@milanicreative In a macro sense, this drawing describes the Buddhist concept of enlightenment. The Buddha is within each of us. Our practice melts delusion so we can see the light.
Venerable Thich Nhat Hanh lived a truly meaningful life. I have no doubt the best way we can pay tribute to him is to continue his work to promote peace in the world. https://t.co/gsmm9KWf0A
"I don't know where our family would be if by chance the cotton gin had never burned down. But entrepreneurship is in my blood." - @StylesBarberSpa 💈 #NeverStopNeverSettle@UNINTERRUPTED x @Hennessy
Join the movement: https://t.co/RNcZVld2X5
@HeatherHoerle @Cpastergold @shieldsNBOA I think schools with low discount rates have a large pool of full pay students, intentionally control the financial aid budget, and have limited economic diversity in their populations. Endowments & philanthropy allow schools to increase discounts without taping operating funds.
@Cpastergold @HeatherHoerle @shieldsNBOA How a school funds funds financial aid, scholarships, and remission doesn’t really affect the discount rate, which basically comes from subtracting all these discounts from “gross tuition,” if everyone paid full price. Endowment can support part of this expense, but rarely all.
@Cpastergold @HeatherHoerle @shieldsNBOA That’s right. Discount rates at healthy schools never used to be north of 15%. Now I regularly see schools over 20%. A detailed study of colleges, where discount rates are higher, showed that anything above 28% has diminished returns - costs more than it generates. Dangerous #s
Episode 2 of the Enrusk podcast features Ed thought leader and expert @ChadTewEDU talking about his fascinating take on Ed, his backstory, his work and thinking helping schools partner or merge. Chad has such a unique and valuable insights. Enjoy #education @ECISchools #enrusk