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Sure UChicago's tuition is a lot, but top schools like UChicago also give insane amounts of financial aid, most low-income individuals who attend these schools usually graduate with very little to no debt. I think it's smarter to look at cost after aid instead of sticker cost. That will give you a better view as to which schools are really the most expensive. If we look at cost after aid, we will find that Uchicago is really affordable for such a world-class education.
Correct. My college technically has a tuition cost of $70K a year, but I went for 4 years tuition free due to their financial aid. They were a great liberal arts college and had $1B in endowment, and that has given me access to a great alumni network
I wonder if all those Nobel Prize winning economists that either graduated from UC or are professors there now think UC should be on the 10 top worst list?
I looked it up and most people come out of UC after a BA with a very high debt. Most of the people going there are NOT low-income individuals. They are the exception not the rule.
@@aeroeng22 Do you even have the foggiest clue how tiny a percentage the number of people you are talking about is in relation to the yearly graduates of the UC overall, you just mentioned? It is less than 1/100th of 1%.
Thank you for this video. It really needs more exposure, more need to learn about this. Looking at acceptance vs graduation rate especially at art schools is revealing. An art degree combined with internships and a great network is worth it, but no for profit schools. I went to Art Center and Teach at Otis and have had a 20+ year career in design.
The University of Chicago is arguably one of the most prestigious universities in the world. Even though the tuition rates look daunting at first, it’s important to remember that the majority of students don’t pay the full tuition rates. UChicago, along with many other universities of its caliber, are quite generous when it comes to financial aid.
@@globulidoktor1733 Exactly, honestly the whole take in the beginning kind of makes me feel like the channel maker is fairly ill-informed when it comes to the undergraduate university system. My alma mater's tuition is nearly $65K a year, but when I went I fell in a middle class category and went tuition free. The key is needs blind.
I received my MBA from University of Phoenix in 2000. While the program lacks rigor, it opened many doors for me. I was able to have my employer pay nearly the entire cost so my outlay was minimal. My first position out of school was a Marketing Manager at a Fortune 500 pharmaceutical company. My income now has increased by 197%.
It good that things worked out for you. I once saw a reddit post about someone with the opposite experience. He went back to school to get a degree so that he could make more money in his job but it was essentially worthless since it was from the University of Phoenix. His boss just gave him an extra 2 dollars an hour "out of pity".
University of Phoenix was great for me also in 2024. I believe they turned around over the years. Many top companies in the US employ UoPX grads and many are friends of mine. If an employer won't take your degree seriously, well time to find a different employer. I used to work with some guys with BSc in Electrical Engineering from BYU, UofU all good schools but got fired, they couldn't do basic tasks. So take it for what it is worth, the degree doesn't make the person it amplifies the person.
I don't see how the University of Phoenix and Capella are still around. You can get a PHD in Psychology in University of Phoenix but you're not state eligible to be a clinical psychologist because states don't accept their garbage degrees. Plus they charge outrageous prices.
This was a much better video than recent ones that were just pitches for digital marketing. He did mention digital marketing but it was appropriate to the content- he mentioned how marketing degrees don’t teach digital marketing but should. That made sense. Very good video. I would love to see a video on bootcamps to avoid.
If you want to be artistic, I think majoring in something conventionally successful and then minoring in art is a good idea. Like a bachelor's in computer science and then a minor in art.
As a art student I agree with this. Most art is honestly within you and takes no set amount of time. For some people they learn it in 5 hours, for others they learn it in a lifetime. It's much the same with most things, but art is a little different. My point in this is that no amount of schooling makes you an artist, you need to put your own time and mostly passion into making your own art that represents with you.
11:20 i have a friend who has spent 50,000$ and 5 years on an associates degree from a local comunity college... she is still not finished because the school made it physicaly impossible to graduate by only offering the classes needed for the degree at specific times. for example: you would only have one oportunity to complete any given class because it takes 4-5 years for that class to become available... and it is designed so that you can only do about 5 classes towards your degree per year. (Red Rocks Comunity College)
I grew up poor and could of took out student loans, but graduated from a UK university instead and did it online. The tution is cheaper and I paid for it in cash. I also did an MBA from an English university. On my LinkedIn profile people think I'm British. I'm American though, and glad I have zero debt.
I love this more people should raise awareness. I’ve seen Everest make people attend school for 3 years to get a medical assistant degree and owe upwards of 80k but working making 12/hr that should definitely be illegal
I went into uni wanting to do a major in marketing after working in marketing for 4 years and very quickly changed my mind. One of my classes literally only had one week of study for online marketing. The rest was about mail out surveys and paper marketing 🙄
In the seventies, many students were able to live at home, work a part time job, and easily graduate from a reputable state university in four or five years with zero debt. What is different today (other than greed)?
