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    Obama decries rising cost of college education

    ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) โ€” President Barack Obama called Friday for an overhaul of the higher education financial aid system, warning that colleges and universities that fail to control spiraling tuition costs could lose federal funds.

    The election year proposal was also a political appeal to young people and working families, two important voting blocs for Obama. But the initiative faces long odds in Congress, which must approve nearly all aspects of the president's plan.

    Speaking to students at the University of Michigan, Obama said he was "putting colleges on notice" that the era of unabated tuition hikes is over.

    "You can't assume that you'll just jack up tuition every single year. If you can't stop tuition from going up, then the funding you get from taxpayers each year will go down," Obama said on the final stop of a three-day post-State of the Union trip to promote components of his economic agenda.

    Obama told the largely supportive student audience that the nation's economic future depended on making sure every American can afford a world-class education.

    "In the coming decade, 60 percent of new jobs will require more than a high school diploma," he said. "Higher education is not a luxury. It's an economic imperative that every family in America should be able to afford."

    The president first announced the outlines of the financial aid proposal during Tuesday's State of the Union address. His plan targets what is known as "campus based" aid given to colleges to distribute in areas such as Perkins loans or in work study programs. Of the $142 billion in federal grants and loans distributed in the last school year, about $3 billion went to these programs. His plan calls for increasing that type of aid to $10 billion annually.

    He also wants to create a "Race to the Top" competition in higher education similar to the one his administration used on K-12 to encourage states to better use higher education dollars in exchange for $1 billion in prize dollars. A second competition called "First in the World" would encourage innovation to boost productivity on campuses.

    Obama is also pushing for the creation of new tools to allow students to determine which colleges and universities have the best value.

    Some in the higher education community are nervous that the Obama administration could be setting a new precedent in the federal government's role in controlling the rising costs of college. Following the speech, Molly Corbett Broad, president of the American Council on Education, issued a statement saying there's concern that the proposal would "move decision-making in higher education from college campuses to Washington, D.C."

    Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., a former education secretary, said the autonomy of U.S. higher education is what makes it the best in the world, and he's questioned whether Obama can enforce any plan that shifts federal aid away from colleges and universities without hurting students.

    "It's hard to do without hurting students, and it's not appropriate to do," Alexander said. "The federal government has no business doing this."

    But Obama education secretary, Arne Duncan, said Friday that institutions of higher learning should get federal dollars based in part on their performance.

    "Historically, we've funded universities whether or not they've done a good job of graduating people, whether or not they've done a good job of keeping down tuition," Duncan said on MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

    Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the ranking member of the House Education and Workforce Committee, said there is bipartisan concern in Congress about the rising costs of college, and he's hopeful the president's plan will open up a dialogue about the problem. Some Republicans in the past, including Rep. Buck McKeon, R-Calif., have offered proposals similar to the president's.

    The administration has already taken a series of steps to expand the availability of grants and loans and to make loans easier to pay back. During the State of the Union, Obama spelled out other proposals to make college more affordable, such as extending a tuition tax break and asking Congress to keep loan interest rates from doubling in July.

    His administration has also targeted career college programs โ€” primarily at for-profit institutions โ€” with high loan default rates among graduates over multiple years by taking away their ability to participate in such programs.

    But until now, the administration has done little to turn its attention to the rising cost of tuition at traditional colleges and universities.

    The average in-state tuition and fees at four-year public colleges last fall rose 8.3 percent and, with room and board, now exceed $17,000 a year, according to the College Board. Rising tuition costs have been blamed on a variety of factors, including a decline in state dollars, an over-reliance on federal student loan dollars and competition for the best facilities and professors.

    ___

    Hefling reported from Washington.

