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Consumerist: Education
con_fraudsting.jpg Freddie Mac con_personalfinanceteacher.jpg Now that Ohio has made personal finance basics a mandatory requirement to graduate from high school, people are starting to look at the problem of who teaches it and what it consists of (just look at the con_checkbookmath2.jpg We may indeed have a nation of financially illiterate youths, but despite cries for increased financial education in public high schools, the one program that's historically addressed this—con_westpointisfree.jpg Want a college education but don't want to go into debt over it? If your interests happen to coincide with the specific curricula at certain "tuition-free" schools, you might actually be able to get away with it. "There are only a handful of such schools in the U.S., which is one reason they are often overlooked by students, parents, and high school guidance counselors during the college search," says a senior policy analyst at the College Board.

They range from an urban college like the Cooper Union in New York's East Village to Deep Springs College, a remote, all-male school deep in the California desert. Many are specialized institutions, often focusing on engineering, such as the F.W. Olin College of Engineering in Needham, Mass.; or on music, like the Curtis Institute in Pennsylvania. A handful--the College of the Ozarks or Berea College in Kentucky--have mandatory work-study programs. Perhaps the most well-known of them is the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., which offers free college tuition in exchange for five years of service after graduation. "Pssst! Wanna Go to College for Free?" [BusinessWeek]

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Slideshow of tuition-free colleges [BusinessWeek]
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