Costs For College Students On The Rise: What Can You Do?
With the price of tuition rising steadily around the United States year after year, students may want to be more cautious about where they are moving to. Students face a variety of costs of living, including accommodation, food, household bills, clothes, travel, socializing, leisure and sport, and study costs such as books, materials, and field trips for courses of study. Moving to a low-cost area could make a huge difference in the amount of loan money a student has to pay back 10, 20, and even 30 years after they finish their degree.
I was lucky. My father paid my college tuition, which was quite expensive the year I went out of state to the University of Delaware. I didn’t think about money at that time; my parents had just always paid for all the big things–school, car, rent, clothing. I paid for some things, but I never took my education seriously until I went to graduate school and paid for it myself. It was during the planning phase for graduate school that I realized life was going to become a heck of a lot more expensive and that I was going to have to borrow more money than I had ever earned in one year. So, rather than choose a college based on its reputation or alleged high quality of education, I chose a college that I could get into quickly, where I could learn what I needed to know, and where the overall cost wasn’t going to keep me in deep, dark debt forever. I went to Utah State University in Logan, Utah. Luckily I found low prices and excellent teachers who taught me what I needed to know.