The Student Loan Scam


Book Description

The Student Loan Scam is an exposé of the predatory nature of the $85-billion student loan industry. In this in-depth exploration, Collinge argues that student loans have become the most profitable, uncompetitive, and oppressive type of debt in American history. This has occurred in large part due to federal legislation passed since the mid-1990s that removed standard consumer protections from student loans-and allowed for massive penalties and draconian wealth-extraction mechanisms to collect this inflated debt. High school graduates can no longer put themselves through college for a few thousand dollars in loan debt. Today, the average undergraduate borrower leaves school with more than $20,000 in student loans, and for graduate students the average is a whopping $42,000. For the past twenty years, college tuition has increased at more than double the rate of inflation, with the cost largely shifting to student debt. Collinge covers the history of student loans, the rise of Sallie Mae, and how universities have profited at the expense of students. The book includes candid and compelling stories from people across the country about how both nonprofit and for-profit student loan companies, aided by poor legislation, have shattered their lives-and livelihoods. With nearly 5 million defaulted loans, this crisis is growing to epic proportions. The Student Loan Scam takes an unflinching look at this unprecedented and pressing problem, while exposing the powerful organizations and individuals who caused it to happen. Ultimately, Collinge argues for the return of standard consumer protections for student loans, among other pragmatic solutions, in this clarion call for social action.




The Student Loan Scam


Book Description

In this in-depth exploration and expos of the predatory nature of the student loan industry, Collinge argues that student loans have become the most uncompetitive and oppressive type of debt in American history. In this clarion call for social action, the author offers pragmatic solutions.




Ways to Prevent the Student Loan Scam


Book Description

Scams involving the cancellation of student loans have increased following the announcement. Here are the warning flags to look out for and some tips for protecting your personal data.




Student Loan Scams


Book Description

I've made this book so that you don't get scammed by taking out a student loan. Why would you pay $100,000 to listen for 4 years to teachers that have never made more than $50,000 per year?You can't even live on $50,000 per year anymore. Not if you want a half-decent life. And people are PAYING to listen to these people. Societal disaster. America is suffering from a debt crisis, cased by insane levels of student loans. Colleges are scamming people left, right and centre. What's worse, society doesn't care.Wages have only increased 67% since 1970, yet student loans are exploding to record levels, year after year. This, along with soaring cost of living, has made it nearly impossible for ordinary millennials who go to college, to become financially independent in the richest country on earth. If you go to college and study most degrees and use the information you learned in your degree in the workforce, the American dream is dead. As an entrepreneur who's looking to hire millennials, I can tell you that most graduates don't have a clue how to help my businesses.Not only that, they're in a constant state of fear and panic. Even if I pay them a great wage, they can't afford to make ends meet due to their obscene student loans, often at high interest rates. They're trying to get married, buy a house and have kids, yet their crippling loans makes it impossible.Because the elites who own the education system have rigged the education system with intense brainwashing for the last 100+ years, colleges no longer need to provide value. They no longer need to help their students make money. They no longer need to help anyone in any way, shape or form.I'm the founder of Gumke University. Gumke University is known for changing the future of education. I didn't do well in traditional education. I wanted to become a multi-millionaire and all the teachers I spoke to about it, were struggling financially. I knew that he needed to find better teachers, outside of traditional education. I wanted to get taught by the people at the top, not their employees. In my pursuit to find the owner of an education company, I found Ekim Kaya, the owner of Kaya Online, the world's largest Amazon training company. I watched Ekim take his business to over 100,000 students and millions of dollars. Many students became millionaires. Thousands of students became financially free. Not everyone was successful, but a much higher percentage than traditional education. All for less than 1% of the cost. I knew that this was the impact I wanted to create. I started to learn high income skills and teach for Kaya Online, having my work translated into multiple languages for Ekim Kaya's 100,000+ students. Within just a few years of learning from Ekim Kaya, I was financially independent. Gumke University was established to help the students get rich on their own terms, without needing degrees. I believe that my students can improve their health, happiness and quality of relationships, by becoming financially free. The younger the students can achieve this, the better. Unlike many other universities, Gumke University adapts to changes in the marketplace and Gumke University focuses on tangible results, not theories. Gumke University succeeds when students make money, not when they correctly answer questions about the curriculum. The reality is that some students win, even if they don't know everything in the curriculum and other students lose, even if they know the entire curriculum. The difference comes down to the mindset of the individual student.At Gumke University, all training programs are set up in a step by step system that helps the students succeed, not just the owners of the university. Of course, I want to succeed as well, but I measure my success by the success of my students. Learn how to avoid student loan scams and becoming another statistic!