     
    • JanetK  •  Simi Valley, California  •  26 days ago
      Why does a book cost $150?
    • John  •  Fort Worth, Texas  •  26 days ago
      If you subsidize something, the cost will rise. It is that simple.
    • Edmond Ross  •  Irvine, California  •  27 days ago
      "Obama decries rising cost of college education"
      American population decries rising cost of food and energy.
      If fact, economically, the only thing that is going down
      is the purchasing power and value of the American dollar.
    • Suzanne M  •  Irvine, California  •  26 days ago
      Got a couple of questions for people to think about:
      (1) Why are there more administrators than teachers in the Calif Stat Univ system? I wonder about other university systems
      (2) Why are you gettting a "degree" in a field that doesn't have jobs, and paying for it with student loans you "know" you can't repay?
    • zxcvzxcv  •  26 days ago
      tuition and health care increases of the past couple decades are unjustifiable
    • robertw  •  26 days ago
      The only thing that has higher yearly cost increases than education is health care.
    • BnMeAintEz  •  Stockton, California  •  27 days ago
      what they need to cut is how much the deans at the colleges...300k + a year....not necessary....but they want to cut classes, teachers, and raise prices for students...something is wrong with that situation.....
    • Bourbon  •  26 days ago
      Plumbers will make more than most of the graduates of second rate colleges.
    • the 44th bestest prez, ev ...  •  27 days ago
      it's like the fannie/freddie thing- everyone gets a loan so colleges can charge what they want. the only thing different is that the borrowers can't default if they ever want to see a tax refund! they will get their money and they don't care what the college charges, not their problem.
    • Morpheous  •  Fort Worth, Texas  •  14 days ago
      Student loans, grants, government support, research funding all plentiful and easy to get plus government and social pressure for everyone to go to college. There's no incentive for colleges to be cost efficient.
    • Lyle  •  Yakima, Washington  •  26 days ago
      Stop educating non citizens free.
    • ED  •  26 days ago
      You can lower the costs of an education by not requiring all those worthless block classes. How may of us had to take those pass/fail music appreciation classes or art history.just for the credit hours. Don't even start on the football coaches million dollar salaries.
    • alexnlulu  •  Ephrata, Washington  •  26 days ago
      WHAT JOBS???????
    • John  •  Woburn, Massachusetts  •  26 days ago
      Perhaps Obama would like to discuss the common practice at public universities of hiring politically connected hacks to six-figure, do-nothing jobs, and the effect this has on tuition rates.

      I'm thinking in particular of the University of Chicago Medical Center hiring Michelle Obama as "Diversity Coordinator", at $360,000 / year, on the very day Barack was sworn in as senator, no less. This job was so vital to the Medical School's mission that they never bothered to replace Michelle Obama when she quit.
    • Jim  •  26 days ago
      Must be an election year.
    • John  •  Liberty, New York  •  26 days ago
      Why don't he make them teach MATH, SCIENCE, & ENGLISH, & drop all the other political correct #$%$ courses.....
    • Jahudi  •  26 days ago
      I decry the rising cost of gas.
    • JohnG  •  26 days ago
      Lets start by eliminating tenure and full professors who 'teach' one class a week. The amount of waste at public universities is criminal.
    • Have a thought!  •  Miami, Florida  •  13 days ago
      To bad they don't consider "quality" of education important. As a professor I can lower the standards and pass every student. The school can double up the class size, get rid of labs and use out of date teaching material to drop cost. The schools could even drop salary of professors. However, considering what what we (professors) could make in industry with our advance degrees how could schools hope to get anyone qualified to teach paying them what a Mcdonald's supervisor with only a high school degree makes?

      You would think after the mess they (politicians) made with "No Child Left Behind" they would know better than to try simple, quick fixes with education. All that does is makes it worse. To bad politicians can't see the fundamental flaw of the stupid stuff they are doing. Must be the poor college education they got when they went to school.
    • chris  •  Memphis, Tennessee  •  14 days ago
      This guy will do anything to try to get votes. There is a simple way to bring costs down... bring the value of the dollar up. We can achieve this by tackling the out of control spending that has gone on since this guy was elected.
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