The ROI of college education is already very questionable. If you truly wanted to learn you can do that for free or relatively cheap - there is an abundance of resources out there and more options open up all the time. There is still value in the campus experience though it depends on the student to make the most of it - avail the full extent of the resources at their disposal.
When classes have to go online and the tuition payments do not adjust to reflect the diminished experience for the student, the question of value comes front and center. What other options do students have that are fair to them, fosters their learning and mental growth and does not cost quite as much. Clearly, everyone who is impacted by college going online is thinking exactly these things and they are going to make decisions about next year soon.
When classes have to go online and the tuition payments do not adjust to reflect the diminished experience for the student, the question of value comes front and center. What other options do students have that are fair to them, fosters their learning and mental growth and does not cost quite as much. Clearly, everyone who is impacted by college going online is thinking exactly these things and they are going to make decisions about next year soon.
Art & Science Group polled 1,171 high school seniors from April 21-24 and found that one in six students who'd planned to attend four-year colleges full-time no longer plan to do so.
Richard Hesel, a principal with the group, said further numbers showed that 60 percent of students have no interest in online education. And two-thirds of students think they should pay "much less" for tuition if the programs they have been shifted to in recent weeks should continue in the next academic year.
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