I went to an art school similar to Full Sail for game design. The one thing I think I have over some of the other art students is programming. Other than that if I could do it again I would probably just go to school for software engineering or computer science since they're cheaper, get paid more and have more job opportunities on top of games. The thing about art schools is they aren't worth it, but sometimes it's your only option. Like for me my family wouldn't help me get a computer to just quit working and make games for 2 years, but go 50k into debt and it justifies me needing the computer and equipment to make games. Same thing for the audio students I know, it would be better for them to just buy the equipment themselves and learn off youtube, but student aid isn't going to help you do that. For art student loans should be just for living and getting the equipment you need, you shouldn't need to put yourself in debt going to college with something that has no right or wrong. Art can only be graded by opinion, there is no fact. Since it doesn't have pure fact you don't really need to be tested, graded or given a diploma in it because it means nothing. Getting a diploma in game design doesn't make me a good game designer, all the games I make during that program make me a designer. At the end of the day it's hard to say. I wouldn't say art schools are totally useless, but I would say there is probably 100 other options better than it in most cases.
I did some research on Southern University at New Orleans . It is a historically all black, public university. It is disappointing to hear the reason why the graduation rate is at 1%.
Well unfortunately they do exist and needs the PSA attention to save people from getting "scammed". Thanks Shane for doing this video to save us the heartache.
For everyone who needs to hear it: Employers do not give a crap where you got your degree, as long as it’s from a legitimate institution and you actually have marketable skills, experience and credentials. Your Gender Studies degree from Iona is not gonna help you as much as a good ole Business degree from your community college. Guaranteed.
Great video as always. I was thinking that you could do video about nurse education or generally how the job position structure works in the healthcare industry
They ended that policy over two decades ago. Compare that to Harvard which had systemic racism in admissions until the supreme court put an end to that this year. Ivy League schools practiced rampant antisemitism for much of the 20th century. Racism is endemic in higher education, especially antisemitism which has exploded since 10/7. The new name for racism is DEI.
@@campagnollo What idiot would have voted for Clinton or Piss Pants Biden instead of Trump?!? Guess you love high inflation, open borders and our taxpayer money being flown overseas to foreign countries.
I'm a student at GCU, I am personally having a really good experience and my tuition is actually more affordable than a lot of other schools in the state thanks to scholarships. The people there are also really kind. I will say that the school has a tendency to nickel and dime you and they do seem to spend a lot of money on marketing, but so far the quality of the courses have been up to standard except for the few prerequisites I had to take. My opinion on the school might be biased for two reasons: 1: I went to community college for two years and was able to skip a lot of prerequisites. 2: I am in person, GCU has a massive fully online degree program and the few classes I have taken online have not been very good. Despite its flaws, it is in no way fair to put them below a college that offers "Build a Bear" degrees.
I am a fully non-tech, non IT people, I don't know anything about this but however seeing the world going in IT, tech and AI. I don't want to remain backward. I also want to gain some tech knowledge.And my interest in on Entrepreneurship and business. My thoughts till now ;; 1. Major in finance and minor in tech 2. Bachelor in any business as major(not decided yet) and doing cpa later But. I am really confused on what to choose, what to pursue !! I just completed high scht(+2)
Shane I would like to see a video showing what the net cost is (tuition - financial aid) is for the 20 most expensive colleges. I would also like to see a list of colleges that put their students in the most in debt (largest amount of student debt post graduation).
My school i went to a state university here in California. I graduated when i was older at 35 however, i was single, and still lived with my parents and still do today, and i do not have kids and i did not graduate with debt. I am saying this to give context, with my college i felt rushed to be done and pretty much everyone was from the bay area and southern California. Colleges now come off as corporate and very uniform and no imagination to them. I got a degree in business although i always liked history then i cook a nutrition course and enjoyed it. However, that same semester i had health issues and had a health crisis within a week after finals and so my last year i commuted then during the las semester covid started. I did not go thru the ceremony it was virtual ceremony crap. I am sure it was great for the kids but to me it was important. I should have double majored with my school or got a food science degree then went for a master's program immediately after that. Bachelor's degrees today are what high school diplomas were years ago. High school before the depression were treated like colleges are today. Most people only had 5th or 8th grade at that time.
What makes me sad is that University of Phoenix provides the "fast track" for graduation in the field of computer science/information technology than spending 4 years in college. Comparable to WGU, all the assignment I do creates a sense of accomplishments since I am graded by assignments, project, and exams vs only being evaluated by one exam which I could fail and not find out what questions were wrong. I feel confident that I'm learning in these courses and be very engaged in my studies. I wish there was more thorough interviews or vids on post IT grads getting jobs once they're completed. Hope there's another upload soon regard this.
What about Anglia Ruskin University UK. Paid for my GDip, completed and passed course work, received no diploma and no refund. They just blocked me. So…….
I went to college in the 90s. It was a great experience. The way things are now, I'd probably go to a community college, but I'm not sure if I'd be interested in a 4 year college.
Actually the University of Phoenix graduates in my State are seriously all of our hiring managers in my State!! (Maybe not all) but seriously there are many. So, I don't agree about UOPX. Now, I didn't attend, but I'm just being honest what I see. Check linkedin you'll see. So not technically only my State.
FYI, if you’re low income schools like Harvard can actually give you a full ride based on financial aid (think it’s like if your family makes less than 65k)
Even if your family is lower middle class (like mine), you can expect a pretty substantial financial aid package (speaking as someone who filled out their net price calculator).
