Is college worth it?
By Alex Kincaid and Miranda Carney / May 2, 2016Students who don’t graduate in four years are affected in more ways then they might realize
Students who don’t graduate in four years are affected in more ways then they might realize
After students invest in a college education, entering the workforce is the next step in determining if the degree was worth the price
For the past five months, the staff members at Ball Bearings Magazine have been trying to answer the question: Where does our money go?
This week, Ball Bearings explores the impact of scholarships–from the athletes who are paid to play to the low-income students who must afford college without scholarships
This week, Ball Bearings explores the cost of an international education
It can be up to three times more expensive for an international student to study in the U.S.
College towns across the nation wouldn’t exist without the universities that define them
In the book The American College Town, Blake Gumprecht writes that a college town is a place where the number of four-year college students equals at least 20 percent of a town’s population.
Around 72 percent of college students juggle working a job with their classes
This week, Ball Bearings takes a closer look at the way Millennials view race, culture, and tradition