Archive for the ‘Education Spending’ Category

Student Loan Debt Exceeds Credit Card Debt for the First Time in History

Friday, April 29th, 2011


(credit: scui3asteveo)

Q. What’s the difference between defaulting on your student loans and defaulting on your credit card debt?

A. If you fall into a hopeless debt spiral because you can’t pay back your credit card company or your mortgage, you can declare bankruptcy and get a clean credit slate after a few years. If you default on your student loans, you can never escape. Ever.

Unfortunately, it looks like a lot of college grads are about to find themselves with a black mark on their permanent records. Your credit history, unlike that mythical permanent record your teachers threatened you with in 4th grade, can really affect your opportunities in life. It can determine whether or not you get a credit card, a school or car loan, or a mortgage on a new home. Some employers even check credit reports to get the dirt on potential new hires.

Check out this article on good.is for more fun details and a glance at the ever-increasing Student Loan Debt Clock!

See also: this depressing article on “mal-employed” college grads.

Also see also: this list of the “20 most useless college majors,” which shows the limited mid-career earning potential for chemistry majors, among other obvious low-paying career tracks (hello, art history scholars!) Of course, being “useless” financially doesn’t mean your degree of choice won’t make your heart soar like an eagle. We recommend you use your own criteria for success when making major career choices. And don’t default on your student loans.

Random Young Writer Making a Killing in the Kindle Store

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011


Amanda Hocking (photo courtesy Business Insider)

Technology changes everything, again.

Amanda Hocking is living the dream: she’s in her mid-twenties, writing what she wants to write, and making a serious profit without any of the usual middlemen. No publishers, no editors, no marketers, no book-signing tours.

The Kindle store allows her to connect directly with readers, who sometimes pay only a dollar to download her work. But multiply one dollar by 100,000 downloads, and then imagine taking home 70% of that. (Amazon keeps the rest.)

This is good news for young writers looking to make a name (and a profit) for themselves, but what about all those people who make their living as publishers, editors, and marketers?

Your parents aren’t going to be happy about this…

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

Ouch. According to a new study, college students are spending four (or more) years and thousands of dollars on higher education, but they’re not actually learning anything.


(photo credit: peanutian)

Here’s the short story:

Students are slacking off, colleges are more focused on enrolling and keeping new students than they are on making sure each student gets a quality education, and professors are having trouble keeping up with their increasingly large class sizes as more and more people attend college.

Here are the fun facts:

  • 45 percent of students “did not demonstrate any significant improvement in learning” during the first two years of college.
  • 36 percent of students “did not demonstrate any significant improvement in learning” over four years of college.
  • Students who study by themselves for more hours each week gain more knowledge — while those who spend more time studying in peer groups see diminishing gains.
  • Students whose classes reflect high expectations (more than 40 pages of reading a week and more than 20 pages of writing a semester) gained more than other students.
  • Students who spend more time in fraternities and sororities show smaller gains than other students.

Read the whole story here.

What You Should Know Before You Budget

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

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Credit: apium

Sticking to a budget is more or less like sticking to a diet: It sucks, and you’re almost guaranteed to fail.

BUT! There’s another way. With a few simple tricks, you can take control of your spending and avoid feeling guilty all the time. Here’s what Tara Siegel Bernard from the New York Times has to say:

  • Let the robots take control. Set up automatic transfers to your savings and investment accounts. It only takes a few minutes. If your savings is being automatically transferred out of your spending account every month, you don’t have to worry about spending it!
  • Start at the finish line. What are you saving for? Saving is easier when you have a goal in mind (a vacation, a new car, an obscenely expensive pair of shoes). Figure out how much money you need and you’ll know how much money to have automatically transferred each month.
  • Separate the fun money from the serious money. If you have a phone bill or rent to pay, keep that money separate from the money you plan to squander irresponsibly at the mall. Obviously.
  • Brace yourself for big surprises. One of the easiest ways to muck up your budget is to suddenly spend a lot of money you hadn’t planned for. This one’s easy, though. Put a little extra away somewhere each month. You can use that to cover your surprise expenses without feeling like a total budgeting loser.

Best Quote:
“Ultimately, what we want our money to be is an energy source. It should help us get somewhere or do something.”  – Amanda Clayman, Financial Therapist (only in New York!)

Be honest. You’ve done it.

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

What is it about a ridiculously expensive education that brings out the ramen-eater in all of us?

