charity wrote:harmony wrote:Do the math, charity. $200 per credit for LDS. $400 per credit for nonLDS. NonLDS carry their entire cost, no tithing supplements for them. For LDS, tithing supplement's $200 per credit. Times 18 credits per quarter, times 40,000 students, times 3 quarters per year. That's a subsidy of $10,000 per student per year. That's $400 million per year. That doesn't count the scholarship students. They pay nothing. I don't know about you, charity, but $400 million is a lot of money that to me could be better spent elsewhere, actually fulfilling the three fold mission of the church.
You didn't take into account the conitnuing endowment funds, the annual fund raising, the very large gifts by different people. So you are still guessing.
There was actually an article on this some years back in BYU Magazine, which interviewed administrators at BYU regarding scholarships and how they are funded.
Here are some excerpts from that article (quoting administrative officials at BYU):
Everyone who is admitted (to BYU) receives, in effect, a tithing scholarship. The costs of an education at BYU are heavily subsidized by funds from the Church. In addition we are able to offer about a third of our students another scholarship: either half- or full-tuition. But those awards are only a small increment compared to the large scholarship that everyone gets in coming to the university.
For all students some of the goals Sue mentioned would apply. The Church is making an investment in every student with the hope that BYU will provide an education that leads not only to students' own personal growth, but to their ability to contribute to society and to the kingdom.
and
Scholarships are funded by tithes and offerings. We consider this money sacred, and with it comes a responsibility--the responsibility for students to leave BYU and use their education to bless others.
http://magazine.BYU.edu/?act=view&a=305
If I'm not mistaken, the good Doctor Peterson regularly reminds folks that tithing contributions into Brigham Young University are substantial, and that tuitions are heavily subsidized by the same.