| Blog results | Results 1 - 10 of about 11,331 for harvard tuition cut. (0.29 seconds) |
| Sorted by relevance Sort by date |
| 5 Nov 2009 by Michael Mitzenmacher Those fractions are very approximate; I don't have the numbers in front of me. Harvard's using the endowment to cut tuition from about 30% to 15% of the budget. I don't think there's anything artificial about that. ... My Biased Coin - http://mybiasedcoin.blogspot.com/ - References [ More results from My Biased Coin ] |
| 16 Apr 2008 As reported by the Yale Daily News, students said that in the wake of Harvard's “much-hyped” tuition cut for third-year law students, Yale would fall behind if the law school did not expand its current benefits for public interest. ... The Harvard Crimson :: News - http://www.thecrimson.com/news.aspx [ More results from The Harvard Crimson :: News ] |
| 18 Nov 2009 by noreply@blogger.com (Paul Russell) The way tuition reimbursement works, I pay the tuition up front, and as long as I get a good final grade, they cut me a check for the tuition after the class ends. While there were a few side costs such as the $100 printing and binding ... Russelldad's blog - http://russelldad.blogspot.com/ |
| 9 Nov 2009 by Munier Salem Or maybe it's convenient to let Albany do the talking, they cut from CALS, so CALS should pay the price. A third guess is that it's convenient for the budget when state programs (with smaller tuition bills) shrink, and endowed programs ... Stories from The Sun - http://www.cornellsun.com/ - References |
| 19 Nov 2009 by Jil Heimensen If Richmond agrees, they would get more freedom to set tuition and run themselves, making them more like Harvard, Princeton, or other private colleges. America's public institutions still educate some 80% of the nation's 14 million ... Portland State Student Fee Committee - http://www.psusfc.com/ |
| 19 Nov 2009 by lynch_loreal@gsb.stanford.edu Most of these nonprofits took the same path as Harvard, Getty, and Yale, choosing to cut expenditures to compensate for reduced income. Though many of these organizations have substantial endowments to fall back on— enough to off ... If the purpose of an endowment—that is, of holding down current expenditures in order to save for the future—is to limit tuition, hospital patient charges, or museum admission fees later, then the issue is one of intergenerational transfers. ... SSIR Articles - http://www.ssireview.org/articles/entry/microfinance_misses_its_mark/ |
| 5 Feb 2007 The real concern is the students who don't quite make the cut for aid but still feel the crunch of tuition hikes. It's good that someone is finally paying attention to their predicament. Clay A. Dumas '10, a Crimson editorial editor, ... The Harvard Crimson :: Opinion - http://www.thecrimson.com/opinion.aspx [ More results from The Harvard Crimson :: Opinion ] |
| 16 hours ago by myglesias What are they teaching at Harvard these days minus 6-7 years? JM Says: November 20th, 2009 at 2:25 pm. WTF Matt. You know as much about Belgian Independence (1830). You know, if you're singing “525600 minutes” while a clown beats a drum, .... EDUCATION: The Media Messiah Imperial President tells everyone to go back to school college, so what do the colleges, do well of course raise the tuition by [1/3rd/ 33%], One-Third / Thirty-Three percent and then cut the State ... Matthew Yglesias - http://yglesias.thinkprogress.org/ - References |
| 17 Nov 2009 by Maureen Downey catlady. November 17th, 2009 5:51 pm. Perhaps cut tuition waivers for foreign nationals (usually Asian grad assistants)? Increase the credit hours each prof has to teach, to a full load per semester? Cut back on amenities. .... Tuition and fees at Georgia State University, which is also a great public university. However, it is not Harvard. $3035(in state) add $671 in fees soon to be $821. Tot $3856 (almost double) $12140(out of state) add $671-$821 in fees. Tot $12961 ... Get Schooled - http://blogs.ajc.com/get-schooled-blog/ - References |
| 14 Nov 2009 by Jeb Breiding Harvard recently reported that the value of its endowment declined by $11 billion, or 27 percent of the total. This is the equivalent of 35 years' worth of tuition from the combined 20230 undergraduate and graduate students. ... The college is facing a budget deficit of $220 million and is taking measures to cut 20 percent of all costs. These cuts have manifested themselves in a variety of ways – thermostats have been lowered during the winter months from 72 to 68 degrees ... The Citizen - http://harvardcitizen.com/ |
Stay up to date on these results:
| Google Home - About Google Blog Search Beta - Information for Blog Authors |