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10 votes
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The dollars and sense of free college - Georgetown University analysis of Biden's free college plan finds that it pays for itself within a decade
11 votes -
“I feel that the future I’ve been working towards my whole life is gone now” — What United States college students have to say about the coronavirus
15 votes -
Edinburgh Philosophy – Voices on Hume
3 votes -
Here’s how Cornell kept low covid-19 rates on campus
5 votes -
College newspaper reporters are the journalism heroes for the pandemic era
5 votes -
Is the University of Edinburgh right to rename its David Hume Tower?
9 votes -
Are illegal strikes justified?
This question is inspired by the university of Michigan's grad student union's announcement that it will strike this week. As noted in the university's response Michigan state law prohibits state...
This question is inspired by the university of Michigan's grad student union's announcement that it will strike this week. As noted in the university's response Michigan state law prohibits state employees from striking and GEO's contract with UofM (signed in April) has a clause that prohibits work stoppages.
Are strikes performed in violation of the law (state or otherwise) or a contract justified? Why or why not?
22 votes -
GWU investigating whether White professor invented her Black identity
7 votes -
A math problem stumped experts for fifty years. This grad student from Maine solved it in days
19 votes -
How men’s rights groups helped rewrite regulations on campus rape
6 votes -
National trends in grade inflation, American colleges and universities
15 votes -
US Justice Department says Yale discriminates against Asian, white applicants
10 votes -
Thoughts on a management information systems degree?
i'm currently on the path to receive a BS in business administration management information systems concentration from a four year state school. i was accepted to my major near the end of this...
i'm currently on the path to receive a BS in business administration management information systems concentration from a four year state school. i was accepted to my major near the end of this spring. my university also has a data analytics minor that i am heavily considering.
once i am done with summer classes i plan to really dive deeper into excel and ease into learning sql b/c that will help in lots of MIS contexts it seems.
i read online that MIS is a great degree that can lead into system admin, database admin, network admin, or business/it/system analyst roles. id find any of these careers interesting so at this point in time i feel on the right path. most importantly i just want to a job that will allow me to live a comfortable life, ya know?
i have never really met anyone that has an MIS degree before so i have no idea what the job market is actually like for degree holders beyond clickbait articles that say how great it is. if you have an mis degree, what is your experience with it and what kind of role are you working? would you recommend this degree to someone else? what skills do you recommend most for hire-ability? id assume this is area specific, but i live in the PNW and live near an area with a strong biz/tech scene and lots of govt opportunities.
i was recently speaking with some CS majors and they were talking about how MIS is a garbage non-technical degree that isnt good for much. obviously CS is a harder more technical degree that can result in higher salary but i feel they were just trying to put my down for pursuing what they saw as a lesser degree, but nonetheless it put a sense of fear into me about my potential career opportunities.
i just need some guidance and would like to hear your experience.
thank you
7 votes -
Stanford cuts eleven sports from their varsity program
5 votes -
Researchers at Cornell University concluded that an online semester would result in more COVID-19
16 votes -
Lurching toward Fall, disaster on the horizon
10 votes -
Higher ed: Enough already
17 votes -
I just made my last ever student loan payment!
I'm throwing myself a little party here -- digital drinks on me! Yes, I know my loans weren't accruing interest on account of COVID-19, but long before that all started I'd been aggressively...
I'm throwing myself a little party here -- digital drinks on me!
Yes, I know my loans weren't accruing interest on account of COVID-19, but long before that all started I'd been aggressively paying them down because I wanted them GONE. And now they ARE! (Or, they will be once the payment clears, which for some unknown reason takes my loan servicer like two full weeks).
The quarantine actually helped me accelerate payments. I rolled over what I was saving in gas money and not eating out into my loan payments. Also, as a teacher I only get paid during the school year, but I have the option to reduce my regular paychecks and roll the difference into a lump sum that gets paid out at the beginning of the summer. I choose this option so that my budgeting is consistent year-round (rather than me having to squirrel away my own nest egg for the summer from my other paychecks). The payoff amount on my loan would have been done around August had I kept with my regular schedule of payments, so I went ahead and treated myself to making the final payment in full, now, as I had the money for it upfront.
