Jason Kincaid of Techcrunch.com reports on the offer of free Amazon Prime–essentially, free shipping on Amazon.com purchases–for college students.
Posts Tagged ‘College Life’
Amazon offers free Amazon Prime to college students
Monday, August 30th, 2010Students turn to online roommate matching service
Monday, August 16th, 2010Isaac Arnsdorf, a writer for the Wall Street Journal, reports students are turning to social media and other online tools to get information about their future roommates or to find a compatible match.
Advice on the transition from applicant to college student
Thursday, August 12th, 2010Jacques Steinberg, contributor to the New York Times, interviews college deans and counselors for advice on making the transition to college. Steinberg also posts useful advice from a current college sophomore.
The coveted but elusive internship
Thursday, July 15th, 2010New York Times writer Hilary Stout reports on the difficulties of finding a summer internship. ”Between the sputtering economy and updated federal guidelines governing the employment of unpaid interns, many students have had a tougher time than they anticipated in landing resume-enhancing experience this summer.”
Effects of recession on college freshmen
Thursday, February 25th, 2010New York Times writer Kate Zernike reports on the annual poll of college freshman and the effects of the recession. The annual survey showed the effects of the recession in a number of areas:
- Two-thirds of college freshman are concerned about their ability to pay for college.
- The percentage of freshman taking out loans is 53.3%, the highest in nine years.
- Most students chose their college because of better financial aid or felt the graduates from that college received better job offers.
- Students will most likely graduate with a larger debt burden.
- Students choosing a career in business dropped to 12.1%, the lowest since 1976.
Where are the opportunities this summer?
Thursday, July 16th, 2009New York Times writer Alex Williams writes of the difficulties facing college students as they plan their summer. Summer jobs are scarce, unpaid internships are scarce as well as not financially feasible, and parents are not as able to finance the summer trips.
The many implications of the financial crisis
Thursday, May 14th, 2009College counselor Scott White has the following comments about a New York Times article entitled “Tough Times Strain Colleges Rich and Poor”.
There are going to be some changes affecting students and colleges, especially if these economic conditions persist for more than one admissions cycle:
1) Public colleges, especially inexpensive ones, will be flocked with huge numbers of applications. Many will rise in ratings, due to astronomically higher selectivity. Ironically, this will coincide with substantial budget cuts which will reduce the actual quality of instruction with larger classes, program cuts and deferred maintenance. Many flagship universities will be forced to abandon their traditional mission of admitting and educating a wide range of students as many previously qualified students will be turned away. There will be more and more pressure to admit higher paying out of state students for the tuition they bring in. At many, there will be (quietly) lower admissions standards for out-of-state students, something which spark outrage when some state senator’s child is denied admission when lower qualified out-of-state students are admitted.
2) What we all feared when “need aware” admissions began will start to become a reality. More and more colleges will apply different admissions standards for those applying for aid than those who do not. Need aware admissions will apply, for many, not just for those in the margins of the academic pool or those with very high need. Some extremely strong students in the pool with high need will be denied as well as some students with average need who are in the middle of the pool.
3) Many tuition driven schools will begin to falter. There will be more college closings than ever before, more mergers, more changes in missions, more questionable marketing techniques and admissions actions.
4) At private colleges, the perfect storm of fewer applications, more students needing aid and those seeking aid having higher need, dramatic devaluation of endowments, huge pressures to keep costs low, and dramatically higher costs for many goods and services will put economic pressures that will be greater than many have ever seen before. Many projects will be cancelled or deferred, priorities re-examined and cost cutting will be the mantra of college presidents.
5) Many private colleges will open their doors in the fall with empty dorm rooms, insufficient revenue to cover costs, much larger classes, and major faculty upheaval as personnel costs are brought down.
6) Public colleges will, while seeing dramatically higher demand, be slashing services. More adjuncts will be teaching classes, athletic teams will be cut, classes will be much larger, programs will be cut and everything from college radio stations to cleaning services will see smaller budgets.
Not everything will be bad for all colleges. Those with large endowments will weather the storm and even thrive as they will be able to attract and fund an ever more talented student body. Many colleges will begin to do what they should have done many years ago: order their priorities. Not all colleges can be all things to all students. Not all college can have state-of-the-art athletic, arts and science facilities. Many college will need to focus on strengthening what they do best. Many colleges will need to step out of the merit scholarship rat race in order to provide need based aid to their students. Students, like many of their parents, may have to forgo some of the amenities that they have come to expect at colleges.
From the student and parent point of view, many will have to drastically change their plans, assumptions, priorities and dreams. As a middle income parent of a high school senior (with two younger children), the prospect of saying to my child that she should apply only to colleges which are the best fit and that we will find a way to pay for it, is changing each day. More and more uncomfortable discussions of what might have to be, in response to financial realities, are taking place. At every income level, these discussion are becoming more and more common.
From the consumer end, the perfect storm of rising admissions standards and increasing costs at public colleges, less financial aid from private colleges and a drying up of credit for student loans will force many unpleasant choices in the months ahead.
Kids and money
Friday, November 14th, 2008Kiplinger’s offers advice on how to educate kids about money, including recommendations about credit cards in college and beyond.
Men: the new minority
Friday, October 24th, 2008Blast Magazine reports that many colleges are now seeking out men in order to bring the gender balance on campus closer to 50-50. Take Dickinson College: “[Their] website features proportionally more pictures of men and athletics. They highlight their new physics, computer science and math buildings, and they started an international business program with the intent of appealing to potential male recruits.”
Colleges look at iPods as useful tools
Friday, October 10th, 2008The New York Times examines how colleges are beginning to look at internet-enabled iPods, iPhones, and the like as potentially useful tools–for sending messages, sharing campus information like menus and bus schedules, and even enabling students to vote in realtime class surveys. Of course, concerns about students goofing off in class remain.