The Price of Progress: How Soaring College Costs Are Locking Out a Generation
Part 8 | Educational Leadership Series – The Way Bahamas
Rising college costs are closing the doors of opportunity for low-income and minority students across the U.S. and Caribbean. How can educators, policymakers, and communities respond with fairness and faith?
A Dream Deferred
Jordan’s acceptance letter arrived on a Tuesday afternoon.
The email subject read: “Congratulations—Welcome to State University!”
He stared at the screen, his heart racing. He’d done it—the first in his family to make it to college. His mother hugged him so tightly that she cried. But two weeks later, joy gave way to panic. The financial aid award covered only half of tuition. The rest—over $20,000 a year—was his responsibility.
Jordan spent the summer calculating and recalculating. Loans. Part-time work. Maybe deferring a semester. He wasn’t giving up—but he couldn’t afford to go.
For countless students like Jordan, the pursuit of higher education has become a paradox: the very key to economic mobility now comes with a lock only wealth can open.
