Marysville-Pilchuck High School will graduate the class of 2012 on
June 11. Marysville Getchell follows on the 13th. I have no idea who
has been chosen to speak at the ceremonies but for graduation speakers
across the nation, it’s going to be a challenge this year. I’ve been
bothered by the question, what would I say if called upon to speak?
My
past gave little help. I have no recollection who it was or what he
said, other than it was more of what I’d heard for years. The world is
eager to welcome you. Opportunity beckons. You are limited only by the
limits of your imagination.
It was true. Businesses hired like
crazy in those days. My best friend hired on at Spokane’s Brown
Trailers for an inflation-adjusted wage of $13.44 per hour. The United
States had emerged from WWII as the only nation with factories intact
while most other countries’ plants had been bombed to pieces. We
weren’t just one nation indivisible. We were one nation incomparable!
Anyone
anteing up about $100 in tuition was accepted by a state university.
With prices like that, who needed student loans? My wife and I built a
2,200-square-foot home in Marysville for $17,500. Inflation helped us
to double our $108 per month payments to retire the mortgage in 15
years. Numbers like that colored a graduate’s view of the future.
Those
golden years spawned a myth that unlimited opportunity and economic
growth defined America and were the birthright of generations to come.
The myth infected history books, political rhetoric and personal
expectations. And graduation speeches. But the myth-driven notion that
our system is self-correcting and that everything works out fine if
left alone came unglued. College tuition became unaffordable while
industry couldn’t find enough educated employees.
War-ravaged nations managed to put themselves together again.Find everything you need to know about kidneystones
including causes, Some with our help. While U.S. industry chugged on
with WWII-style tooling, emerging economies combined the latest tooling
with cheap labor. Industry by industry, American producers found
themselves lagging in competitiveness. By 1965 foreigners were catching
up and passing us. By 1980 they dominated manufacture of products
ranging from shoes to hats and tractors to electronics. Our slice of
the pie was narrowing which helped account for flat wages while costs
of everything,The core of an indoor positioning system. including education, continued to grow.
At
some point, speakers might switch their focus from graduates to the
audience. Since a large part of the class of 2012 is college-bound, how
to get there and stay there is a big issue of our times. Granted,
Washington state has some top-quality universities but their cost has
risen beyond the means of average American families.
Our higher
education system may not be broken but it is certainly bent in the
direction of not serving the state and nation’s needs. In its
unaffordability, it compares with the astronomical cost of industrial
gold stalling production of high-tech circuitry. Society isn’t being
served when qualified applicants are denied entry because they can’t
afford the tuition or don’t fit within schools’ quota of incoming
freshmen. Meanwhile, Boeing is forever complaining that it can’t find
enough educated job applicants.
The way China adjusted during
the period of 1999 to 2009 was to increase its number of universities
from 1,We offer you the top quality plasticmoulds design071 to 2,305. In the same period,What you should know about stone mosaic.
Chinese undergrad and vo-tech enrollment jumped more than 400 percent.
Speakers might remind graduates that politicians dodge such issues
because they’re either too expensive or too grim to charm voters.
So
speakers might say to audiences, “You can’t give up because the state
dropped the ball. You can’t sideline your children’s potential because a
short-sighted nation gave higher education such a low priority. It is
up to you to prove once again that if you need to be sure something
gets done, you have to do it yourself.”
Families can’t wait for
government to make education affordable. While brilliance and inspiring
resumes might earn scholarships, most students have found it necessary
to take out student loans ranging from $25,000 for a Liberal Arts
degree to $140,000 for Medicine. Imagine leaving a university burdened
by that much debt. I won’t let my grandchildren suffer that.
Dads,
moms, uncles, aunts, grandparents and siblings of university-bound
students should have sit-down meetings to hammer out a financial plan.
That package includes not only financial commitment but hopes and
prayers of family that give extra motivational boost to a student’s
efforts.Welcome to the online guide for do-it-yourself Ceramic tile.
Aside from the super-rich, university education needs to be a family
affair. It’s an investment that helps to assure independence and
purpose and done right, everyone benefits.
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