I cannot tell you how good it feels to finally be free of them. I paid off my undergrad loans in under 10 years and felt super proud of myself, only to immediately have to turn around and start the process all over again for grad school. Months after I finished my undergrad loan payments I was again accepting tens of thousands of dollars in debt so that I could get a master's degree to qualify myself for a job that I'd already been doing for years. It was not a great feeling, nor something I was very happy about, but you do what you have to do, right?
BUT NOW IT'S OVER. NO MORE STUDENT LOANS. I'VE WON THAT AMERICAN MILLENNIAL BOSS FIGHT.
It honestly feels like I just got a big raise, as, come August, once my timeline for paying the loans is done, all the money that I was putting towards them is now mine to do whatever I want with. I'm not saying this to gloat (and I know that I'm financially very privileged even in light of my debt), but simply because I'm reveling in the feeling of being out from under the suffocating thumb of a difficult financial pressure, and it feels wonderful.
EDIT: If anyone's wanting to join in my festivities remotely, participating is easy! All you need to do is pour yourself a tasty drink of your choosing, grab a delicious snack you love, and throw Carly Rae Jepsen's discography on shuffle.
43 votes -
Colleges face student lawsuits seeking refunds after coronavirus closures
12 votes -
Education without loans
5 votes -
The coming disruption - Scott Galloway predicts a handful of elite universities and tech companies will soon monopolize higher education
6 votes -
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sues Betsy DeVos over “reprehensible” new sexual assault rules
5 votes -
California police used military surveillance tech at grad student strike
11 votes -
How a leftist cartoonist’s college campus drawing nearly became a far-right meme
6 votes -
Why do so few people major in computer science?
15 votes -
Biden’s free-college plan is a solution in search of a problem
6 votes -
Small colleges were already on the brink. Now, coronavirus threatens their existence.
4 votes -
Joe Biden adopts part of a tuition-free public college proposal as a nod to US progressives
10 votes -
Coronavirus prompts Harvard, MIT to send students home
5 votes -
Cost matters: Why Lambda School should have a lower success rate than college
3 votes -
Professor loses landmark legal battle after claiming it’s ‘free speech’ to deliberately misgender trans students
23 votes -
Demoted and placed on probation
5 votes -
Judge rules that student loan debt is dischargeable in bankruptcy
18 votes -
FTC settlement with for-profit University of Phoenix over deceptive advertising will require them to cancel $141M in student debt and pay $50M to former students
14 votes -
ICE creates fake US university, lures international students, collects money, arrests them
21 votes -
Scandinavia is famous for its liveable cities, but a new university course in Nordic urban planning has raised questions about replicating the region's approach elsewhere
8 votes -
One in five University of Otago, New Zealand medical students to be denied graduation after falsifying overseas placement records
6 votes -
In China, surge in students informing on professors
8 votes -
Student tracking, secret scores: How college admissions offices rank prospects before they apply
15 votes -
An unseen victim of the college admissions scandal: The high school tennis champion aced out by a billionaire family
9 votes -
The hedge fund billionaire’s guide to buying your kids a better shot at not just one elite college, but lots of them
11 votes -
What college admissions offices really want - Elite schools say they’re looking for academic excellence and diversity. But their thirst for tuition revenue means that wealth trumps all
10 votes -
It’s time for Black athletes to leave White colleges
7 votes -
Jerry Falwell’s aides break their silence - Current and former Liberty University officials describe a culture of fear and self-dealing at the largest Christian college in the world
10 votes -
US Congress promised student borrowers a break. Education dept. rejected 99% of them.
20 votes -
Flawed algorithms are grading millions of students’ essays
13 votes -
China orders halt to history tests for students seeking credits for US university courses
9 votes -
Alaska defunds scholarships for thousands of university students ahead of fall semester
18 votes -
College financial-aid loophole: Wealthy US parents transfer guardianship of their teens to get aid
15 votes