After hearing Gov. Charlie Crist’s plan to increase Florida college tuition annually by 15 percent for the next eight years, many college students might have a negative reaction.
Most college students struggle financially, and being forced to pay more money is not an encouraging thing.
But Florida in-state students currently live as royalty anyway, paying the cheapest tuition rates in the country.
The plan would cap the tuition increases at the national average, and it would take seven to 10 years to even skim the surface of that level.
This plan, though costly at first, will make the college degree – and the experience – more valuable.
There are 15.9 million students currently enrolled in college, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, and some of those are only there because someone else – a parent, grandparent, or fiancé – is forcing them.