https://lendedu.com/blog/private-student-loan-limits/ "Limits for private student loans are different than limits for federal loans. Private lenders use factors such as your income, credit score, current major, future projected income, and if you have a cosigner to determine how much to lend you." |
I was waiting for Ops, UPenn or something, LOL |
This is correct. Again, depends upon the major. Parchment shows that 33% choose Michigan State in Lansing over Yale; Also shows 25% select U Michigan over Yale; 48% select Purdue over Yale; 21% select Illinois over Yale; If it's engineering, then the choice is not easy. |
This is simply just not true. The penn state student will not even be interviewing for the same jobs. And that is a misrepresentation of their data. They do not say same student will have same outcome. |
100% Yale |
Depends on the major. |
They booted Ye on Twitter tho |
I am the last one to defend Dale & Krueger, however, the OP's situation is literally the one they reference in their findings...a kid that was accepted to Yale, but chose Penn State. The problem is that Dale & Krueger can only look at median/average outcomes. So, they are saying the kid that goes to PSU (but also accepted to Yale) will have the same median financial outcome as the average kid at Yale. Obviously, they have no way of proving if the kid that picked PSU would have had some amazing outcome had that kid picked Yale. I suppose you could look at the median outcomes of the top 10% of Yale and compare that to the Accepted Yale/Chose PSU kid. Not sure if that was part of their analysis. |
Agree! Like I posted before, it depends on the MAJOR. For liberal arts/social science/general studies, choose YALE. No question about that. But if it’s an engineering major, definitely state schools like Purdue, Michigan or UIUC over Yale, by a wide margin! |
Dale and Kruger's conclusion, in their own words: "when we adjust for unobserved student ability by controlling for the average SAT score of the colleges that students applied to, our estimates of the return to college selectivity fall substantially and are generally indistinguishable from zero" |
Ha. I'm a Purdue engineering grad. Thanks, I feel a bit vindicated in my confusion now. |
Maybe for lacrosse. Certainly not for football, basketball, etc. |
I am a very happy PSU parent whose kid is in a specialized program there that is among the most highly ranked in the country and, if by some miracle the kid had gotten into Yale (didn't apply) and was interested and we could easily afford either, there is zero chance that I would not be a Yale parent instead.
Unless (1) kid is a recruited athlete in a sport like football and wants that experience; (2) will be playing in the Blue Band and wants that experience; or (3) is heart set on a course of study offered at PSU but not Yale, then attending Yale is about the largest no brainer in history. |
Penn State is a perfectly good school and your child would certainly not suffer going there but it’s not comparable to Yale in stature.
Why would you let them apply to Yale if you were not willing to pay for it? |
How about if the kid 1) wants to go to medical school and you can't easily afford that, too, 2) is among the many teenagers with an anxiety disorder that's exacerbated by academic pressure, 3) has someone who's mistreated her horribly in high school decide to attend Yale, etc. While I agree that most would choose Yale, I don't think it can be called a no-brainer. |