“It’s like a weird maze,” remembered Camara, who was 19 at the time and had finished high school with a 4.0 GPA. “You need help with your classes and financial aid? Well, here, take a number and run from office to office and see if you can figure it out.”
Advocates for community colleges defend them as the underdogs of America’s higher education system, left to serve the students who need the most support but without the money required to provide it. Critics contend that this has become an excuse for poor success rates that are getting worse and for the kind of faceless bureaucracies that ultimately prompted Camara to drop out after two semesters; he now works in a restaurant and plays in two bands.
“I gave it my all,” Camara said. “But you’re sort of screwed from the get-go.”