University of Chicago does have specific university grants as well when you maintain a certain gpa... so it cuts off 1/3 of the tuition sometimes and it stacks with Cal Grants and Fed Pell Grant. Not entirely accurate.
In 1982 l went to Auburn. Tuition was 364$ for as many hours as I wanted. I did 17 that quarter. I had no financial help from my family. Worked 2 jobs, pizza delivery, and for my apt manager. I received free rent and the pizza job took care of expenses. Student loans and ROTC school expanses. Summers were spent training. The Army clothed me housed me and fed me and payed me. 3000$ in one hundred dollar bills. I received 2 degrees this way. Graduated with 10000$ in debt which I payed it off in one year. Can't do that today.
I want someone to look into landmark college’s funds. It’s a tiny college so it gets overlooked but it’s for neurodiverse students but tuition is ridiculously expensive because small class sizes and academic support but food and dorms are not good and worth for the tuition, also faculty doesn’t get paid and most of the money seems to go into marketing
Something really needs to be done about Rockford Career College in Rockford, IL which is owned by Starutzenberger college. This place is a scam that lies to people telling them that they can get a good paying job in a trade like HVAC , or as a surgical technician in 10 months. The programs are outrageously expensive, and the education quality is piss poor. I was so dumb that I went there their electrician program. I still owe a lot of money to these people and going to that school didn't help me put at all like they said it would. I am currently on the pursuit of a chemical engineering degree which i really wish I would have done sooner.
Evergreen State College is basically like NYU gallatin where they allow students to customize their own degrees. I would say that at least evergreen is cheaper than nyu
Was pretty surprised to see UChicago on here. Lots of privileged students tend to go there which might explain that tuition cost. Families under a certain income can practically go for free. Other than that, like the list. 👍🏻
Uchicago is a great school with the most generous finacial aid in the country. Instead of looking at the tuition you should look what the average person pays post finacial aid.
I just completed my bachelor degree in technical management from DeVry. I did so in 3 years and it cost me 35k. I was quickly accepted into FSU college of law masters program. So DeVry can not be too bad. I enjoyed them.
You can be bright and still take longer than 4 years if you don’t want to do full time for other reasons like I’m working part time and I have mental health problems and adhd and autism, I know school will take me more years than a lot of people and that’s okay, it wouldn’t be the school’s fault. Although if you have a 1% 4 year graduation rate, then that’s bad
It would be interesting for you to make a video speaking about the different universities you can find in other countries and how much better off you are in the US.
If the environment sucks than it’s a college that you shouldn’t go to, if a university snooping in your personal life don’t go to it, if they forbade you from doing harmless hobbies like playing m rated games don’t go to it, if they don’t let you watch r rated movies don’t go to it, if they treat you differently for not being white don’t go it, if they don’t let you have an easy dating life don’t go to it
Normal people, meaning of course poor people, should live in their parents’ basement while commuting down town to the nearest open admissions state university. Anything more expensive than that for people with dull normal IQs is nothing but a waste of money. Once you graduate most people will not care where you went to school or what your grades were seeing as how it takes about a nanosecond to size most people up correctly as dull normal. And study something which is considered a job credential if you’re not an artistic genius of some sort. The best degree is probably accounting lets get real. Everybody needs an accountant and all you need do is rent a tiny office which is always far cheaper than renting a store front like you’d need to set up as a barber. Better yet, enlist in the navy and become a limited duty officer once you’ve been in for 8 years. So no, you don’t really need a degree to be a naval officer. That’s just one example. But your promotions will be capped off at lieutenant commander. Big deal. Reserve officers all get kicked out after making that pay grade even if they did have a degree.
Personally, I don't think the University of Chicago belongs on this list at all. Yeah, it's expensive but it also is very prestigious and will likely get you a high-paying job.
Well people better be getting compensation for the money they are investing trying to make and honest good living. I would hope and think companies would see that commitment and try to help them too as well as people who made the choice just to put in work with the company I'm sure both can be compensated well
I don’t know if the University of Chicago is that much more expensive than say Princeton, Stanford, Harvard, Yale, JHU, WUSTL, etc. Some like Princeton and Harvard are need blind so might look cheaper but less than 5% qualify for need blind.
Hello @shane Hummus and everybody else. in university for undergrad degree if I have to choose to specialize between : - 1 - management , 2 - finance & economics, 3- accounting. Which one pays the most and has the highest potential to make the most money. Thank you. Also between those :- 1 - BS in Business program, 2- the BS in Business and Political Economy program, 3- or the BS in Business, Technology and Entrepreneurship program. Between university of Toronto and New York University. Thank you.❤
As a current business student, I would throw out management, unless maybe you want to do that along with another major. Probably the only situation in which a management degree is if you go to a very high ranked business school and want to go into management consulting. Finance and Economics would definitely be the option that has the highest potential to make money imo. I'm personally a Finance major, which may bias me, but I think its generally accepted that Finance is probably the industry with the highest potential to make boatloads of money out of all the business majors at least. I am certain that curriculums vary across colleges, but my courses so far have a lot to do with time value of money, portfolio theory, financial statement analysis, among other things. As far as the economics part, I'm not sure how much that would be a part of your curriculum, but certainly the basic supply and demand type things apply and I imagine that would also entail looking at larger market trends as well. Accounting is good as well, probably has a smaller cap generally speaking than finance, but still really good potential to make money in a variety of ways. You can work your way up a company and become a CFO, have your own accounting practice, or have a high-ranking position in a big accounting firm. I would say that there is probably a larger concern for automation within accounting than finance, but who really knows when it comes to stuff like that. In an accounting major you'll learn a lot about financial statements and tax code, if you are concerned about the material that you learn for that. Either way, you can always watch Shane's videos. And a personal tip from me would be to take as many technology related classes as possible, and get familiar with Excel before you get too deep into your major.