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ilovecharts:

On my 3rd cup, on my way to the 4th

-lanzeee

Keep pushing, kids! Finals week is almost over!

^Very important comma placement

This holiday season, let’s try to avoid destroying the rainforest

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

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When you crack open a fresh copy of Where the Wild Things Are, do you smell rainforests in Indonesia being decimated? Well apparently, that actually happens.

Our friends at the bad-ass Rainforest Action Network just pulled together a shopping guide for the kiddies in your life. Download the 2-page guide here (pdf), or read more about the project at ran.org.

Thinking About Getting An MBA? Prepare For Possible Unemployment

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

Compared to last year, it’s easier for MBAs to get a job, but nowhere near as easy as it was before the recession.

  • The recession has made it a lot harder for business-school grads to get a job, especially in the consulting and financial services industries.
  • Though companies are recruiting less, some schools have maintained relationships with those hiring sources. But schools that don’t have those relationships are having a much harder time hooking their grads up with jobs.
  • Companies that are hiring are focusing their recruiting efforts on schools located nearby, even more than the top-tier schools.

Facts & Figures

  • In 2009, 84% of business-school grads worldwide had  jobs within a few months of graduating; in 2010, that number rose to 88%
  • Industries now actively recruiting MBAs: healthcare, energy, technology
  • Median starting pay for business-school grads in 2010 was $78,820 in 2010; in 2009 it was $75,000

Best Quote

“Back in 2007 and 2008, students had flexibility to decide where they wanted to live and work. With outlooks tightening, students will take opportunities wherever they’re available.” – Nicole Hall, President of the MBA Career Services Council

The Hobbit Lives In New Zealand!

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

New Zealand wants the new Hobbit films to be shot within its borders so badly that it’s changing labor laws to make it happen.

  • Just when it seemed the J.R.R. Tolkien film adaptation industry was moving to New Zealand for good, Warner Bros. almost pulled its latest project – a two-part adaptation of The Hobbit – out of the country.
  • After an actors’ union boycott threatened production, Warner Bros. management flew to New Zealand to discuss whether the movie could be made there or not. Thousands of Hobbit fans took to the streets to protest.
  • New Zealand’s government responded swiftly, promising Warner Bros. additional tax breaks on future movies, setting up a joint marketing deal, and changing the country’s labor laws to “clarify the differences between a contract worker and a movie production employee.”

Facts & Figures

  • The Hobbit film project is worth about $500 million to New Zealand.
  • Losing the film could have meant up to a $1.5 billion loss.
  • “The Hobbit,” by J.R.R. Tolkien, was first published in 1937.

Best Quote

“Making the two Hobbit movies here will not only safeguard work for thousands of New Zealanders, but it will also follow the success of the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy in once again promoting New Zealand on the world stage.” – John Key, Prime Minister of New Zealand

DailyCandy Editor Lauren Lumsden On Discovering New And Cool

Monday, October 4th, 2010

It’s not every day you get to interview an editor from your favorite daily mailing list, but we somehow convinced Lauren to chat in front of our camera last week. Check out her interview to learn about the dude-ranch-to-web-editor career track and, of course, Bacon Salt.

>>TILE brings you exclusive interviews from people doing great things in SPEND, GROW, and GIVE. To view more, click on TILEcasts in the TILE Library.

Have a burning question or someone you’d like to see interviewed? Let us know – just Ask TILE!

‘The Official Preppy Handbook’ Updated For Today’s Prep

Monday, August 30th, 2010

“True Prep” is a lifestyle guide updated for the modern prepster.

  • The author of 1980′s shockingly successful “The Official Preppy Handbook” has just published a new edition for the next generation: “True Prep: It’s a Whole New Old World.”
  • This new take on the original talks issues like divorce, second marriages, and dealing with the fallout from youthful partying.
  • Lisa Birnbach, author of both editions, is not-quite-ironic in her assessment of what is and isn’t preppy. There’s a preppy hall of fame (starring Stephen Colbert, oddly), an assessment of the preppiest schools, and, apparently, a serious devotion to preppy shopping.

Facts & Figures

  • When it came out in 1980, “The Official Preppy Handbook” was on the New York Times bestseller list for over a year
  • Today the original edition can sell for $100 or even $1,000

Best Quote

“Every single one of us — no matter the age or the gender or sexual preference — owns a blue blazer.” – True Prep: It’s a Whole New Old World