Now, most student pay for college themselves, Just as the Great Depression left a lasting mark on the generation
who lived through it, the children of the Great Recession may already be
shifting their world view about money, judging by a new survey that says about 80 percent of them are shouldering some or all of their college costs.
"I think kids are stepping up and it requires a degree of financial
responsibility," said Linda Descano, the president and CEO of Citi's Women & Co.
"I think it's a huge financial wake-up call," she said. "I
think they're really seeing, they really have to own themselves. They
don't have the security their parents did.They see their grandparents
struggling to cover health care. I think they're realizing those safety
nets are no longer there. How are you going to stay relevant? You can't
just go to one place and stay there forever."
Four out of five college students are now working while going to school,
typically 19 hours a week while classes are in session, according to
the 2013 College Student Pulse survey conducted by YouGov for Citi and Seventeen Magazine.
The survey, released this week, was conducted online in July and
considered the views of more than 1,000 college students and high school
seniors.
The YouGov findings are in line with a recent study released by SallieMae financial
services company that found that parents now pay for about 27 percent
of college costs, compared with 37 percent in 2010.
"The whole job outlook has been nothing short of bleak. That sort of
had an effect on my outlook," said 20-year-old Zachary Lomas, who
attends Colgate University.
Lomas, who hails from Buffalo, N.Y., gets a mix of grants and loans,
including some in his name which he figures will amount to $5,000 to
$10,000 by the time he finishes his undergraduate degrees in history and
English literature. His parents help with costs, especially his mother,
he said.
The university's full financial aid package brings down the cost from
the top-level sticker price. "What it actually costs is so far out of
my range it would be laughable," Lomas said.
During the school year, he works up to 10 hours a week as a research
assistant, a job that started out at minimum wage his freshman year.
This summer, he's working 25 hours a week for $9 an hour at a bathtub
refinishing company. His first summer was spent working 40-hour weeks at
an unpaid internship at a law firm. He has since changed his career
goals and now plans to attend grad school for journalism.
Indeed, 60 percent of the students in the YouGov survey said they
plan to pursue a graduate or professional degree. And fully 94 percent
said they believe college will end up being a good investment.
About 62 percent of the students said they have set a budget for
their expenses and 67 percent have a savings account. When it comes to
college choice, 77 percent said money played an important role in where
they applied, and one-third said that money was the single most
important deciding factor in enrollment.
In line with the findings of a recent Pew report, the YouGov study
found that of the college students surveyed, 35 percent live with their
parents; 32 percent live in campus housing; 18 percent live off campus
with friends and 4 percent live off campus by themselves.
The one expense parents are most likely to still pay is the students' monthly cell phone bills, according to the survey.
Despite the jobs outlook and the college costs, Lomas is certain his
hard work will pay off even if the jobs front remains tough. "If I go in
and work hard and prove that I'm one of the best at what I do, it's not
going to matter," he said.
Src : http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/227802#ixzz2dcg43n26
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Students Now Pay for College Themselves
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