Higher Education in America


Book Description

A sweeping assessment of the state of higher education today from former Harvard president Derek Bok Higher Education in America is a landmark work--a comprehensive and authoritative analysis of the current condition of our colleges and universities from former Harvard president Derek Bok, one of the nation's most respected education experts. Sweepingly ambitious in scope, this is a deeply informed and balanced assessment of the many strengths as well as the weaknesses of American higher education today. At a time when colleges and universities have never been more important to the lives and opportunities of students or to the progress and prosperity of the nation, Bok provides a thorough examination of the entire system, public and private, from community colleges and small liberal arts colleges to great universities with their research programs and their medical, law, and business schools. Drawing on the most reliable studies and data, he determines which criticisms of higher education are unfounded or exaggerated, which are issues of genuine concern, and what can be done to improve matters. Some of the subjects considered are long-standing, such as debates over the undergraduate curriculum and concerns over rising college costs. Others are more recent, such as the rise of for-profit institutions and massive open online courses (MOOCs). Additional topics include the quality of undergraduate education, the stagnating levels of college graduation, the problems of university governance, the strengths and weaknesses of graduate and professional education, the environment for research, and the benefits and drawbacks of the pervasive competition among American colleges and universities. Offering a rare survey and evaluation of American higher education as a whole, this book provides a solid basis for a fresh public discussion about what the system is doing right, what it needs to do better, and how the next quarter century could be made a period of progress rather than decline.







Student Loan Debt Secrets


Book Description

Relief Is In Your Hands Student loan debt has become a burden of unprecedented proportions. Millions of Americans are losing sleep, highly stressed out over their investment they thought would better their lives and set them up financially making this debt easy to repay. But so many borrowers feel they have been duped because they have a bill every month the size of buying a fancy car with little to show for it. If you are one of the millions who silently suffers and feels pain at the mere mention of student loans this book is designed for you. Student Loan Debt Secrets will show you how: -All the unknown forces that created a student loan trap that is currently crippling our economy. -To navigate an intensely complicated system designed to keep you an indentured servant. -To get your student loan monthly payment as low as possible and get a ton of money in forgiveness. -To make a student loan financial plan that is bulletproof to scam artists, servicing companies, and political interests. -How to beat the student loan game and grow the wealth being siphoned from your pockets. This Book Is The Key To Your Freedom!




Game of Loans


Book Description

Why fears about a looming student loan crisis are unfounded—and how they obscure what's really wrong with student lending College tuition and student debt levels have been rising at an alarming pace for at least two decades. These trends, coupled with an economy weakened by a major recession, have raised serious questions about whether we are headed for a major crisis, with borrowers defaulting on their loans in unprecedented numbers and taxpayers being forced to foot the bill. Game of Loans draws on new evidence to explain why such fears are misplaced—and how the popular myth of a looming crisis has obscured the real problems facing student lending in America. Bringing needed clarity to an issue that concerns all of us, Beth Akers and Matthew Chingos cut through the sensationalism and misleading rhetoric to make the compelling case that college remains a good investment for most students. They show how, in fact, typical borrowers face affordable debt burdens, and argue that the truly serious cases of financial hardship portrayed in the media are less common than the popular narrative would have us believe. But there are more troubling problems with student loans that don't receive the same attention. They include high rates of avoidable defaults by students who take on loans but don’t finish college—the riskiest segment of borrowers—and a dysfunctional market where competition among colleges drives tuition costs up instead of down. Persuasive and compelling, Game of Loans moves beyond the emotionally charged and politicized talk surrounding student debt, and offers a set of sensible policy proposals that can solve the real problems in student lending.




Indentured Students


Book Description

The untold history of how AmericaÕs student-loan program turned the pursuit of higher education into a pathway to poverty. It didnÕt always take thirty years to pay off the cost of a bachelorÕs degree. Elizabeth Tandy Shermer untangles the history that brought us here and discovers that the story of skyrocketing college debt is not merely one of good intentions gone wrong. In fact, the federal student loan program was never supposed to make college affordable. The earliest federal proposals for college affordability sought to replace tuition with taxpayer funding of institutions. But Southern whites feared that lower costs would undermine segregation, Catholic colleges objected to state support of secular institutions, professors worried that federal dollars would come with regulations hindering academic freedom, and elite-university presidents recoiled at the idea of mass higher education. Cold War congressional fights eventually made access more important than affordability. Rather than freeing colleges from their dependence on tuition, the government created a loan instrument that made college accessible in the short term but even costlier in the long term by charging an interest penalty only to needy students. In the mid-1960s, as bankers wavered over the prospect of uncollected debt, Congress backstopped the loans, provoking runaway inflation in college tuition and resulting in immense lender profits. Today 45 million Americans owe more than $1.5 trillion in college debt, with the burdens falling disproportionately on borrowers of color, particularly women. Reformers, meanwhile, have been frustrated by colleges and lenders too rich and powerful to contain. Indentured Students makes clear that these are not unforeseen consequences. The federal student loan system is working as designed.