Image 01 Image 03

Berkeley Journalism School’s answer for low paying careers: $10k tuition hike

Berkeley Journalism School’s answer for low paying careers: $10k tuition hike

Graduates can look forward to low salaries and little public trust, but hey… social justice!

What’s the problem with an extra ten or twenty thousand dollars for a journalism degree?

It’s not like the public’s trust in journalists is at an all time low or anything.

The higher education bubble is a subject we’ve covered extensively at College Insurrection.

This new report from Kaitlin Mulhere at Inside Higher Ed is special because it also involves the future of American journalism.

It seems the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism is in dire need of cash:

Jacking Up J-School Tuition

A proposal to raise tuition at the University of California at Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism has some faculty members, alumni and students worried about destroying the school’s distinctive character.

Faced with a half-million-dollar budget gap, Dean Edward Wasserman announced plans to recommend a tuition increase for the 2016-17 academic year in a memo to campus members earlier this month.

He said the increase is necessary given the school’s financial standing, and that the amount students pay doesn’t actually cover what it costs to provide that education.

He also said that the school would remain devoted to affordability and dedicate a large portion of the sum raised through the new fee to financial aid.

Much of the online response to the idea has been negative, with several people questioning how journalists can afford to pay an additional $20,500 over two years for a degree in a troubled industry with historically low pay.

One student quoted in the column knows she won’t make much money in journalism but she’s focused on the bigger picture.

The emphasis below is mine. Ladies and gentlemen, the future of liberal media:

Students speaking about the proposal online and in interviews for this article said that affordability was one of the major reasons they chose Berkeley’s two-year master’s degree program.

“We’re here because we care about social justice, and we want to tell good stories,” said Mara Van Ells, a first-year student. “We’re not necessarily going to make a lot of money when we graduate, especially in today’s market.”

Ms. Van Ells could just skip the $10,000 price hike and get a job at the Huffington Post.

That won’t require any investigative skills.

And if she’s really desperate, there’s always VOX.

Featured image via Wikimedia Commons.

DONATE

Donations tax deductible
to the full extent allowed by law.

Comments

A strong selling point would be “your increased tuition payments helps support scholarships and in-state tuition for illegals”. This tactic will garner huge agreement among the lib-dem crowd, and is sure NOT to fail!