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What do you think_capitalist exploitation or higher education?

the truth about the US higher education system : student for profit.

By Khoirul MustogaPublished 2 years ago 3 min read
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What do you think—capitalist exploitation or higher education?

The truth about the US higher education system: students for profit

Your charging articulation is currently accessible on the web. Kindly sign into Hawk Administration to make an installment, view your record action and download your PDF charging explanation."

As an understudy of American College, you will get this email when your installment is expected. Assuming you neglect to follow it, you will be fined. This isn't simply AU — this is the manner by which the advanced education framework works in America.

Nowadays, attending college is a privilege rather than a public good. Students are the consumers in a market where colleges are constantly competing with one another. Nowadays, investing in education helps to improve the human stock by preparing people for the workforce. We frequently hear that a college degree is required in order to generate money and find employment in the future. On top of that, we are informed of how much our IQ is influenced by a school's acceptance rate. We wonder if we are "deserving" enough to pursue an education.

We all understand how colleges achieve this. They make it seem like they are offering you a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity as they bombard you with emails about their school's huge financial aid or how their study abroad program is the best. You get paralyzed by indecision as each option sounds better than the one before it. Each gives you the impression that you are desired and may receive the best education there.

This is how the capitalist cycle functions.

The underpaid staff union goes on strike during Welcome Week despite AU President Sylvia Burwell earning close to $1 million annually. While tuition that is already over the national average rises, student cries to pay off our loans get louder every day. The University stops offering isolation housing because the coronavirus outbreak has passed. Without any help from the university, students are left to live in self-isolation in their residence halls. Bad luck. The Bridge Cafe loses its reputation as one of the few havens for people of color on campus; the music and activities it hosts start to favor white people.

For students with learning disabilities, AU is ranked seventh in the nation, as ASAC's extensive and onerous application procedure falls short of meeting the demands of the disabled community. Students' health worries are pointless because McDowell Hall residents, who live in one of the most affordable dorms on campus, have raised several concerns about mold.

The list may go on forever, but one thing is for certain: as long as you pay the bills, as long as you borrow money, as long as you contribute to the ratings, students are the profit.

When this is not the case, colleges are taught to present students as their top focus. Contrary to popular belief, college is a place where students drown in debt and loans rather than a place where they discover who they are. It is a location where students are taken advantage of and held captive by addiction and enmity. It's a place where your position in society's hierarchy is determined by the credential you get.

It's critical to distinguish between the facts and the lies that are being given to us about the American higher education system. The story is the same whether it's AU or any other college.

Change can't wait is the school's motto, according to President Sylvia Burwell, but where is this purported change when students most need it?

This article is made from sources who have such views, do you agree with their opinions.

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Khoirul Mustoga

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