As a fourth year at Rotman, I recommend you to take the first year courses as well as the RSM230, RSM250, and RSM219 to see what you enjoy before making your decisions. That really helps. You choose your specialization in second year anyways, so you have plenty of time. Cant comment on UofT VS New York though.
@@WarloyJenkins I would add, that accounting, when it comes to automation won't fundamentally change in HOW the day works but in what tools and systems you need to understand in order to become an accountant. There is a need for financially savvy computer programmers, or to put it another way, programming is coming to the accounting space and learning those skills will allow you to keep your job. The only difficulty is in getting the information as most Unvieristies have not caught up to the state of IT Accounting software's development. You still need the accounting degree to understand what's going on and how to get your foot in the door.
Greetings and Salutations Los Bayou University it teaches on a floating dock My 1st pick So Chapman University seen my home schooling before graduating from junior college in 2012😊 but whos counting..😊
As for UCHICAGO do not listen to this person. Apply and see the doors that open. See the comments below they are more accurate. This is an incredible university.
I don’t understand the beef with Bob Jones University. Why should we hold a grudge against a university for a policy that hasn’t been on the books in over 20 years?
because it was only 20 years ago and segregation had been gone legally for over 20 years before that. highly prejudice and shows more stupidity than intellect ( which is ironic because its supposed to be a learning institution)
I worked in film and every once in a while we would get a full sail grad in a higher position and none of them had any clue about anything. In title they were my boss but on site they were no more than a pa.
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I'm happy you dropped names. Respect +
Sure UChicago's tuition is a lot, but top schools like UChicago also give insane amounts of financial aid, most low-income individuals who attend these schools usually graduate with very little to no debt. I think it's smarter to look at cost after aid instead of sticker cost. That will give you a better view as to which schools are really the most expensive. If we look at cost after aid, we will find that Uchicago is really affordable for such a world-class education.
Correct. My college technically has a tuition cost of $70K a year, but I went for 4 years tuition free due to their financial aid. They were a great liberal arts college and had $1B in endowment, and that has given me access to a great alumni network
Find a job yet?
I wonder if all those Nobel Prize winning economists that either graduated from UC or are professors there now think UC should be on the 10 top worst list?
I looked it up and most people come out of UC after a BA with a very high debt. Most of the people going there are NOT low-income individuals. They are the exception not the rule.
@@aeroeng22 Do you even have the foggiest clue how tiny a percentage the number of people you are talking about is in relation to the yearly graduates of the UC overall, you just mentioned? It is less than 1/100th of 1%.
Thank you for this video. It really needs more exposure, more need to learn about this. Looking at acceptance vs graduation rate especially at art schools is revealing. An art degree combined with internships and a great network is worth it, but no for profit schools. I went to Art Center and Teach at Otis and have had a 20+ year career in design.
The University of Chicago is arguably one of the most prestigious universities in the world. Even though the tuition rates look daunting at first, it’s important to remember that the majority of students don’t pay the full tuition rates. UChicago, along with many other universities of its caliber, are quite generous when it comes to financial aid.
Right? And you get to be taught by literal geniuses in their fields. 99.99% of students can't even get into Chicago, so the advice is useless as well.
even tho tuition fees are a thing to consider, I think it's still unfair putting them in the same boat as for-profit scams
@@globulidoktor1733 Exactly, honestly the whole take in the beginning kind of makes me feel like the channel maker is fairly ill-informed when it comes to the undergraduate university system. My alma mater's tuition is nearly $65K a year, but when I went I fell in a middle class category and went tuition free.
The key is needs blind.
I received my MBA from University of Phoenix in 2000. While the program lacks rigor, it opened many doors for me. I was able to have my employer pay nearly the entire cost so my outlay was minimal. My first position out of school was a Marketing Manager at a Fortune 500 pharmaceutical company. My income now has increased by 197%.
It good that things worked out for you. I once saw a reddit post about someone with the opposite experience. He went back to school to get a degree so that he could make more money in his job but it was essentially worthless since it was from the University of Phoenix. His boss just gave him an extra 2 dollars an hour "out of pity".
University of Phoenix was great for me also in 2024. I believe they turned around over the years. Many top companies in the US employ UoPX grads and many are friends of mine. If an employer won't take your degree seriously, well time to find a different employer. I used to work with some guys with BSc in Electrical Engineering from BYU, UofU all good schools but got fired, they couldn't do basic tasks. So take it for what it is worth, the degree doesn't make the person it amplifies the person.
