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ARCHIVE :: JANUARY
2003 :: ON CAMPUS
Educational
Value
It's
Up to You to Get
Your Money's Worth
Out of College
By
HARLAN COHEN
Special to The Wall Street Journal
There’s
no question about it: College is expensive.
The
average cost of tuition, room and board at a four-year public
college is $9,663 annually this year, and rising fast. At a private
college, it’s $25,052—or more than $100,000 for four years.
Is
it really worth that much money? The answer is entirely up to you.
College
isn’t so much an expense as it is an adventure, one where your
choices determine how rewarding your experience will be.
It’s
sort of like buying a ticket to an amusement park. College is filled
with exciting attractions, scary turns, interesting characters,
unique experiences, even emotional roller-coasters. And choices.
Lots and lots of choices. If you make good choices and take
advantage of the opportunities, you’ll have an exhilarating time.
If you don’t, if you simply drift through campus for four years,
you’ll walk away on graduation day feeling like you got cheated
out of the price of admission.
Pick
Up a Map
If
you’re going to spend four years in an academic theme park, start
by picking one where you like the “theme,” where the
surroundings excite you. There are thousands of colleges to explore,
some in big cities, small towns, along sandy beaches, snowy
mountains, tropical spots, and frigid tundra. There are small
colleges that boast the benefits of nearby cities, and big colleges
that boast the benefits of small-town life. The theme you choose
will help define your college experience. And if after a couple of
years, you need a change of scenery, you can always take a semester
or two abroad, often with little additional cost. You’ve got the
Parkhopper pass.
No
matter what environment you choose, you’re likely to find even
more choices when you get there. So before you go anywhere, pick up
a map. That is, find someone to guide you—an academic adviser or
mentor who can help you choose your courses, plot a strategy and set
priorities. (Often, freshmen are assigned a faculty adviser when
they enroll, but you can always choose someone else). Otherwise, you
could end up wandering aimlessly and wasting time and money. Amanda
Isen, a sophomore at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, says she
never got good guidance from her adviser and feels like she kept
taking wrong turns. A large college like UW certainly offers more
choices and resources than a smaller school, but the choices can be
overwhelming if you don’t have the right people to guide you. Ms.
Isen is contemplating transferring to a smaller college where she
can get more attention.
Andrew
Glickman spent his freshman year at a large state school in Florida,
but says “a lot of people sit around and get lost in the crowd.”
He has since transferred to Northwestern University in Evanston,
Ill. Northwestern, a private school, is a lot costlier, but the
appeal for him there is the smaller classes, the quality of the
education, and the location (20 minutes from Chicago). Andrew is
enrolled in NU’s journalism school, a small college within a
college. The attention and guidance, he says, make a huge
difference.
Have
Fun
At
least half the adventure in college is what you do outside the
classroom. These are the side attractions—the things that fill up
your time between classes—but they often become a college
graduate’s most valuable and memorable experiences. Erin Abrahams,
a University of Michigan alumna, has fond memories of the many
cultural attractions in Ann Arbor, Mich., such as her college’s a
capella singing group. She discovered them on a trip home to New
York, where the singers were competing at Carnegie Hall. She went to
see them perform, and then went back to campus to hear them again
and again and, yes, again. Other students take advantage of
discounted tickets to the theater, movies and collegiate sporting
events. At Northwestern, for instance, a football season ticket
costs students just $36, which is about what nonstudents pay for a
single game. (Caution: Northwestern football games can cause nausea
and discomfort. But the victories have a way of being memorable.)
Besides
sports and culture, take a chance with courses outside of your
major. Some colleges offer classes in music (I took guitar), martial
arts, fine arts, poetry, pottery, sports, dance, wine tasting, and
even the history of rock ’n’ roll. These are generally free for
students, or offered for a small additional price. And while they
offer all the adventure and fun of learning something new, there’s
none of the queasiness associated with exams and grades. Lately,
I’ve also seen a lot of colleges adding recreation centers with
equipment rivaling costly private gyms. Access to the gyms is
typically included in the cost of tuition, so failing to use them is
just letting money go to waste.
And
if that’s not enough, campus clubs and activities often include
trips to conferences or conventions, where the college pays for your
travel expenses. They even give you money for food. This year’s
college-newspaper convention was in Orlando, Fla., a town famous
for, well, you know.
Yes,
college is expensive, but it’s what you do in college that
determines whether it’s worth the price of admission. You can walk
out with just a souvenir T-shirt and a ticket stub. Or you can have
the adventure of a lifetime. It’s all up to you.
Now,
this is the part when I start singing, “When You Wish Upon a Star
...”
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