Since the university tuition fee increases of 2015, going to university is now a substantial financial commitment, with
the average student spending up to # 50,000 on tuition and maintenance fees in the UK.
According to NBC,
the average student spends $ 1200 annually just on books.
Much less than
the average student spends on textbooks each year.
A single book can cost as much as $ 200 and it's estimated that
the average student spends almost $ 1,200 per year on books and supplies alone.
Not exact matches
Families with kids in kindergarten through 12th grade will
spend an
average $ 634.78, versus $ 688.62 in 2012, while families of college
students will
spend $ 836.83, down from $ 907.22 last year.
After meeting the scholarship
student, the amount of money the
average call center employee raised in a week shot up 142 percent and the number of minutes
spent on the phone went up 171 percent.
Students spend an
average of 25 to 30 hours of work outside of class weekends studying.
On
average, Millennials under 25
spend 4.2 % more of their income on education than their parents did.3 Higher costs have meant more
student debt which has put a damper on
spending.
Children could also be held partially responsible for disrupting family - time as the poll revealed 72 % of
students spent between three and ten hours on - line on an
average day during weekends and holidays.
Clearly, the
average theological school is not awash in funds available for discretionary
spending, for covering the start - up costs of major new academic «experiments,» for providing new
student services, or even for providing adequate support services for administration and faculty.
In one eastern college the
students, far above
average in wealth and brains,
spent a year deciding the subject for a week's religious program and came up with the title, «Anxiety, Despair and Faith: the Search for Meaning in Life.»
Up from 23.4 % in 2007, in 2017 40.6 % of
students now
spend 3 or more hours each day (on an
average school day) playing video or computer games, or using a computer, smartphone, or tablet for something other than school work.
The higher cost of fringe benefits is another reason why New York State tops the nation in education
spending — $ 19,552 per
student — nearly double the $ 10,608 national
average.
New York
spends more on education per
student than any other state in the nation, roughly twice the national
average.
New York
spent $ 21,206 per pupil compared to a national
average of $ 11,392 in school year 2014 - 2015.38 Better targeting
spending to the highest needs districts would contain costs while ensuring that all
students have access to a sound basic education.39 The State wastes $ 1.2 billion annually on property tax rebates and allocates $ 4 billion annually on economic development
spending with a sparse record of results.40 Curtailing
spending in these areas would reduce pressure to increase taxes and lessen the tax differential with other states.
Education
spending had peaked at an
average of $ 11,621 per
student in 2008 — 09 before the deep global recession caused states to slash their
spending amid plummeting tax revenues.
The fact is that New York
spends more on education per
student than any other state in the union — an
average $ 18,126 each, according to the latest federal data.
YES — cut
spending — NY pays double per capita to educate
students than the
average... one of the highest in the nation.
Charter schools statewide receive on
average 75 cents for every dollar
spent on
students in traditional public schools, according to charter advocates.
Nationwide, states
spent an
average of $ 6,903 per
student on teacher salaries that year, compared to $ 14,769 in New York.
The
average teacher
spends more than $ 500 a year on his or her
students, and many have expenditures that top $ 1,000.
The Huntington Union Free School District, which operates eight schools with 4,650
students,
spent an
average of $ 4.7 million less than budgeted each year, according to the audit, released Friday by the state Comptroller's Office.
In one small study of 104 college
students, more than half unlocked their phones an
average of 60 times a day and
spent upward of 3 1/2 hours on the devices.
At the University of La Rochelle, where in the 1st year of the program
students were recruited without having an assignment to start with,
students spent an
average of 2 days per week just trying to find a consulting opportunity, Canet says: «They found it difficult to manage their time between their thesis work and the search of company assignments.»
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The
students spent an
average of five weeks in the blended class.
Even Education Week «s raw dataset shows that the poorest districts (those with the most
students living in poverty)
spend, on
average, 122 percent of the state's median.
The
average respondent estimated that their local school district
spent $ 6,189 on each
student and that a teacher in their state earned $ 36,063 annually.
They also do not differ significantly in their initial per - pupil
spending,
average class size, percentage of
students receiving subsidized school lunches, percentage of
students with limited English proficiency or disabilities, and the mobility of their
student populations.
Districts that are higher performing by this indicator actually
spend, on
average, no more than the lower performing districts (after adjustment for differences in family income, special - education placements, and the percentage of
students who are of limited English proficiency).
After controlling for
average class size, per - pupil
spending in 1998 - 99, the percentage of
students with disabilities, the percentage of
students receiving a free or reduced - price school lunch, the percentage of
students with limited English proficiency, and
student mobility rates, high - scoring F schools achieved gains that were 2.5 points greater than their below -
average D counterparts in reading (see Figure 2).
Students who won the lottery are more than 55 percentage points more likely than losers to attend their first - choice school in the first year, and on
average spend an additional 1 to 1.5 years enrolled in that school overall.
According to recent studies, between kindergarten and 12th grade, the
average student will
spend, cumulatively, at least one full year of classroom time with a substitute teacher.
More than 45 percent of
students in the state attend schools in districts where
spending equals or eclipses the national
average.
Just 4 percent of
students in the state attend schools in districts that
spend at least the national
average per
student.
Spending: Colorado ranks 28th among the 50 states and the District of Columbia on the spending index, a comparative measure that describes both the percent of students at or above the national average in funding and how far the rest fall below that
Spending: Colorado ranks 28th among the 50 states and the District of Columbia on the
spending index, a comparative measure that describes both the percent of students at or above the national average in funding and how far the rest fall below that
spending index, a comparative measure that describes both the percent of
students at or above the national
average in funding and how far the rest fall below that
average.
Almost 97 percent of
students in the state are in districts that
spend at least the national per - pupil
average.
The state scores a 99.9 on the
spending index, which indicates that even the 3 percent of
students in districts
spending below the national
average do not fall very far below that
average.
Nevada ranked 44th on the
spending index, which considers both the percentage of
students in districts
spending at or above the national
average and how far below that
average the
spending for the rest of the state falls.
Lovenheim and Willén found that
students who
spent all 12 years of elementary and secondary school in a state with a duty - to - bargain law earn an
average of $ 795 less per year as adults than
students who were not exposed to collective bargaining laws during the same time period.
Almost 97 percent of
students attend schools in districts that
spend at least the national
average.
Families with
students at the region's public four - year colleges
spent 21 percent, the same as the national
average.
This
average is effectively an implicit
spending weight unique to each district, determined by dividing the sum of all allocations made on behalf of each
student type by the number of
students in that category.
The state ranks 19th out of the 50 states and the District of Columbia on the
spending index, which considers both the number of
students in districts
spending at least the national
average and how far other
students fall below that
average.
In Washington State and New Mexico, districts with
student enrollments between 100 and 1,200
spend $ 104 million and $ 69 million more, respectively, in total public funds than if they were
spending the statewide
average per pupil in these districts.
The state
spent $ 6,380 per
student in the 2001 - 02 school year, well below the national
average of $ 7,734.
Spending: Just under 1 percent of
students in Tennessee attend schools in districts that
spend at least the national
average.
Not far away, in another affluent, suburban school district in Montclair, New Jersey, minutes from an August meeting show the board of education approved
spending nearly $ 5 million this year for tuition payments — an
average of $ 63,000 per
student — on «out - of - district placements» for 79
students with a variety of classifications, including learning disabilities and «other health impairment.»
In 2003 - 04, families with
students attending a community college
spent 17 percent of their income to cover the costs, compared with the national
average of 13 percent.
Fewer than 1 percent of
students attend schools in districts that
spend at least the national
average.