
THE MEASURE OF COLLEGE
COSTS
By Ian Crawford, EDFUND Web Communications
Editor
It’s getting more expensive to attend higher education
institutions. If you didn’t know that already, then a new
report offers more proof.
Postsecondary Institutions in the United States: Fall 2005
and Degrees and Other Awards Conferred: 2004-05 by the U.S.
Education Department’s National Center for Education Statistics
is a “first look” at the most recent data collected
through the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System.
The total number of institutions eligible to award federal financial
aid grew from 6,548 to 6,600 with most of that growth coming in
the for-profit sector.
Of particular note for the financial aid industry are statistics
showing the cost of attending college. Regarding tuition and required
fees, it’s most expensive for those undergraduates attending
private nonprofit institutions, followed by private for-profit
and four-year public colleges.
| Average tuition and required fees for
undergraduates 2005-06: |
 |
| Private nonprofit four-year institutions |
$16,888 |
 |
| Private for-profit four-year institutions |
$13,894 |
 |
| Out-of-state undergrads at four-year public institutions
|
$12,652 |
 |
| In-state students at four-year public institutions |
$5,206 |
 |
| In-state students at community colleges |
$2,514 |
Average tuition and fees have increased the most for grads attending
four-year institutions (17 percent over 2003-04), while at private
nonprofit institutions the increase was 12 percent and at private
for-profit institutions, 11 percent over the same two-year period.
When room and board charges, books and supplies, and other expenses
are added to the equation, the price of attendance at private
for-profit four-year institutions is the most expensive.
| Overall average price of attendance
for undergraduates 2005-06 and increase on 2003-04: |
 |
| Private for-profit
four-year institutions |
$28,250 |
12.5 percent |
 |
| Private nonprofit four-year institutions |
$27,754 |
11.3 percent |
 |
| Out-of-state undergrads at four-year public institutions
|
$22,791 |
13.6 percent |
 |
| In-state students at four-year public institutions |
$15,114 |
13.8 percent |
 |
| In-state students at community colleges |
$9,836 |
10.2 percent |
In the last two years, students at all institutions experienced
a double-digit increase in the price of attendance, but it was
most noticeable for undergraduates at four-year public institutions.
For the complete report, Postsecondary Institutions in the
United States: Fall 2005 and Degrees and Other Awards Conferred,
go to the NCES Web site: http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2007/2007167.pdf.

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