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Colleges slash tuition, create 3 year degrees

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- A growing number of colleges are taking extreme measures to attract more students by cutting tuition or speeding up the rate at which they graduate.

While some private colleges are introducing double-digit percentage cuts in tuition or freezing prices altogether, other schools are offering three-year degree programs or four-year graduation guarantees.

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  • from money.cnn.com

In part, these schools are responding to consumers' concerns about the rising cost of college, said Tony Pals, spokesman for the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities. "These types of initiatives have been used to some degree in the past, but have become increasingly prevalent since the economic downturn -- and we expect to continue to see them spread," he said.

But colleges have their own motivations as well. By offering a more competitive price, they are ultimately hoping to attract more students -- and increase their bottom line, said Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of financial aid website Finaid.org.

"This is about boosting enrollment, local competition and improving an individual school's finances rather than any noble purpose," Kantrowitz said.

While making school more affordable for students has become more common, it's still far from a widespread trend. Many more schools continue to hike tuition, he said. Overall, tuition at private colleges has been increasing more than 4% each year for the past three years, according to the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities.

Tuition at a discount: After seeing enrollment decline for the first time in a decade, the University of Charleston, in West Virginia, cut its tuition by 22% to $19,500 per year.

In addition, Seton Hall University in New Jersey, Lincoln College in Illinois, and Pennsylvania's Cabrini College have all slashed tuition by at least 10% for the upcoming academic year.

5 colleges slashing tuition

But there's a tradeoff: "Temporary tuition cuts and freezes are usually accompanied by financial aid cuts -- so the money isn't all going back to students," Kantrowitz said.

The University of Charleston, for example, may be slashing tuition but it's also reducing the amount of financial assistance that's available to students to $10 million from $15 million.

Instead of making cuts, other schools are freezing tuition at current levels or giving students four-year tuition guarantees.

For the upcoming academic year, Burlington College in Vermont is guaranteeing it won't increase tuition for four years. Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts is also holding tuition steady -- its first tuition freeze since 1968.

"Coffeeolleges and universities cannot continue to threaten access and add to already burgeoning loan burdens for students," Mount Holyoke president Lynn Pasquerella said in a statement.

0:00 / 1:37 How to negotiate financial aid

Pals said at least 14 additional colleges have frozen tuition for the upcoming school year -- the highest number of tuition freezes on record.

Other colleges are joining forces with community colleges to increase enrollment and lower costs for students.

Baylor University in Texas, for example, is offering a pilot program this fall where students can take most of their classes at a local community college for a year or two before transferring to Baylor, where they will eventually graduate.

Texas students enrolled in the program that take 12 hours at McLennan Community College and three hours at Baylor will pay about $20,000 per year -- less than half of Baylor's $45,000 annual cost, including tuition, fees, and room and board.

A degree in four years or less: With average tuition at four-year private colleges costing $28,500 a year, according to the College Board, failing to graduate on time is a costly proposition. As a result, some colleges are reducing the time it takes to graduate or guaranteeing that students will get their degree in four years.

Beginning next year, Ashland University in Ohio is granting bachelor's degrees that can be completed in three years instead of four -- saving students an estimated $34,000 in tuition costs and giving them a year's head start in the work force.

College 101: Everything you need to know

Ohio's Baldwin-Wallace College is introducing a "Four-Year Graduation Guarantee" program this fall. Under the program, the school guarantees that students who meet certain requirements, like maintaining a GPA of 2.0 or higher, will graduate in four years. If not, the college will pay for the extra time.

Some colleges are taking it a step further by offering joint-degree programs that allow students to graduate with both a bachelor's and master's degree in four years. Simmons College in Boston is offering joint-degrees in areas including social work and public policy, while Wilson College in Pennsylvania is launching a program that lets students graduate with both a bachelor's and master's degree in humanities.

Meanwhile, Lipscomb University in Tennessee is reducing the number of credits students need to take to graduate on time from 132 hours to 126 hours for the 2012 school year -- the equivalent of about two classes.

How much does college actually cost?

While tuition cuts and freezes likely won't have an impact on the quality of the education that the colleges provide -- unless enrollments increase so much that the student-to-teacher ratio climbs too high -- some fast-tracked degrees are another matter, Kantrowitz said.

