News Briefs: Archives 2011 & Earlier

College Prices Keep Rising

 

The cost of higher education rose for this school year; the biggest increase was at public two-year colleges, where tuition and fees jumped 7.3 percent, to an average of $2,544 from $2,372 last year, according to a new report.

But while two-year colleges saw the biggest percentage increase in tuition, public four-year colleges saw bigger jumps in the median of their 2009-10 published tuition and fees: $406.

The findings are in a new College Board report called Trends in College Pricing 2009. The report comes with a series of caveats, such as: “Increases in published prices do not necessarily correspond to increases in the amounts students pay, which also depend on the amount of grant aid they receive.”

The report was released along with another College Board report called Trends in Student Aid 2009.

Among the highlights of that report: In 2007-08, public four-year institutions gave roughly two-thirds of their institutional grant aid without regard to financial circumstances. Students from the lowest-income families got an average of $570 in non-need-based and $760 in need-based institutional grant aid, while students from upper-middle-income families got an average of about $840 per student in non-need-based and $310 in need-based institutional grant aid.

Contact: http://www.collegeboard.com.

 

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