Took
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 22, 1999
- Messages
- 1,955
I've always found it strange that so many people need student loans - or so much in loans. There are eighteen years between birth and college to save. The average student loan debt is $30k or so. That's about $1700 a year that you need to set aside to fund college.
Yes, for a lot of people, $1700 a year is impossible to come up with. But for a lot of people, it simply means making a few sacrifices. Driving a cheaper car. Taking fewer vacations. Skipping the new furniture for the living room. Going out to dinner less often. Saying "no" to expensive sports/dance/etc. And, of course the sacrifices of choosing a college you and your kid can afford - which might mean two years of community college and/or living at home.
It isn't like college costs should come as a surprise.
I agree. My parents were not rich, but between their saving some, my scholarship, and our family's somewhat frugal habits, I was able to go to a private college with NO loans or debt. I worked hard there and learned a great deal. I got a job right after college and worked for two years, saving a bit as I went along and living fairly cheaply. I did not buy a new car, have cable t.v., or spend money for new furniture, a fancy phone or computer, etc.
Then, I went to grad school on scholarship (partly earned because I got a very solid undergrad education which I took full advantage of), and I lived cheaply and within the stipend offered and took no student loans again.
I now have two advanced degrees and teach at a c.c. I earn a decent and very stable living with solid benefits. My reasonably frugal lifestyle while I was younger meant I had no debts to pay off and have a good life now.
Furthermore, I have all of the social and intellectual benefits of an excellent education and a mind ready to learn for the rest of my life.
BTW, my degrees are in English.

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