternative has some pretty significant setbacks.