The American Nation A History of the United States, Combined Volume (14th Edition)

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Does the government help you pay for college?


194


The recession that struck in 2008 hit young adults the


hardest. By the end of the year, less than half (46 percent)


of those aged eighteen to twenty-four had jobs—the


lowest rate on record.^1 Many of those who couldn’t find


jobs decided to go to college. This influx produced


another record in 2008: More young adults were enrolled


in either two- or four-year colleges than ever before. The


chief enrollment increase was in community colleges,


whose costs (tuition, fees, books and expenses) averaged


$7,000, compared to four-year public colleges ($10,000)
and four-year private colleges ($27,000).
But how could young people pay for college during a
severe recession? The federal government provided the
answer—through loans for college, chiefly Pell grants. By
2010, for example, nearly 8 million students received Pell
grants averaging $3,700 with a maximum grant of $5,500.
That the federal government would one day play so
profound a role in the lives of its people would have
astonished the founding generation. Well into the nine-

(^1) The federal government began tracking such data in 1948. teenth century, the federal government failed to generate

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