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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper argues that corporate sponsorship for institutions of higher learning is not a good idea. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RG13_SA940col.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
those in need, many middle class families are handed financial aid packages that plunges them into enormous debt. A part of the problem appears to be that money is needed
to run the institutions, and someone must foot the bill, but is allowing corporate sponsorship the answer? On the surface, colleges and universities are essentially businesses, and they are run
that way. Of course, ideologically, they should not be. This is because education is very important to society. It is not a commodity like automobiles or tract homes or sweaters.
Education is something that is supposed to be objective and is designed to stimulate minds. Corporations have taken over most things in todays economy. The family farm hardly exists because
large conglomerates provide too much competition for any small farmer to sustain. The small business owner closes his store as a new Wal Mart breaks ground. One reason why corporate
sponsorship of colleges should not be supported is that such ownership taints the quality of education and is effectively a conflict of interest. Gary Thorne (2008) writes about this
topic and notes that Barnhart for example claims that there is nothing wrong with corporate sponsorship. Barnhart provides an example of a library and claims that if the library has
the name of a company on it that does not change what is in the library (Thorne, 2008). To that, Thorne (2008) remarks: "Maybe such corporate involvement doesnt change a
thing. Maybe. Or maybe it changes everything." He goes on to explain that in negative economic times, opportunists take advantage of colleges (Thorne, 2008). Corporations are in business
to make a profit and when they donate the money, it is for the publicity (Thorne, 2008). When individuals contribute to universities, for example, they give money for a legacy
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