This is why I’m satisfied with community college. It’s affordable and easy to get into.
Regardless what ACT score you get from High School, Community Colleges will still admit you!
I heard of a mother who sent her daughters to a too uni and payed everything thanks to her nursing career she got form a
Community college😊
“It’s affordable and easy to get into.”
…just like your mom.
Community college is that much needed second wind anyone needs. It gives you a second chance at success when you mess up in high school
Agreed!
Hey you forgot about Hustler's University
Or Prager U
That’s not even a real university
@@cindyliartr/woosh
Or IM Academy
@@John-TV_Random-Videosthats not even a real college so it doesn’t count
I don't see how the University of Phoenix and Capella are still around. You can get a PHD in Psychology in University of Phoenix but you're not state eligible to be a clinical psychologist because states don't accept their garbage degrees. Plus they charge outrageous prices.
Once you start paying $50K or higher to get a bachelors level degree, you know something is wrong
I think that's normal actually
Overall, very normal. Per year is too much imo
Most colleges for this criteria pre financial aid.
This was a much better video than recent ones that were just pitches for digital marketing. He did mention digital marketing but it was appropriate to the content- he mentioned how marketing degrees don’t teach digital marketing but should. That made sense. Very good video. I would love to see a video on bootcamps to avoid.
If you want to be artistic, I think majoring in something conventionally successful and then minoring in art is a good idea. Like a bachelor's in computer science and then a minor in art.
Yeah I wish I did this earlier. I’m just now switching majors before it’s too late
As a art student I agree with this. Most art is honestly within you and takes no set amount of time. For some people they learn it in 5 hours, for others they learn it in a lifetime. It's much the same with most things, but art is a little different. My point in this is that no amount of schooling makes you an artist, you need to put your own time and mostly passion into making your own art that represents with you.
@@nekomancer09 UI.UX design probably has way more job opportunities to be honest.
11:20 i have a friend who has spent 50,000$ and 5 years on an associates degree from a local comunity college... she is still not finished because the school made it physicaly impossible to graduate by only offering the classes needed for the degree at specific times.
for example: you would only have one oportunity to complete any given class because it takes 4-5 years for that class to become available... and it is designed so that you can only do about 5 classes towards your degree per year. (Red Rocks Comunity College)
Yeah this is a super messed up tactic that many colleges use. Some much worse than others. Sucks for your friend.
50k for an Associate's degree and she has to suffer through all that? I feel sorry for her.
I grew up poor and could of took out student loans, but graduated from a UK university instead and did it online. The tution is cheaper and I paid for it in cash. I also did an MBA from an English university. On my LinkedIn profile people think I'm British. I'm American though, and glad I have zero debt.
What university did you graduate from?
@@davidmladenovski1438 University of Essex.
Well done, thanks for sharing
I love this more people should raise awareness. I’ve seen Everest make people attend school for 3 years to get a medical assistant degree and owe upwards of 80k but working making 12/hr that should definitely be illegal
I caught on quick and unenrolled and now make more money than someone with a degree because I learned who pays better and took those jobs
I went into uni wanting to do a major in marketing after working in marketing for 4 years and very quickly changed my mind. One of my classes literally only had one week of study for online marketing. The rest was about mail out surveys and paper marketing 🙄
In the seventies, many students were able to live at home, work a part time job, and easily graduate from a reputable state university in four or five years with zero debt. What is different today (other than greed)?
I went to an art school similar to Full Sail for game design. The one thing I think I have over some of the other art students is programming. Other than that if I could do it again I would probably just go to school for software engineering or computer science since they're cheaper, get paid more and have more job opportunities on top of games.
The thing about art schools is they aren't worth it, but sometimes it's your only option. Like for me my family wouldn't help me get a computer to just quit working and make games for 2 years, but go 50k into debt and it justifies me needing the computer and equipment to make games. Same thing for the audio students I know, it would be better for them to just buy the equipment themselves and learn off youtube, but student aid isn't going to help you do that.
For art student loans should be just for living and getting the equipment you need, you shouldn't need to put yourself in debt going to college with something that has no right or wrong. Art can only be graded by opinion, there is no fact. Since it doesn't have pure fact you don't really need to be tested, graded or given a diploma in it because it means nothing.
Getting a diploma in game design doesn't make me a good game designer, all the games I make during that program make me a designer. At the end of the day it's hard to say. I wouldn't say art schools are totally useless, but I would say there is probably 100 other options better than it in most cases.
I did some research on Southern University at New Orleans . It is a historically all black, public university. It is disappointing to hear the reason why the graduation rate is at 1%.
Very disappointing and I’m from New Orleans
Well unfortunately they do exist and needs the PSA attention to save people from getting "scammed". Thanks Shane for doing this video to save us the heartache.
For everyone who needs to hear it:
Employers do not give a crap where you got your degree, as long as it’s from a legitimate institution and you actually have marketable skills, experience and credentials.
Your Gender Studies degree from Iona is not gonna help you as much as a good ole Business degree from your community college. Guaranteed.