"If you eliminate core requirements to become more job-focused, it may allow you to cut a semester off, but the purpose of core requirements is to teach the very basic skills like the ability to write and read critically that also have an impact on job performance," he said. To top of page

Re: Colleges slash tuition, create 3 year degrees

  • I sense colleges are trying fend off possible federal investigations and general backlash from the public... much like various catholic institutions I'm affiliated with suddenly seem to be more "catholic"
  • So I guess the 5 year plan is a thing of the past.  I was amazed at how many of my friends suckered their parents into paying for another year of partying, I mean education.
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  • And my alma matter just raised tuition so the cost of attendance is now over $50k/year. Yay!

    In reality, I graduated in 3.5 years and could have done it in 3 if I'd applied myself. But it's college, so why bother. Anyway, I'd thank to thank the Advanced Placement Board for saving me and my parents $15k at the time.

    HOWEVER, I will forever defend a well-rounded education. College =/= trade school. College is not about job training.

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  • emisiemisi member
    Nice to see some colleges are admitting that there's really no reason to raise tuition 5% a year, far faster than inflation or wages going up.  DId you know U.S. News and World Report actually increases your score if you raise tuition?  Yeah, that's part of why it always goes up.
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  • meh - I knew a few smartasses who finished in 3 years anyway. If you can swing it, do it.

     

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  • NJ has already had a program in place for years where you can attend community college for the first two years and then transfer to a state college for the last two.
  • TeamCTeamC member

    "If you eliminate core requirements to become more job-focused, it may allow you to cut a semester off, but the purpose of core requirements is to teach the very basic skills like the ability to write and read critically that also have an impact on job performance," he said. To top of page

    This is just such a ton of horseshit I don't even know where to start.  If you can qualify, there should be no reason to take these classes again.  I remember having to take PE and stupid electives like philosophy that did nothing for me or my science degree.  What I could've used more was OJT or perhaps a business class or two.  Or maybe a personal finance class.  Philosophy I most definitely did NOT need.

  • imagemsmerymac:

    College is not about job training.

    With the the cost of college now, it needs to become about job training.
  • As a professor, I really don't know how I feel about this.  I agree tuition is too high, and I agree something needs to be done about rising tuition costs.  However, I truly wish that we could have our students take less classes in the core, and more classes in our degree program/classes that are applicable to their degree - because we are in a major where there are multiple classes in other disciplines that would benefit them.

    If you want to make college solely about job training, then it needs to be more like a trade school.  But part of being in college is having some classes outside of your major - and I do think that is important.  Do I think my student that is currently taking walking (yes, walking) and water boot camp is benefiting at all from those classes?  Hell no.  Do I think my liberal arts students need to be in chemistry?  Not necessarily.  But I do think there needs to be a basic core in place, and they do need something besides comm/pr/journalism classes.

    At my university, there is no way in hell they could be done in 3 years.  Because of budget cuts, we don't have the faculty to be able to provide the classes for them.  So...there's that aspect too.  

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  • imageTeamC:

    "If you eliminate core requirements to become more job-focused, it may allow you to cut a semester off, but the purpose of core requirements is to teach the very basic skills like the ability to write and read critically that also have an impact on job performance," he said. To top of page

    This is just such a ton of horseshit I don't even know where to start.  If you can qualify, there should be no reason to take these classes again.  I remember having to take PE and stupid electives like philosophy that did nothing for me or my science degree.  What I could've used more was OJT or perhaps a business class or two.  Or maybe a personal finance class.  Philosophy I most definitely did NOT need.

     

     

    Well I disagree, but I realize that it's a luxery for me to have that opinion.  

  • imagecasmgn:
    imagemsmerymac:

    College is not about job training.

    With the the cost of college now, it needs to become about job training.

    College should not be about learning grammar, either. High school is for learning grammar, college is for using that grammar.

  • One of the problems is that with NCLB, some states have turned schools into objective test taking facilities and even the writing is done with an assembly line process.  I read that many professors don't like the style of writing and the lack of expanding thoughts that results from the bubble the answer type of education and I think that college can provide a place to learn in a different way.  I don't blame schools for doing what they have to do according to the policies of their states, but I do think the students suffer.  AP classes can help, but colleges can open up a different world for students, especially if they are able to expose them to new ideas.
  • I think this is great- helps you save up on time and money! I also just read a Stevens Henager College Review (considering programs in healthcare) and I learnt that their bachelor programs could be completed between 30-36 months (the nursing programs in 20 months) and I thought that was pretty cool. So I guess are already some colleges that have made it possible for students to complete their bachelor?s degree in less than 4 years.
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