Master of Ossus wrote:Nonetheless, it is an option. People transferred into and out of my college all the time--we got at least 3-6 transfer students every year in a school of only 1500. Other colleges have even less stringent transfer requirements.
Wrong. It's not
always an option. Schools that do transfers frequently have a credit and course requirement in order to jump ship. For instance, to get into the particular school of Pitt I'm going to, they require you to have 48 credits already under your belt before they even seriously give you any thought for transfer, plus several basic courses, like Intermediate Algebra. I can transfer
now because I started college with that goal in mind and have completed my transfer requirements in order to start the process, but that does absolutely nothing to someone just starting college. What happens if you are just starting college and you don't meet the transfer requirements for those colleges (something that can take a few semesters to aquire)? Kind of a problem. Doing a transfer is only an option with
considerable preplanning and work. It is not something that people just
do/
The administration obviously didn't handle the situation very well, and whether you like it or not people are punished or rewarded all the time based on how well the school's administration is performing.
Even after the fact, the school's students could easily have asked the administration to take action against those responsible--the school knows the regulations regarding its Federal funding.
And they'd do what exactly? Chances are the administration knows full well what happened before someone who wasn't there does, and if they hadn't taken any sort of action already, chances are they aren't going to, largely because proving who was involved would be a nightmare.
Like I said, if you are going to hold people accountable for the shit that a few other people do when they are not around and whom they had no connection to, then you've got alot of explaining to do about yourself. That logic is highly applicable to you and everyone here if we are going that road about some truly heinous things.
Bullshit. Hardly anyone ever drops out of school for financial reasons, since student loans are so affordable and since other schools are always an option, albeit a difficult one.
Actually, I've known plenty of people who have dropped out because they can't afford to go to college and due to the fact that their job doesn't give them enough hours to pay for it (or the catch-22, if it did give them enough hours, they'd have to drop out anyway, due to not having enough time for both).
Plus, student loans do
not fall out of trees. I just did a FASFA myself, Ossus, and it was a major pain in the ass to get, not to mention all the student loans that I completely failed to qualify for various, usually demographic or tax-related reasons (like the PELL). When it comes to student loans, there are only a few options available, and if you
still can barely afford school after the student loans are spent, you are
screwed when the next round of tuition hikes come around. Do you honestly thing that if student tuition went up 30% due to the powers-that-be doing shit that students can just keep getting more and more student loans to stay there? Somethings got to break. It's bad enough that we've got textbook manufacturers tacking on worthless "bundles" that never get used simply so they can raise the price of books by 50 bucks to a product that already costs way too much and schools raising tuition because they can get away with it.