Wow . That's really something new, bro. Good one to know ❤️🌟
Great video as always. I was thinking that you could do video about nurse education or generally how the job position structure works in the healthcare industry
University of Chicago is weirdly the number one option for Korean Chaebol kids to pursue higher education
I remember those DeVry commercials , it was just oozing consumer scam.
Fun fact: the median earnings from Grand Canyon University is the exact same as my local community college (CSN) but for double the time
I am still stuck on the fact that Bob Jones University has such a recent racist history. Crazy.
It’s a fundy (fundamentalist) school. If you didn’t vote for Trump, you get denied admission, no matter your GPA or talents.
They ended that policy over two decades ago. Compare that to Harvard which had systemic racism in admissions until the supreme court put an end to that this year. Ivy League schools practiced rampant antisemitism for much of the 20th century.
Racism is endemic in higher education, especially antisemitism which has exploded since 10/7. The new name for racism is DEI.
@@deanschulze3129 Spot on.
@@campagnollo What idiot would have voted for Clinton or Piss Pants Biden instead of Trump?!? Guess you love high inflation, open borders and our taxpayer money being flown overseas to foreign countries.
I'm a student at GCU, I am personally having a really good experience and my tuition is actually more affordable than a lot of other schools in the state thanks to scholarships. The people there are also really kind. I will say that the school has a tendency to nickel and dime you and they do seem to spend a lot of money on marketing, but so far the quality of the courses have been up to standard except for the few prerequisites I had to take. My opinion on the school might be biased for two reasons: 1: I went to community college for two years and was able to skip a lot of prerequisites. 2: I am in person, GCU has a massive fully online degree program and the few classes I have taken online have not been very good. Despite its flaws, it is in no way fair to put them below a college that offers "Build a Bear" degrees.
I am a fully non-tech, non IT people, I don't know anything about this but however seeing the world going in IT, tech and AI. I don't want to remain backward. I also want to gain some tech knowledge.And my interest in on Entrepreneurship and business.
My thoughts till now ;;
1. Major in finance and minor in tech
2. Bachelor in any business as major(not decided yet) and doing cpa later
But. I am really confused on what to choose, what to pursue !!
I just completed high scht(+2)
I grew up across the street form Bob Jones, now I live next to Full sail 💀💀💀
Full Sail University is on this list hopefully
Absolutely 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Well deserved!
Shane I would like to see a video showing what the net cost is (tuition - financial aid) is for the 20 most expensive colleges. I would also like to see a list of colleges that put their students in the most in debt (largest amount of student debt post graduation).
My school i went to a state university here in California. I graduated when i was older at 35 however, i was single, and still lived with my parents and still do today, and i do not have kids and i did not graduate with debt. I am saying this to give context, with my college i felt rushed to be done and pretty much everyone was from the bay area and southern California. Colleges now come off as corporate and very uniform and no imagination to them. I got a degree in business although i always liked history then i cook a nutrition course and enjoyed it. However, that same semester i had health issues and had a health crisis within a week after finals and so my last year i commuted then during the las semester covid started. I did not go thru the ceremony it was virtual ceremony crap. I am sure it was great for the kids but to me it was important. I should have double majored with my school or got a food science degree then went for a master's program immediately after that. Bachelor's degrees today are what high school diplomas were years ago. High school before the depression were treated like colleges are today. Most people only had 5th or 8th grade at that time.
What makes me sad is that University of Phoenix provides the "fast track" for graduation in the field of computer science/information technology than spending 4 years in college.
Comparable to WGU, all the assignment I do creates a sense of accomplishments since I am graded by assignments, project, and exams vs only being evaluated by one exam which I could fail and not find out what questions were wrong. I feel confident that I'm learning in these courses and be very engaged in my studies. I wish there was more thorough interviews or vids on post IT grads getting jobs once they're completed. Hope there's another upload soon regard this.
What about Anglia Ruskin University UK. Paid for my GDip, completed and passed course work, received no diploma and no refund. They just blocked me. So…….
Please do a video on wildlife careers
I went to college in the 90s. It was a great experience. The way things are now, I'd probably go to a community college, but I'm not sure if I'd be interested in a 4 year college.
Actually the University of Phoenix graduates in my State are seriously all of our hiring managers in my State!! (Maybe not all) but seriously there are many. So, I don't agree about UOPX. Now, I didn't attend, but I'm just being honest what I see. Check linkedin you'll see. So not technically only my State.
FYI, if you’re low income schools like Harvard can actually give you a full ride based on financial aid (think it’s like if your family makes less than 65k)
Even if your family is lower middle class (like mine), you can expect a pretty substantial financial aid package (speaking as someone who filled out their net price calculator).
Fortunately, my university which is private is fairly generous with scholarships. It’s not the best but better compared to others.
University of Chicago does have specific university grants as well when you maintain a certain gpa... so it cuts off 1/3 of the tuition sometimes and it stacks with Cal Grants and Fed Pell Grant. Not entirely accurate.
