Couverture de The $42,000 Report Card

The $42,000 Report Card

The $42,000 Report Card

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Harvard's Class of 2025 graduated with an average GPA of 3.83 — nearly straight A's for everyone. Yale isn't far behind at 3.7, with almost 80% of all grades in the A to A-minus range. Professors have stopped assigning whole books. Film professors have given up on complex movies. Students broke down crying at the suggestion they might have to attend class. The authors of a new Fox News opinion piece call it "convenient cosplay"—professors pretending to teach and students pretending to learn. All for $60,000 a year in tuition.

Meanwhile, Steve Forbes reports that New York City spends more than $42,000 per student per year on public education—the highest in the nation—while enrollment in its underperforming schools keeps falling and outcomes keep declining. The city's response? Not fixing the schools. Not merging classrooms to match shrinking enrollment. Instead, raise taxes on renters to hire more teachers for emptying classrooms, because the teachers' unions won't allow cuts.

In this episode, Dr. Gene Constant, founder and president of Global Sovereign University, breaks down what these two stories reveal about the state of American education—and presents a radically different model.

At GSU, a 501(c)(3) educational foundation, everything is free. But nothing is easy. There are no grades. There are badges—Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Platinum—earned through demonstrated mastery, not seat time, not participation, and certainly not tuition payments.

Dr. Constant walks through GSU's newest interactive learning games: Budget Survivor, where an 18-year-old navigates real financial decisions with a live bank balance that rewards smart choices and punishes costly mistakes. The Tradesman's Trial, where apprentice plumbers, electricians, carpenters, and HVAC technicians solve real trade math problems on a virtual job site. GENO's World Tour, where language learners navigate 10 real cities in 10 languages—with zero English hints at the Platinum level.

Every one of these programs costs the learner nothing. Everyone demands everything. That's the GSU difference.

Dr. Constant also issues two calls to action. For retired professionals: join the Civilization Builders mentorship program and volunteer as little as two hours a month to mentor someone who needs your real-world expertise—a teenager who can't pass a trade entrance exam, a single parent starting over, or a veteran translating military skills to civilian life. For learners left behind by the system: visit globalsovereignuniversity.org, where world-class education is free and every badge you earn means something real.

As Dr. Constant puts it, "Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime. American education has perfected a third option: charge a man $60,000 for a certificate that says he can fish, never make him touch a rod, and wonder why he starves."

Harvard is finally proposing to cap A's at 20% of grades. GSU didn't need a committee. The standard was built into the architecture from day one. Earn it or don't.

Learn more at globalsovereignuniversity.org. https://amzn.com/B0GNLQ6N91

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