Then what’s with the whining about the insanely high sticker prices and the application fees? There are “flat fees”. The people that the OP (PP?) seems concerned about can just pay them. No paperwork needed. |
The exact same hamburger that can be had for $5 can cost $50 somewhere else. You are also paying for the restaurants rent, etc. Surely you understand that??? Don't you??? |
And that helps in subsidizing American poor students and in-state students. NOW, because of Trump's racist policies the international students are going to other countries. ![]() |
I think the PP might be referring to the very small number of schools like Yale and maybe Harvard that offer free rides to kids from families with certain income levels. What they don’t seem to get is the extremely tiny number of kids that this applies to, who, of course have to get accepted first. They seem to want to stir up animosity towards the tiny number of low income kids who have overcome immeasurable odds to make it into a top tier school, while complaining about the cost of application fees for families who are quite wealthy by most standards. Beyond that, yes: Pell grants are small, particularly in comparison with the costs of attending college. |
+1000 I can’t imagine these people would have the absolute gall to say this to a low income student’s face. You’re first in your family to go to college, coming from let’s say a rural area, working a job that interferes with your school work to help your family, and you beat the odds and do well and get an acceptance to a top school and your family doesn’t have to worry about the cost that would definitely put them into debt… and someone tells you don’t deserve it because with their $300,000 income they can’t afford a T20. Laughable. Mind you there are plenty of schools that aren’t anywhere near the $100k a year sticker price. UMC people love to think they’re part of the upper crust because they live in nice neighborhoods and drive nice cars. Then they get hit with the newsflash that they are upper MIDDLE CLASS and can’t keep up with the Joneses when their DC gets to go to UPenn with no worries. Nevermind the plentiful state schools in Maryland, Virginia, or schools like Alabama, Iowa, Missouri, Mississippi, etc. that would throw money at their own supposedly bright kid. Just admit you thought you would easily have a seat at the table with the “other” elites but you opened your pocketbook and saw you didn’t have enough. 3,000+ colleges and universities in the US. But it’s a crime if my kid has to go to UVA, VT, or God forbid… Towson or JMU, because I didn’t save enough for them to get a luxury college experience at Stanford. |