In 1982 l went to Auburn. Tuition was 364$ for as many hours as I wanted. I did 17 that quarter. I had no financial help from my family. Worked 2 jobs, pizza delivery, and for my apt manager. I received free rent and the pizza job took care of expenses. Student loans and ROTC school expanses. Summers were spent training. The Army clothed me housed me and fed me and payed me. 3000$ in one hundred dollar bills. I received 2 degrees this way. Graduated with 10000$ in debt which I payed it off in one year. Can't do that today.
Please make a video on medical physics soon
The University of Harvard? Who the hell has ever used this wrong phrase?
I want someone to look into landmark college’s funds. It’s a tiny college so it gets overlooked but it’s for neurodiverse students but tuition is ridiculously expensive because small class sizes and academic support but food and dorms are not good and worth for the tuition, also faculty doesn’t get paid and most of the money seems to go into marketing
Something really needs to be done about Rockford Career College in Rockford, IL which is owned by Starutzenberger college. This place is a scam that lies to people telling them that they can get a good paying job in a trade like HVAC , or as a surgical technician in 10 months. The programs are outrageously expensive, and the education quality is piss poor. I was so dumb that I went there their electrician program. I still owe a lot of money to these people and going to that school didn't help me put at all like they said it would. I am currently on the pursuit of a chemical engineering degree which i really wish I would have done sooner.
Awesome video
What do you think about Network engineering, is it really worth the word "engineering" or do you consider it real engineering? Keep up the good work 😘
There's the intention behind the federal subsidy of post-secondary education and then there is the market reaction that is based on economic factors.
Bit surprised that Los Angeles Valley College wasn't on the list
Evergreen State College is basically like NYU gallatin where they allow students to customize their own degrees. I would say that at least evergreen is cheaper than nyu
Have you ever done a video on law schools?
Could you do a video for the best Universities/Colleges in Europe? (Preferably with different fields; engineering, medicine etc.) Love your content.
Was pretty surprised to see UChicago on here. Lots of privileged students tend to go there which might explain that tuition cost. Families under a certain income can practically go for free. Other than that, like the list. 👍🏻
All the more reason to not blindly believe everything we encounter on social media
I am considering going back to college to learn about digital marketing and you pointed out that the colleges have less subjects on digital marketing?
Uchicago is a great school with the most generous finacial aid in the country. Instead of looking at the tuition you should look what the average person pays post finacial aid.
So what are the worst colleges in the world?
You should do a video about Minerva!
I just completed my bachelor degree in technical management from DeVry. I did so in 3 years and it cost me 35k. I was quickly accepted into FSU college of law masters program. So DeVry can not be too bad. I enjoyed them.
Wait you can sued for criticising a college?????? I've been wanting to expose my college publicly on the Internet once I'm graduated. 🤣
I think I’ll be fine, you just have to be careful what words you use when criticizing them.
Shane where is hustlers university?
Brave and bravo.
You can be bright and still take longer than 4 years if you don’t want to do full time for other reasons like I’m working part time and I have mental health problems and adhd and autism, I know school will take me more years than a lot of people and that’s okay, it wouldn’t be the school’s fault. Although if you have a 1% 4 year graduation rate, then that’s bad
What about Cuny? Surely the reviews look mid
Do you guys think Liberty University is a good college?
It would be interesting for you to make a video speaking about the different universities you can find in other countries and how much better off you are in the US.
It only takes 3 years to get a BA in the UK. You can get a masters in 5.
#7 has nothing to do with the quality of education
If the environment sucks than it’s a college that you shouldn’t go to, if a university snooping in your personal life don’t go to it, if they forbade you from doing harmless hobbies like playing m rated games don’t go to it, if they don’t let you watch r rated movies don’t go to it, if they treat you differently for not being white don’t go it, if they don’t let you have an easy dating life don’t go to it
Normal people, meaning of course poor people, should live in their parents’ basement while commuting down town to the nearest open admissions state university. Anything more expensive than that for people with dull normal IQs is nothing but a waste of money. Once you graduate most people will not care where you went to school or what your grades were seeing as how it takes about a nanosecond to size most people up correctly as dull normal. And study something which is considered a job credential if you’re not an artistic genius of some sort. The best degree is probably accounting lets get real. Everybody needs an accountant and all you need do is rent a tiny office which is always far cheaper than renting a store front like you’d need to set up as a barber. Better yet, enlist in the navy and become a limited duty officer once you’ve been in for 8 years. So no, you don’t really need a degree to be a naval officer. That’s just one example. But your promotions will be capped off at lieutenant commander. Big deal. Reserve officers all get kicked out after making that pay grade even if they did have a degree.
Do they promise a job after graduation?
Personally, I don't think the University of Chicago belongs on this list at all. Yeah, it's expensive but it also is very prestigious and will likely get you a high-paying job.
The math isn't mathing. It's more expensive than MIT and NYU, and nowhere near the same prestige.
@@njpme Well not to say rankings mean everything but Uchicago is ranked higher than NYU at #6.
@@firstnamelastname-lm5fe 😯😯
@@njpme UChicago has more prestige than NYU. Lower acceptance rate and the requirements to gain acceptance are much harder
@@rubyhakim9674 cool
Very surprised to see GCU on this list (Grand Canyon University) it’s an accredit D1 Christian school. Even though it’s a private school
As a former GCU student, it is complete trash.
