Monday 5 September 2011

The Edupunks' Guide: How to Do Research Online


It’s the best of times and the worst of times to be a learner. College tuition has doubled in the past decade, while the options for learning online and independently keep expanding. Anya Kamenetz's new free ebook The Edupunks’ Guide is all about the many paths that learners are taking in this new world, and we're running excerpts from the book all week. We're also asking GOOD readers to doodle your learning journey and submit the result by Sunday, September 11.
There’s been a revolution in the way people spread knowledge. Sharing information openly over the Internet is way cheaper than purchasing it commercially in dead-tree format, and often the learning that happens this way is faster, more up-to-date, and more relevant to our immediate needs. A simple example is learning to make pizza. A few years ago, you may have had to take a class or at least buy a cookbook. Today you can put “how to make a pizza” into YouTube and within minutes, you’re watching a video that shows you how to fling the dough!

How to Become Part of a Network

The Edupunks' Guide: How to Become Part of a Network
It’s the best of times and the worst of times to be a learner. College tuition has doubled in the past decade, while the options for learning online and independently keep expanding. Anya Kamenetz's new free ebook The Edupunks’ Guide and her free online course are all about the many paths that learners are taking in this new world, and we've been running excerpts from the book all week. We're also asking GOOD readers to doodle your learning journey and submit the result by Sunday, September 11. See all Edupunks excerpts here.
A diploma is the final step in a traditional education, but in the DIY world, credit comes from the reputation you build by doing good work and demonstrating it to others in a community. The rules of this world are informal and evolving, but joining and demonstrating value to a network is not optional for success in the 21st century. Here's a guide to becoming a valued part of a network. source

Ceiling for Tuition Hikes


Middlebury College's president, Ronald D. Liebowitz, wants to take away some of his own flexibility. Starting this year, under a plan that Middlebury's board is expected to approve, the college will plan its budgets each year by capping its "comprehensive fee" -- the equivalent of tuition, room and board at other private colleges -- at an upward limit of 1 percentage point above the Consumer Price Index.

One percentage point above inflation might not seem like much to celebrate for students and parents facing the bills, especially at institutions like Middlebury, where charges top $50,000. But if Middlebury sticks to its policy, it could result in a slowing of increases that have typically run well above the inflation rate at such colleges.
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College Tuition Will Not Stop Rising


DINO GRANDONI AUG 16, 2011968 ViewsComments (7)
Here's a chart that helps explain why the value of a college degree has been so hotly debated.  Moody's, in a study (PDF) on student lending, has found that tuition costs have more than doubled since 2000. Inflation in the price of tuition has outpaced the inflation rate for all goods, as well as those specifically of housing, energy, and health care (yes, even health care) for two decades. In other words, since 1990 college has become much more expensive relatively to most of the other essential goods and services Americans consume, which has fueled critics like PayPal founder Peter Thiel and hedge fund manager James Altucher who argue that schools are sending their graduates into a tough job market saddled with debt they will have a difficult time repaying. Even Moody's report says that "Fears of a bubble in educational spending are not without merit."

Putting a Limit on Tuition Increases


Everyone complains about the steep and seemingly unending rise in tuition. Now, one college is responding — in a modest way.
As the article points out, “one percentage point above inflation might not seem like much to celebrate,” but it could be a first step toward reducing the rate of increase, which often exceeds the inflation rate by several percentage points. Last year, the article said, the average increase for private four-year colleges was 4.4 percent, while there was no inflation at all. 
 source