Monday, November 24, 2014

Germany's Free Tuition : Progressive socialism Gone Crazy

The reason for fee tuition in Germany is social justice? This sounds a lot like Mr Obama's ideology of 'income redistribution' and "fundamental change" for America's way of life. The next question is has the entire world gone crazy for progressive socialism, neocommunism?

The Costs of Free Tuition in Germany
Source:  Natasha Bertrand, "Why Germany's Free College Education Is Actually Not That Great," Business Insider, November 19, 2014; Christopher Denhart, "There Is No Such Thing As A Free College Education," Forbes.com, October 3, 2014.

November 21, 2014

College education in Germany is now tuition-free, but what does that mean? According to Natasha Bertrand of Business Insider, it has increased student access to school -- but at a cost.

With free tuition, demand for college education in Germany has risen dramatically, not only for domestic students but for foreign students, who enrolled in German schools in record numbers in the 2013-2014 school year. But without tuition fees, schools are struggling to meet the increased demand. Says Bertrand:
  • Schools have had difficulty building additional classrooms and training new teachers.
  • There is a housing shortage among German universities, which receive 400,000 new students annually but have only 230,000 places for them.
Why did Germany turn to the tuition-free model? Its lawmakers believed the fees were "socially unjust," explains Christopher Denhart, administrative director for The Center for College Affordability and Productivity. Denhart says that the "free" German education will not be free for taxpayers, who will likely face higher tax rates as a result of the new policy.

He notes that Germany already has a problem with students who remain in college longer than they should, a problem that could increase with the free college model. In the United States, 50 percent of college students graduating from public schools do so within four years, compared to an 80 percent four-year graduation rate in private schools.
 

No comments: