"Education" isn't what you think it is.Skipjack wrote:The problem is that if education is expensive and there are no loans and grants for the people, you will end with a whole lot less educated people out there. Less well educated people means less know how and that means being less competitive on the international stage.
The high prices of education are a real problem in the US.
You have a few very well educated people and a lot of really badly educated people.
Education that we see in colleges is the most absurd and stupid thing in existence. Very few people should go to college, those being the ones who work in a very specialized field (Physics, Engineering, Medical, etc).
True Education is this: Learning how to learn. That's what schools should be teaching kids. But they don't. How many people out there have you run into that you tried to explain how to walk themselves through a simple concept, only for them to just completely abandon the idea after 5 minutes?
It's easier for our schools to drill data into people's heads, then give them a test and say "well, we taught 'em!" That's why we have the problems we have today.
9 out of 10 people in society today would be better off taking 5 years reading good books by people like Dale Carnegie, David Schwartz, Ayn Rand, Seth Godin, John Bunyan, John Maxwell, etc...
As far as how expensive this specialized education is, it's expensive because they encourage every idiot and their grandmother to go by giving them GOVERNMENT LOANS.
If schools were forced to find a way to have a reasonable price because NOBODY was willing to drop $15,000 per year (and that's "cheap") on a school because they're paying out of their own pocket, trust me, it'd be a lot cheaper.