Education

Why Is College in America So Expensive?

Why Is College in America So Expensive?

Today, the U.S. spends more on college than almost any other country, according to the 2018 Education at a Glance report, released by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

All told, including the contributions of individual families and the government (in the form of student loans, grants, and other assistance), Americans spend about $30,000 per student a year—nearly twice as much as the average developed country. “The U.S. is in a class of its own,” says Andreas Schleicher, the director for education and skills at the OECD, and he does not mean this as a compliment. “Spending per student is exorbitant, and it has virtually no relationship to the value that students could possibly get in exchange.”

Only one country spends more per student, and that country is Luxembourg—where tuition is nevertheless free for students, thanks to government outlays. In fact, a third of developed countries offer college free of charge to their citizens. (And another third keep tuition very cheap—less than $2,400 a year.) The farther away you get from the United States, the more baffling it looks.

The Forgotten Tale of How a Black Psychiatrist Helped Make β€˜Sesame Street’

Chester Pierce: The Forgotten Tale of How a Black Psychiatrist Helped Make β€˜Sesame Street’

Each show opened with scenes of children of different races playing together. Episodes featured a strong black male role model (Gordon, a school teacher), his supportive wife, Susan (who later is offered the opportunity to develop a profession of her own), a good- hearted white storekeeper (Mr. Hooper) and more. Within a few years, Hispanic characters moved into the neighborhood as well.

As Loretta Moore Long (who played Susan) later reflected: ‘“Sesame Street’ has incorporated a hidden curriculum … that seeks to bolster the Black and minority child’s self-respect and to portray the multi-ethnic, multi-cultural world into which both majority and minority child are growing.” The radical nature of this “hidden curriculum” did not go unnoticed.

In May 1970, a state commission in Mississippi voted to not air the show on the state’s newly launched public TV network: the people of Mississippi, said some legislators, were not yet “ready” to see a show with such an interracial cast. The state commission reversed its decision after the originally secret vote made national news — though it took 22 days to decide to do so. FELT Inside Bert and Ernie’s Brief Moment of Gay Liberation Tim Teeman “Sesame Street” would go on to become the most successful children’s show of all time.

Over time, though, the radical mental health agenda fueling its creation was largely forgotten. Later critics would instead increasingly suggest that the show, as a straightforward experiment in early education, benefited white middle-income children more than its primary target audience of disadvantaged minorities, and in that sense had arguably partly misfired.

School Districts Proposing To Override Tax Cap

A handful of school districts will need 60 plus percent of the vote today, if they wish to override the tax cap to increase spending above and beyond what is normally allowed under state law. Note, this map is missing data for two Adirondack school districts, and does not include school districts who budgets are not under consideration today, such as New York City, Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse.

Data Source: NYSED.gov: New York State Property Tax Report Card. http://www.p12.nysed.gov/mgtserv/propertytax/