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Starbucks Announces Free* College Education. *Kinda sorta free

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Starbucks and Arizona State University (ASU) Online an to provide a free online college education to thousands of its employees. At first blush, this sounds like a great idea. According to Starbucks, more than 70 percent of its 135,000 employees are currently college students or are aspiring college students. Given the sheer size of the Starbucks workforce, that鈥檚 a great benefit for many current and future employees. But like many 鈥渇ree college鈥 programs, this benefit comes with a lot of strings attached:

1) To receive the full benefit, an employee must be a college junior or senior. The benefit includes an upfront scholarship to cover part of tuition costs鈥攊t鈥檚 unclear how large these scholarships 聽will be. Then, , he will be reimbursed for the full cost of tuition and fees for the credits鈥損rovided he鈥檚 remained eligible for benefits (i.e. work 20 hours a week). The details are still rather sparse, but it sounds like freshmen and sophomores will at least be eligible for some amount of a scholarship, but no reimbursement. They could always start at another institution, like a community college, but like many transfer students, they may find that they lose some of their credits in the transfer process. (ASU Online does have this that helps students see how their credits will transfer.)

Given that of students attend community colleges, I find it surprising that Starbucks didn鈥檛 also partner with local community colleges or have a community college partner. In order to keep costs down for students, Starbucks should consider making the scholarships more flexible for freshmen and sophomore students so they can use them at local community colleges first, where the money will go much further, and then transfer in to ASU Online.

2)聽Employees will potentially have to bear significant upfront costs. Depending on what the upfront scholarship is, juniors and seniors will have to pay for the rest of tuition and fees out-of-pocket until they reach the 21-credit threshold. At approximately $500 a credit, ASU Online is not cheap. Juniors and seniors could face around $10,500 in upfront costs. Meanwhile, freshmen and sophomores will face even larger costs since they won鈥檛 be reimbursed every 21 credits. Additionally, the reimbursement automatically appears in a student鈥檚 paycheck. So if a student took out a loan to cover his upfront costs, because of the interest accrual the reimbursement will not even cover the cost of the loan.

This 21-credit policy also brings up a lot of questions. This is almost two semesters worth of credit. A lot can happen over two semesters. What happens if a student suddenly falls below the 20 hours a week required to remain eligible? Given the shift nature of Starbucks employment, it seems possible that the student鈥檚 work situation could suddenly change. Also, what happens if an employee is let go? Furthermore, if a student works 20+ hours a week and is also a full-time student .听Given the upfront cost, it pushes a lot of risk onto the student.

3)聽Federal aid first, then the employee benefit. Employees must fill out the FAFSA to see if they are eligible for any federal aid. According to , students are required to apply for federal aid first. Any reimbursement would kick in after that. But again, this brings up many questions. What is Starbucks considering aid? If a student receives a Pell Grant and a subsidized loan that covers all of tuition and fees, for example, will Starbucks have to reimburse the student anything? Arguably, loans should not be considered aid when Starbucks reimburses students.

The fact that Starbucks is willing to help its employees get a bachelor鈥檚 degree is laudable鈥攅specially considering that once a student obtains the degree, he does not have to stay with Starbucks. The problem is that this program is free* college. It鈥檚 not actually free. Students face significant upfront costs, no help with living expenses, and constant eligibility concerns.

This partnership, although innovative, is not the way to solve the college cost problem. In this situation, the student picks up the tab first, and then if they are successful Starbucks will pay the student back. Removed from the equation is the institution. ASU Online is an expensive school. At approximately $15,000 a year for tuition and fees alone, the price is more than four times the price of an average community college () and a little less than double the average in-state tuition rate of .

Undoubtedly, this program will benefit some of Starbucks鈥 135,000 employees. But anyone who thinks this may be an innovative solution to the college cost problem is mistaken. Loans don鈥檛 make college more affordable and free* college employer/employee programs don鈥檛 make college more affordable: It鈥檚 the price of college that makes it more affordable. Until we address the cost drivers of higher education, this remains an exercise in continual cost shifting.

As more details have emerged on the Starbucks plan, I’ve written a new blog post you can access .听

Updated 6/17/2014: According to multiple sources, Starbucks employees do not need to be full-time students to qualify for the benefit. I made some slight changes to the language of this blog post to reflect this new information.

Updated 7/20/2016: Added link in first paragraph to ASU Online/Starbucks partnership page.

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Starbucks Announces Free* College Education. *Kinda sorta free