Glad to see U of Chicago on the top of the list, it’s a Rockefeller school.
Harvey Mudd? The guy from Star Trek?
can you make a video about getting an associates after a bachelors to complement the bachelors?
I was halfway expecting my college to be on this list.
UChicago is not a bad college. There is a good economics and finance department in the University. Milton Friedman gave lecture there.
Well people better be getting compensation for the money they are investing trying to make and honest good living. I would hope and think companies would see that commitment and try to help them too as well as people who made the choice just to put in work with the company I'm sure both can be compensated well
I don’t know if the University of Chicago is that much more expensive than say Princeton, Stanford, Harvard, Yale, JHU, WUSTL, etc. Some like Princeton and Harvard are need blind so might look cheaper but less than 5% qualify for need blind.
my reaction throughout this entire video: tea? 👀
What about Carribean medical schools? What is your opinion?
You can take “ITT Tech” off the list. They folded after numerous investigations.
Basically all low-income UChicago students go for free. It's one of the most influential academic institutions ever
I also think that University of Southern California is now more expensive than UChicago as well, but I’ve never heard anyone ever call USC a scam
Evergreen State is a joke 🤣
By world do you mean just US and UK?
Guys, what do you think about Schiller International University? I got scholarship from them ,is the university worth it ?
Hello @shane Hummus and everybody else. in university for undergrad degree if I have to choose to specialize between : - 1 - management ,
2 - finance & economics,
3- accounting.
Which one pays the most and has the highest potential to make the most money.
Thank you.
Also between those :- 1 - BS in Business program,
2- the BS in Business and Political Economy program,
3- or the BS in Business, Technology and Entrepreneurship program.
Between university of Toronto and New York University.
Thank you.❤
As a current business student, I would throw out management, unless maybe you want to do that along with another major. Probably the only situation in which a management degree is if you go to a very high ranked business school and want to go into management consulting.
Finance and Economics would definitely be the option that has the highest potential to make money imo. I'm personally a Finance major, which may bias me, but I think its generally accepted that Finance is probably the industry with the highest potential to make boatloads of money out of all the business majors at least. I am certain that curriculums vary across colleges, but my courses so far have a lot to do with time value of money, portfolio theory, financial statement analysis, among other things. As far as the economics part, I'm not sure how much that would be a part of your curriculum, but certainly the basic supply and demand type things apply and I imagine that would also entail looking at larger market trends as well.
Accounting is good as well, probably has a smaller cap generally speaking than finance, but still really good potential to make money in a variety of ways. You can work your way up a company and become a CFO, have your own accounting practice, or have a high-ranking position in a big accounting firm. I would say that there is probably a larger concern for automation within accounting than finance, but who really knows when it comes to stuff like that. In an accounting major you'll learn a lot about financial statements and tax code, if you are concerned about the material that you learn for that.
Either way, you can always watch Shane's videos. And a personal tip from me would be to take as many technology related classes as possible, and get familiar with Excel before you get too deep into your major.
As a fourth year at Rotman, I recommend you to take the first year courses as well as the RSM230, RSM250, and RSM219 to see what you enjoy before making your decisions. That really helps. You choose your specialization in second year anyways, so you have plenty of time. Cant comment on UofT VS New York though.
@@WarloyJenkins I would add, that accounting, when it comes to automation won't fundamentally change in HOW the day works but in what tools and systems you need to understand in order to become an accountant. There is a need for financially savvy computer programmers, or to put it another way, programming is coming to the accounting space and learning those skills will allow you to keep your job. The only difficulty is in getting the information as most Unvieristies have not caught up to the state of IT Accounting software's development. You still need the accounting degree to understand what's going on and how to get your foot in the door.
Odd question but is a masters in Music or Film worth it if the goal is to be a professor?
Greetings and Salutations
Los Bayou University it teaches on a floating dock
My 1st pick
So Chapman University seen my home schooling before graduating from junior college in 2012😊 but whos counting..😊
As for UCHICAGO do not listen to this person. Apply and see the doors that open. See the comments below they are more accurate. This is an incredible university.
you are opinionated and right about some things and wrong about other things.
I don’t understand the beef with Bob Jones University. Why should we hold a grudge against a university for a policy that hasn’t been on the books in over 20 years?
because it was only 20 years ago and segregation had been gone legally for over 20 years before that. highly prejudice and shows more stupidity than intellect ( which is ironic because its supposed to be a learning institution)
@@Zaycancode thank you for this comment! I don’t know why people are acting stupid about Jones University.
I was gentle with the “like” button this time…as I’ve stated before this is ONLY for the Holidays….😊🎄
😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
Trade school is the best option. Learn by DOING not BEING LECTURED! And the tuition is CHEAPER! And graduates will get HIGH PAYING jobs!
Add McPherson College in Kansas to the list!
Southern New Hampshire University online?
Would like to know your views on American Military University / American Public University...
What are your thoughts on Purdue Global?
I’ve been to full sail and it was a mostly good experience.
I worked in film and every once in a while we would get a full sail grad in a higher position and none of them had any clue about anything. In title they were my boss but on site they were no more than a pa.